Monday, January 5, 2009

Gaza: Just Such A Time As This

Today I am in sorrow over what is happening in the region of Gaza. Is there anything I can do? Am I limited to government statements, last minute diplomacy, or immobilizing personal outrage? How do I respond from this place of despair? What do I tell the children? Is this the time when the posture of prayer may provide the spirit of openness for a solution waiting to be recognized from the treasures of mystery?

What is at issue in this crisis? Israel is outraged due to persistent rocket attacks from Gaza. Hamas is outraged by the Israeli authorities’ ongoing harassment at border checkpoints where supplies and people must travel from Gaza’s confined space to the rest of the world.

There is also an elephant in the room that most governments across the world are ignoring; the attack and destabilisation of a duly elected government. In the most recent elections in the Palestinian territories including Gaza, Hamas won with wide popular support. There were good reasons for this, relating to governance by the Palestinian Authority over the past decade. But when democracy is promoted across the world and the people elect a government that other nations do not like, by what guide of democracy can the outside world unilaterally decide that this is not acceptable and deliberately undermine that election? Grumbling about an elected government is part of democracy everywhere, but destabilizing an elected government is not a part of the democratic way of life.

There is also a stark military economic inequality between the two sides in this violent conflict. Isn’t it suicidal for Gaza residents through their defence institutions, to attack Israel? Why would anyone make a fight that will surely bring harm to one’s family and neighbors? One answer may be that when people are pressed to the limit of their flesh, they find a way to struggle. The people of Gaza are not the first peoples to do so. Suicidal mission is inherent in any war. Soldiers in service of a cause - freedom, empire, democracy or religion - know that they may die for that cause . They believe, sometimes with positive outcomes, that their sacrifice might reach beyond the limits of today’s reason into tomorrow’s solutions. In this case self sacrifice in their mind is honourable.

Where do we turn for a resolution? Thousands of board rooms, staff meetings, and grand peace councils set up to deal with crises like this have not produced solutions. When diplomats desperately grope for chimerical cease fires, the time is ripe to feel and acknowledge despair and guilt over lost opportunities. Will solutions ever come from diplomacy or councils of peacemaking? Will the 60 year stalemate continue for another 40 years, a full century to explain to the children of Christians, Jews and Muslims?

Alternatively, can the fruits of our imaginations be ignited through the Gaza crisis of 2008? Can we believe that our collective imaginations of this day might help? Have we been given one more opportunity to sharpen our seeing and listening for what wants to be revealed from divine mystery?

People who are deeply committed to social justice and peacemaking, religious and secular, are suspicious that meditation belongs only to the pious and spiritual ones who hide behind their exercises to avoid engagement. The split between people of action and people of prayer is a false dichotomy that appears in every tradition. If political analysis, dissecting the holy, the manipulation of shame and guilt, or raw activism could have provided the basis for peace in this region of God’s earth, it would have happened long ago. What has been lacking is the acknowledgement of the mystery of unknown forces at work among and through patterns of violent conflict so heavily focussed on Israel and Palestine.

The war in Gaza today invites me to prayer. I don’t promise that prayer will enlighten my imagination in a fresh way. I will try because I know that liberation from false myths of security is born in moments of irrational violence. I share our common desperation for a break through. When a sign or nudge to action comes I hope I have the courage to acknowledge it. And if it comes to me or you, we can share it with the people on the peace councils, in diplomatic corps, or organizations, share it with all the people on this journey with us. We may be here for just such a time as this.

source: http://peaceprobe.wordpress.com/2008/12/31/gaza-just-such-a-time-as-this/

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is my help to the situation, I am going to send over swiming belts, as the solution for the people of Gaza is to enter the water and swim direction West............

Anonymous said...

Here is my Help to the situation.
I am going to send over swiming belts, as the solution to the poeple of Gaza, is to enter the water and Swim direction WEST..........

Father Theodosius - Dayroyo Theodosius said...

Perhaps in the mean time you could in our prayers for all in the Holy Land, Jews, Christians and Muslim. They are all suffering. In addition to praying for peace, you might also pray that the seas are not too high, that they learn to swim, and that the Israeli Navy does not run them over as they already have relief ships. Better yet, maybe Moses will appear and divide the waters for the Jews and Christ will appear walking on water for the Christians. Hopefully, you pray that God will open both your heart and your eyes. People on both sides are being killed. I believe that commandment is NOT thou shall kill, but rather thous SHALL NOT kill.

Father Theodosius - Dayroyo Theodosius said...

For anyone who is reading these, perhaps you would like to know how long the person who does not sign is name looked at the read the original blog posting. They were on the site 5 minutes and 21 seconds. their PC was running IE 7.0, Window XP. we also have a technology blog which was meant to publish the result of research into Web 2.0 technology on the democratization of developing countries. Oh, way the way, the anonymous posters found us from a Google search and was logged in from Herzliya, Tel Aviv, Israel. i give out this imformation because I do like to know who I am talking to.

I by the way am in Plymouth, Indiana. The writer is invited and so are his friends, if closer, to join us in our church. We pray for peace and healing every day. And there are more than Srian Orthodox Christians coming to pray. http://www.southbendtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090104/News01/901040301/0/FRONTPAGE