Violence, Blood, Violence!
Dr
Harry Hagopian
You will be asked for your
patience, for the conflict will not be short. You will be asked for resolve, for the conflict will not be
easy. You will be asked for your strength because the course to victory may be
long.
These portentous words - uttered by President George W
Bush at Camp David on 15 September 2001 - constituted a warning. It was an
angry warning directed as much at the terrorists responsible for the horrifying
devastation that struck at the military and financial heartland of the USA as
it was at those states harbouring terrorists across all continents. And mind
you, who could blame the American President for such a resolute statement?
After all, his country had just experienced international violence of such
macabre intensity and accurate deadliness that it could have easily come out of
the pages of Tom Clancy’s novel ‘Rainbow Six’.
So one week after the series of mind-numbing events,
is it possible to make a few summary observations that would suggest a number
of informed judgements? What are
the critical dangers that are already evident today?
AA.
To start with, let me emphasise that such wide-scale
and malignant outrages cannot be justified or condoned in any way. No matter
what the political or economic grievances of certain countries or individuals,
the wholesale and indiscriminate killing of human beings - children, women and
men of various ethnic or national origins from across the world - can never
become acceptable under any religious, political or economic system. A chorus
of candle-lit vigils and statements by churches and church-related
organisations world-wide - ranging from Pax Christi International to the Middle
East Council of Churches - underscores such Christocentric and faith-centred
denunciations of violence.
Indeed, in his homily for the Mass of Peace held in
Jerusalem in remembrance of the hapless victims in the USA, Latin Patriarch
Michel Sabbah reminded the assembled faithful that Jesus himself called us to
be perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect. Therefore, he affirmed, our
obvious guide remains God himself - who symbolises love and mercy, not hatred,
death and exclusion. The Patriarch questioned the negative role that religion
plays at times in societies, and added that ‘God is the God of all
His children, whatever their faith and nationality’.
BB.
Over the past week, I have heard many political
commentators - both on radio and television - coming up with different
rationalisations to the tragedy that has assaulted the USA. Some have compared
those dreadful acts of violence to a war between civilisations, and have
referred to Samuel Huntingdon’s book ‘Clash of Civilisations’ in order to draw
a stark difference between ‘us’ and ‘them’! Others have talked even more
prophetically about an imminent apocalyptic end to civilisation itself! There have also been those who have
made fevered invocations of Good versus Evil, and have come up with
superstitious readings of Nostradamus or numerals to give vent to their
political or religious viewpoints.
I believe it is important here to stress the inherent
dangers of viewing the world in terms of black and white, or of analysing the
conflict as one between the ‘developed’ and ‘developing’ civilisations - in
other words, between the West and its industrialised allies versus all others.
Such classifications are simplistic, blending ignorance with arrogance and
opening the way for further polarisation, tension and strife. It might perhaps
be more reasonable to assert that the conflicts of the world today are as much
between different interests (or principalities, to use a biblical term) as they
are within
the different ‘civilisations’ themselves. In an interview on Sky television
some days ago, James Wolfenson, President of the World Bank, argued against the
premise that terrorism is a war between civilisations. Rather, he segued, one
way of combating terrorism would be through the conquest of poverty and
inequity in the world.
CC.
One dangerous fall-out of this tragedy has been the
emotive - and at times virulent - attacks waged against Islam in some parts of
the world. Islam (as a religion) is also being held synonymous with ‘Arab’ (as
a people) and then associated willy-nilly with fundamentalism, radicalism and
terrorism. The inferences here are clear and lethal! I have read many columns
in different newspapers purporting to ‘explain’ the mentality behind Islam for
such suicidal and terrorist acts. One paper wrote that Muslims like to die
through ‘acts of martyrdom’ in order to be rewarded with eternal life in paradise,
permission to see the face of Allah and the privilege to grant places in heaven
for seventy of their relatives. To conclude this analysis with a touch of
salacious sensationalism, the paper then added that such attacks will also
provide each Muslim with the promise of the services of seventy two vestal
virgins.
Accusing any religion of terrorism, denigrating its
ethos and then demonising its foundation by maligning a large number of its
[Arab] adherents, is counter-productive!
As an Armenian Christian from Jerusalem, I have enjoyed over the years
the friendship and neighbourliness of many Muslim scholars, practitioners and
ordinary men and women. I must profess that this brand of violence being
attributed to Islam today is alien to my understanding or experience. True, I
have had disagreements with Muslims over their theology. I have also voiced my
concern about some of the exclusive exegeses and insular ideologies within that
faith. But such disagreements form part of a daily pattern of life the world
over. I have had them with Jews and Christians as much as with Muslims, and
have resolved them by engaging others in dialogue across conference tables or
in the real witness of daily life - person to person, neighbourhood to
neighbourhood.
