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Faith, hope and love
on the West Bank |
| Faith, Hope, and Love in
Zababdeh
March 2, 2003
[posted 3-3-03]
Marthame and Elizabeth Sanders are American
Presbyterians working in the Palestinian Christian village of Zababdeh, near
Jenin.
They share a close-up look at a West Bank
community, and the Christians and Muslims for whom it's home. And they try
to explain why, even now, they haven't left for the safety of the United
States.
The answer? "We're still here because we
believe. We came here out of a commitment to serve the Church in the land of
its birth, to be in solidarity with our brothers and sisters in Christ. What
our American government says or does cannot change that calling, or pry us
from this place. ... We're still here because we hope. We hope that war will
be avoided, for nothing made by human hands is inevitable. ... We are still
here, because we love. We love the people of this region. From Baghdad to
Beirut, we have visited them, eaten with them, laughed and cried with them,
worshiped and prayed with them. Having done so, it's impossible for us to
think of them as the enemy - or as candidates for collateral damage."
So your WebWeaver wonders: Living out of
faith and hope and love, how might we in the U.S. face the threats that our
national poses to the world today?
Thanks to
Don Smith for sharing this.
Over the past two and a half years in the
West Bank, we've received many phone calls and e-mails asking some variation
on the question, "When are you coming home?" When violence erupted in
response to Ariel Sharon's provocative Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif visit,
we were asked. But Jerusalem can be a long way away from our little Zababdeh.
When a mob of Palestinians lynched two Israeli soldiers in Ramallah, the
Israeli army bombed civil and government targets in Palestinian towns, and
internationals began leaving, we were asked. But Gaza and Ramallah are still
pretty far. When gunfights erupted near the Israeli military camp at the
edge of Zababdeh, we were asked again. But the camp and gunfights were way
over on the other side of town from us.
Since then, the violence spiraled deeper
and deeper, taking its toll on thousands of lives, limbs, homes, lands. But
friends and family had mostly stopped asking us when we'd leave. We knew our
way around, spoke passable Arabic, the locals knew us. We'd stuck around
this long - there wasn't any use in trying to talk sense into us at this
point. But then there was the particularly deadly suicide bombing last
Passover, linked to nearby Jenin. Our telephones were cut, our schools were
closed, and tens of thousands of Israeli reservists were called up for
military duty in the Territories. No one knew what would happen, but
everyone knew it could be very bad. We were afraid for our safety and,
without school or internet, we couldn't do much of our work. There was no
need for persuasive emails; we made the very difficult decision to leave
Zababdeh, fleeing across the border to the quiet safety of Nazareth.
We were only gone for a month, but many
people back home assumed we'd left for good. Perhaps it was our poor
communication, but more likely it was collective wishful thinking that we'd
finally come to our senses. Now the emails and phone calls have started
again. It's a blurry chorus of reason and rumor: "We're going to war in
Iraq." "Yeah, there're some peace movements, but at this point, it's
inevitable." "Saddam will send scuds/nerve gas/smallpox at you!" "The Arab
anti-American backlash will put you in danger." "The American government has
called for a full evacuation of Americans in the Middle East! Don't you have
to leave?" "When does your flight arrive?"
Yet here we are.
We're still here because we believe. We
came here out of a commitment to serve the Church in the land of its birth,
to be in solidarity with our brothers and sisters in Christ. What our
American government says or does cannot change that calling, or pry us from
this place. Our presence here (in Zababdeh, Nazareth, Jerusalem, or
elsewhere) is a religious calling, not a political affiliation. The cross
overshadows the crown, not the other way around.
We're still here because we hope. We hope
that war will be avoided, for nothing made by human hands is inevitable. We
hope that nationalism and fanaticism will not have their way, that the rift
between East and West will not become an impassible chasm, swallowing up
lives and hopes for a peaceful future. We feel strongly that this is a time
for peacemakers, not warmongers. For those of you who share our conviction,
we love you dearly. Struggle with us. Pray with us. Work with us as seekers
of peace. If you disagree, we love you dearly. And we challenge you. For
this is a time for turning swords into ploughshares, a time for us to turn
to the long hard work of cultivating peace, not to the deception of a "quick
and clean" war.
We are still here, because we love. We love
the people of this region. From Baghdad to Beirut, we have visited them,
eaten with them, laughed and cried with them, worshiped and prayed with
them. Having done so, it's impossible for us to think of them as the enemy -
or as candidates for collateral damage. Arab, Christian, Muslim, Jew, they
have become our brothers and sisters, fellow children of God trying to carve
out life in a region of imported death. For their sake, for our sake, and
for God's sake, we continue to do what we can to bring peace here. Those of
you sending us emails and making phone calls, before you ask us to come home
again, we ask the same of you, to do everything in your power to stop this
disastrous war.
So we're still here because we're still
called to work and minister here. But don't worry; we're not seeking our own
martyrdom. But we haven't bought those plane tickets yet. |
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