Following the road map for peace
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“Drinking a cup of tea, I end the war.” It seems simplistic and
sugary, yet invites each of us to take responsibility for bringing
peace to our lives and the world, moment by moment. In Zen, each
person tries to find his or her way in family life, the work place,
political involvements and all forms of community life, whether local
or global. We deepen our appreciation that each moment and every act
participates in the whole. We do not have to be secretary of state to
make a difference: all of our activities are influencing everyone
everywhere. How might that awareness guide our choices?
Looking within ourselves with a gently inquiring awareness, we
discover the very roots of war -- our anger, fear, hurt, feelings of
inadequacy, neediness, judgments and our inept attempts to cope with
our suffering. Gradually we learn that practicing skillfully with
these difficult emotions is the basis for cultivating compassion. We
experience the quiet joy and satisfaction of living fully in each
moment, and this naturally draws us to concern for the welfare of
all.
As we listen more carefully to ourselves and to one another,
boundaries dissolve. Globalism compels us to see inter-connectedness
or inter-being as reality, not an idealistic theory. Labeling others
as “enemies,” “terrorists,” “barbarians” or “torturers” will not
create conditions for solving problems, ending violence and creating
peace between international neighbors.
Rosemary Radford Ruether, a prominent Catholic theologian,
proposes that the “war against terrorism” may be viewed as a form of
Americanist messianic nationalism. This ideology uses religious
language in order to justify its contention that the United States is
an elect nation chosen by God to impose its way of life on the rest
of the world, by force if necessary. We are told that “evil” is
located in the “enemy” and that this evil can and should be conquered
by military might.
Ruether urges Christian churches, in partnership with other
religious groups, to vigorously counteract this abuse of religion and
moral charade. The 13th century poet, Saadi of Shiraz, teaches, “The
children of Adam are limbs of one another -- when the world gives
pain to one, the other members find no rest.”
Zen emphasizes right action flowing naturally from awareness.
Engaged Buddhism encourages individual practitioners as well as Zen
and Buddhist centers to work together on issues such as prison
reform, international human rights and world peace.
THE REV. DEBORAH
BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
Standing on the tel of Jericho, the oldest town on Earth, our
Israeli-Palestinian-Arab-
Christian guide said, “No doubt you Americans want to sing ‘Joshua
fought the battle of Jericho ... and the walls came a-tumblin’ down.’
As we do, please remember that my ancestors were the ones on the
inside of those (7000-1200 BC) walls!” In what Christians call “The Holy Land,” wars have raged for
millennia! Biblical history bears clear witness that true peace can
ultimately be built only on justice. The Episcopal Church has been a
strong advocate of President Bush’s “Road Map” for peace. We support
both its commitment to Israel’s security in a Jewish state with
secure and defensible borders and that policy’s description of a
future Palestinian state that is “viable, contiguous, sovereign and
independent.”
We affirm the work of the United Nations in pursuit of global
peace, protection of fundamental rights and the environment, health,
and poverty eradication; we support implementation of previous U.N.
resolutions. We have urged the United States government and U.N.
Security Council to lift restrictions on normal trade in civilian
goods with all countries in the Middle East. The Anglican Communion
affirms the rights of all peoples of the Middle East, including
Israelis and Palestinians, to self-determination, independence and
sovereignty.
We believe no one in such terrible conflicts can claim any moral
“high ground” and we try to focus on real solutions, not
justifications for continuing the violence. We advocate
re-envisioned, re-empowered, even-handed American diplomacy and
support. We believe that generosity and love and kindness hold the
best hopes for lasting peace with justice.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Parish Church
Corona del Mar
Turning specifically to the Palestinian war against Israel, there
are at least four revolutions that must occur to create the
conditions for peace.
First, Israel’s neighbors must at last admit Israel’s right to
exist. Only Egypt and Jordan have acknowledged Israel’s legitimacy,
and they with great tenuousness. All other Arab and Muslim lands in
the dangerous neighborhood known as the Middle East maintain a state
of war with the Jewish State and continue to act as belligerents.