To be honest, I do not know what drives ‘Muslim
terrorists’ - if I were to use such a tabloid and inaccurate expression! But what I do know are the clear,
unequivocal values, moral premises and ethical restraints of Islam. They make
the sanctity of human life a permanent obligation. Care for the innocent, the
suffering and the bereaved becomes a sacred duty. The Prophet Mohammed forbade
the killing of civilians, women and children, the old and the infirm, as well
as the destruction of property, the burning of crops and the slaughter of animals.
Kidnapping, hijacking and other deeds of terror are as contrary to the true
teachings of Islam as they are to those of Christianity and Judaism.
In a statement entitled ‘A Muslim Calls for Sanity’,
HRH Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan - whose Hashemite family is a direct
descendant of the Prophet Mohammed - stressed that respecting the sanctity of
life is the cornerstone of all great faiths. Reminding the world that Muslims,
Christians and Jews have a common shared history, Prince Hassan warned the
world against the ever-increasing tendency of ceding to Islamaphobia - a common
form of xenophobia and intolerance directed at Islam - in our lives. He also
cautioned in his statement, “The politics of the Middle East must not be
allowed to destroy the natural capacity that people of faith have to live
together and to work together. We must always hold fast to the moral values
contained in our common heritage despite the conflicting rights and comparable
injustices still separating us.
Bloodshed is no answer.” In
the perennial words of Dr Martin Luther King Jr, ‘violence begets violence in a
never-ending circle of destruction’.
It is therefore the responsibility of political
leaders and media barons to distinguish Islam as a monotheistic religion of
core values from those consequences of violence or carnage that are perpetrated
in its name. In a rather vulnerable and volatile environment, people must be
taught that fanaticism is not the trademark of Islam. Any fanaticism within
Islam can be matched with fanaticism in many other monotheistic or polytheistic
religions - including Christianity.
But this huge onus - to raise the awareness of different
societies to the true values within Islam - lies also with Muslims themselves.
In fact, what is critical these days is for the tacit majority of well-thinking
and peace-loving Muslims across the world to stand up and proclaim their
beliefs in an authentic and user-friendly manner. As Rabbi Tony Bayfield from
the Reform Movement in Judaism commented recently in the Evening Standard, such
an outward openness on the part of religious leaders across the board will help
Jews, Christians and Muslims to rediscover together their shared core values
about the sanctity of human life, justice and compassion. Indeed, religious
leaders from all faiths should make their positions unequivocal and clear. They
should challenge the abuse of power by eschewing violence, by teaching that we
worship the one God in spite of our different theological manifestations, and
by recognising our common humanity. Only then will it become possible to put
those core values at the service of sharing, compromise and peace. Only then
will the masses be taught - and therefore learn - to distinguish myth from
reality.
Islam remains one of the fastest growing faiths
world-wide. It is also a faith that abuts a number of fault lines, and does not
draw a distinction between the religious and political lives. This is an
important perception toward understanding how the followers of this religion
think or act in their own lives. It is also one way toward appreciating the
mechanisms by which Muslims tie their concerns in matters related to God with
those related to Caesar.
DD.
What next? According to most analysts, we are in for a
long war. Allies are being selected, encouraged, cajoled or bought in the hope
of forming an awesome coalition and confronting the shadowy and hyper-linked nature
of global terrorism. This is definitively one method of retribution against the
culprits of terror, but is it the only one? Who are those allies? Who is the
enemy? In his book ‘Reaping the Whirlwind’, Michael Griffin suggests, for
instance, that Iran is a natural ally of the USA in any war with Afghanistan.
Considering Pakistan untrustworthy at the best of times, Griffin argues that
mutual American-Iranian concerns over energy in Central Asia, Iraq,
Afghanistan’s heroin trade as well as the profound Iranian dislike for the
Sunni Taliban Muslims, forge natural allies out of those two erstwhile foes.
War strategies aside, however, I would like to posit
some tentative pointers arising from this calamity. After all, we cannot accept
the stark view of a world created for us by terrorists where the remedy to
every human grievance or injustice is a resort to the random violence of
revenge - often against the innocent. Surely, true political mettle can only be
shown by denying terrorists their victory and by refusing to submit to a world
created in their image.
