What are we to do in the face of the suffering we see in
Gaza? And not only in Gaza, but in the whole of the Middle East. We are there,
virtually, at around 7pm every evening. Are we to ‘switch off’ at the end of
the news and try to return to our normal lives, even if they are not always all
that normal? How are we to think of other things? Is it even possible, at the
stage which these various conflicts have reached, to do so? So much has been
written. So much has been said, but there is little in the way of sane
prognosis for the future, or of how to alleviate suffering in the present. We
are left feeling angry, confused and profoundly disturbed by it all. So what
can Christians, Muslims and Jews living away from these conflict zones, but
watching the events unfold before their eyes day after day on the news, do that
would make the slightest difference?
As a Christian, I am convinced, along with St. Paul writing
in his letter to the Romans, that neither hardship, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword can separate us from
the love of God in Christ Jesus. (Rom.8) This does not make me feel especially safe,
because engaging with this particular text attentively requires that we also
engage with violence. Furthermore, we have to do this from our most vulnerable place,
the inner space where we know ourselves most truthfully. This truthful space is
that part of our selfhood which few
others know. Only God himself knows us as we really are and loves us as we are.
There exists a similar conceptual space for nations and peoples, in which all are
both accountable before God and fully ‘justified’ – their cause understood and
dealt with justly by him because of his deep love for them. History has shown
that in this place of truth he remakes nations.
Here then is a place for Christians, Muslims and Jews who
want to see an end to the suffering in the Middle East to begin the work of remaking.
All people of genuinely good faith can do this by engaging directly with God
and with his redemptive purpose for the whole world, and for every person caught
up in violent conflict at this moment. Together, as Christians alongside other
people of faith, we need to allow ourselves to feel the pain on all sides by
owning it as our own before God.
This is not just a vaguely spiritual exercise. It involves
honest thinking, leading to the asking of difficult questions of ourselves as
well as of those we either disagree with, fear, or simply hate. So one way to
begin, with regard to the conflict in Gaza, might be to consider what Hamas,
itself an agent of fear, represents in the minds of ordinary Palestinians, both
in Gaza and in other parts of Palestine/Israel, and what it represents to
Palestinians living in other parts of the world. Do they believe that Hamas is to
be trusted with the well being of a people in the longer term? Has it proved itself,
in this respect, so far? To what extent, might it be directly responsible for
the carnage which is taking place in that country now? How much does it really
value the lives of the people it has been elected to protect and serve? Do its
members think of Israelis as in some way less human than they are? Is it
conceivable that Hamas might one day think of Israelis as something other than ‘occupiers’,
to quote its leader in exile, Khaled Mishal?
Similarly, how does the ordinary Israeli, who genuinely
wants peace and justice for all, view the wholesale appropriation of
Palestinian lands and the bulldozing of their homes? Are they prepared to
accept that they are indeed, to a great extent, ‘occupiers’? If so, might they
be willing to dialogue with Hamas, beginning with this crucial point? How do
these Israelis come to terms with the hugely disproportionate numbers of
Palestinians being killed or wounded (the majority being women and children)
compared to the relatively few Israelis (mainly military) in the current
conflict? Would these Israelis personally be prepared to go into Gaza to help
rebuild what has been devastated? If a climate of trust could be generated, in
the way I am about to suggest, could they conceive of a time when the brutal
wall which divides families and has wrecked lives, be dismantled with their
help? Could they see themselves, as people whose faith centres on a righteous,
just, merciful and holy God, rebuilding what has been shattered by decades of
conflict? Would they even like to think this possible?
These are questions which need to be addressed from
within a place of truth and of deep silence before God. It is a silence shaped
by sighing and longing, always in the presence of God. Before there is any more
talk of truces and ceasefires, we and all who long for an end to this incessant
killing need to keep silence together for an hour before God, the hour to be followed
by two hours the following day, three on the third, and so on, until continuing
with the slaughter and the hatred is revealed in all its ghastly futility and
stops. This would be a time for everyone in that region and elsewhere in the
world, to simply stand in the presence of God. Secularists should respect it and
try to use it to the highest possible good for all in whatever way they can,
but they too should remain silent.
This is just one way of re-directing sighs, so that they
acquire a purpose. That purpose will ultimately consist of God’s word speaking
wisdom into the silence through the voices of women and men who want the kind
of peace which, as we say in the blessing given at the end of the Eucharist, ‘passes
all understanding’ but which might just get people together who can speak
wisdom into the turmoil which is overtaking the Middle East.
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