They consider all of Israel to be the land of Islam and seek to
replace Israel with Palestine. It is not a question of Israel’s
withdrawing from the Gaza or the disputed Territories. Israel’s
enemies believe all of Israel, that is Tel Aviv, Haifa, Netanya,
etc., to be Palestine. Only when the Arab nations turn from this
vision will any peace be possible.
Second, peace may come only 30 years after Palestinian textbooks
and school curricula are reformed to speak of tolerance, recognition
and reconciliation. Only a new generation reared in the value of
peace will be able to embrace that ethic. Today, Palestinians are
universally exposed only to a fostering of a multi-faceted rejection
of Israel’s existence and an instilling of hateful stereotypes into
their consciousness. When Israel is viewed as a neighbor with whom
peaceful relations should be desired will the seed of concord be
planted.
How can tolerance be created when children study maps of the
region which do not feature the name “Israel,” when they are taught
that Palestine (as the design on the official emblem of the
Palestinian National Authority) stretches from the Jordan River to
the Mediterranean Sea and is exclusively Arab, when the 5.5-million
Jewish inhabitants are not counted. These textbooks reject and
de-legitimize Israel, instill animosity and teach the implicit
aspiration to replace the State of Israel with the State of
Palestine.
From elementary through high school, the books are replete with
strong expressions of hatred toward Israel and praise for the
struggle against it, as well as anti-Semitic expressions against the
Jews. Thousands of Palestinians are trained for Jihad in summer camps
and “martyrdom” is highly prized.
Third, a new leadership must arise. Arafat and his cohorts have
betrayed their people over and again, lining their pockets with vast
sums intended for the relief of their impoverished people. They have
never missed an opportunity to miss an opportunity to further the
cause of peace. They prefer to mouth slogans, to divert the masses
from their misery by blaming others, and to play the role of victim.
It is, of course, easier to be a revolutionary than to be a
responsible statesman; it is easier to be a demagogue than to have to
confront the realities of governing.
The Palestinian response to their situation must be more than
daily burning of the American flag, and it must be better than
cheering the terrorists of 9/11. Arafat has the blood of many
Americans, let alone Israelis, on his hands. Does he qualify as a
partner in peace?
Fourth, Muslim clerics and leaders must raise their voices against
the culture of incitement and terror that pervades the Arab “street.”
The only expressions of regret over the revolting slaughter of
innocents by Muslims acting in the name of their faith are statements
that are tactical and strategic: “We must desist from these actions
because they are injurious to our cause, to our public relations
campaigns, to winning world sympathy.” Where is the moral outrage of
supposed spiritual leaders over the murder of innocent men, women and
children?
Long ago, Jeremiah said, “There are those who cry ‘Peace,’
‘Peace,’ but there is no peace.” So it is today. Peace will remain a
distant prospect as long as Israel is not accorded the elemental
right to be, as long as children are taught to hate and that death is
preferable to life, as long as a corrupt leadership seeks only its
own profit, and as long as Muslim clergy do not raise their voices in
protest against those who degrade Islam. America and Israel are
rightly united, standing as democracies in a world of tyranny, as
forces for peace in a world of terror, and as defenders of
civilization in a world gone mad.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
Peace is elusive because of two twin demons: dubious political
objectives and fanatical religious elements. Peace would have half a
chance if either one or the other were not active, but they feed upon
each other. If America could act purely, we would have a chance, but
because we have moments in our history that are global
embarrassments, our current objectives will always be questioned. The
current abuse scandal adds to that lack of trust. How can we claim to
be freeing people from the human rights abuses of Saddam Hussein and
then do this to them? Someone must be held publicly accountable in
order to restore some semblance of trust.
Ultimately, peace will not come to the world because of people’s
choices. People continue to choose that one set of values overrides
the value of human life and security. These choices are motivated by
a dimension beyond what we can see. Wars between flesh and blood are
symbolic of a spiritual reality where the forces of Satan are vainly
waging war against the kingdom of God. They will do anything to
eliminate the ability of someone to find real peace available to them
only in a relationship with God.
When someone dies, they no longer have the ability to choose to
follow God. The more who can be killed before they can make that
choice, the more enter eternity without God. This is the urgency that
Christian missionaries face globally. God says it is not his will
that any should perish. We are called to be ambassadors of
reconciliation and peace. Peace with God and peace with one another.
ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity Church
Costa Mesa
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