In an article entitled ‘What America must Learn from
Disaster’, Tony Judt, Director of the Remarque Institute at New York
University, claims that the latest acts of terrorism have offered the world a
glimpse into a possible future. In the 20th century, he argues, war
was made on civilians. In the 21st century, however, war will
be made by civilians. It could well assume the shape of a faith-based
initiative that bypasses the conventional state. All it will need is planning
skills, financial resources and a willingness to die for one’s beliefs. Most of
everything else - machinery, technology, targets - will be furnished by a
society which then becomes its ultimate victim. The point of such warfare,
writes Judt, will not be to achieve an objective, much less win a final
victory. It will be - it already
is - simply to make a point.
Tony Judt goes further to draw some distinctions
between European and American responses to terrorism. Europeans faced with a
terrorist campaign typically ask, ‘Why
does this happen?’ Americans he
has spoken to or heard on the box in the immediate aftermath of the catastrophe
have demanded, ‘How could this
happen?’ Will this mindset alter now?
Once the immediate trauma of this bloody violence is
abated to a degree, and once America regains some of its in-bred resilience and
vitality, three variables must be dealt with by the US Administration - in one
way or another.
·
The obsession
with ‘missile defence’ has become redundant. True, there are still quite a
number of states and individuals who dream of firing inter-continental missiles
at the USA. But that is their
least likely weapon of choice because it advertises ever so clearly its point
of origin and its owner. The threat in the coming decades is more likely to be
from individuals or organisations who want to make a point, to mock and humble
their adversary.
·
As Peter
Hain, Foreign Office Minister in London, mentioned in a recent BBC NewsNight
interview, the Middle East conflict can no longer be shunted away. It remains
one of the likeliest sources of indoctrination and one of the likeliest reasons
for attacks. Whether we like it or not, countless people from Morocco to
Pakistan see Israel as a surrogate for the USA. In their minds, the USA will
accrue the blame for Israeli actions. Israel will even be the excuse as much as
the catalyst for such attacks. This will not change so long as there is no
solution to the regional Arab-Israeli conflict. Therefore, the USA cannot
consider itself an optional presence, and cannot see itself as a super-power disengaging
itself from the parties - as has happened recently. It is time for the USA to
make a virtue of necessity and to tailor a comprehensive peace settlement that
will put out the flames of hatred and bigotry. As one priest wrote recently,
the conflicts of the world transit through Jerusalem. It is the skeleton key to
peace or war no matter how far-fetched, obnoxious or perverse this reality
might sound to many people in the USA or elsewhere.
·
America has
spent the first few months of the Bush presidency in denouncing treaties,
promising to retreat from crisis zones, and repeating that the administration
plans to put ‘US national interests’ first. But the blood that was spilt last
week proves that the interests of America and those of the rest of the world
are inextricably intertwined. In a trans-national world, national interests no
longer have any meaning in isolation. Alliances, treaties, international laws,
courts and agencies are not an alternative to national security. They remain
its only solid hope.
Within this overall political configuration, with
prudence and wisdom, it could perhaps become possible to rid the world of the
ghoulish spectre of terrorism. But such an objective must adopt a strategy that
goes beyond the instant gratification derived from punishing the prime
suspects. Any such move must avoid inflicting further pain and penury upon
long-suffering civilians in different - deprived - parts of the world.
Otherwise, the seeds of further hatred will be sown in the world. And for this
purpose, one needs to harness all available political, diplomatic, economic and
operational resources.
EE.
The world has been reacting to this latest tragedy
with muted respect. Even the Last Night of the Proms in London altered its
programme to include the Choral Finale from Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony to
highlight the way in which music enhances the universal bonds of humanity and
fellowship. However, music is not the sole panacea for grieving hearts.
Countless Americans have shown the world that prayers also help in the quest
for inner serenity and peace.
Rabbi Nachman of Bratzlav was one such person whose
inveterate belief in prayer drove his life. A Hassidic master living in the
Ukraine around the turn of the 19th century, he was a pessimist by
nature! He often compared the human situation to that of a person suspended by
a thread over a raging sea that seeks to swallow him. Yet, like many other
mystical thinkers of his tradition, he also believed that goodness - in the
shape of divine sparks - is inherent in all human beings. Could men and
women of goodwill use the power of prayer like life rafts to see them through
these turbulent times? Can they
uncover and celebrate those divine sparks within them? Will time heal pessimism
and yield optimism?
Or will further violence, blood, violence continue to
taunt us and haunt us all for years to come?
© h-bvH @ 18
September 2001