Monday, January 28, 2019

Compassion in time of War


On my recent trip to Jerusalem I  met a wonderfully brave and compassionate young woman , Stephanie Saldana.
 Inspired by Christian vision  Stephanie seeks  to hear the story of the  refugee the  migrant  and those  whose  commitment to truth causes them   to remain  in threatening places.


Extract from:

All Sorts of Little Things.
On compassion in Time of War

(Published in The Plough Summer 2018)





Father Jacques Mourad, a  Syrian priest and member of the community, (of Deir  Mar Musa, a Christian monastic community )  wrote about the renewed significance of  wartime dialogue in a letter in 2014, quoted by  Navid Kermani in the pages of this magazine
[Spring 2016]: "Right now, the kind of dialogue  we're experiencing is our shared suffering as a  community. We are sorrowing in this unjust  world, which bears a share of the responsibility  for the victims of the war, this world of the  dollar and the euro, which cares only for its  own citizens, its own wealth, and its own safety  while the rest of the world dies of hunger,  sickness, and war .... The true dialogue we are living today is the dialogue of compassion." 
Since then, the world has continued to  look on as Syrian innocents have been shot or crushed, gassed or drowned,  downed by easily preventable illnesses, and   left to die in too many ways to mention here. 

Is there a way out? I think back to Father  Jacques' words. A dialogue of compassion, a  binding of ourselves together in love, might be  all we have left - carried out in a world that no  longer cares.
Yet if compassion asks all of us to "suffer  with," it begs the question: who should . -- we suffer with? To whom should we  bind ourselves in this hour of need? If we  listen to the prevailing wisdom not only in the  Middle East but also abroad, then we should be  cautious of who we choose to suffer with - for  there is only so much suffering the human  heart can bear.
We stand at a precipice. I am increasingly  convinced that the only way back is to choose  to bind ourselves however possible to every  person we encounter. I say this not out of some  naive hope, but out of a grim reality, that the  alternative is rising nationalism and a brutal  sectarianism.
Who will I suffer with? Everyone, without  exception. We can only hope to be saved  together.
These days, when I am tempted to  give up, I often think of Christian de  Cherge, the prior of the monastery of  Tibhirine, the monastic community of French  Cistercian monks who decided to remain in  Algeria during the country's civil war so as not  to abandon their Muslim neighbors. Seven of  the monks, including Christian, eventually lost ntheir lives due to their fidelity. Pope Francis  recently recognized them as martyrs, clearing  the way for their beatification.
During the period leading up to their  deaths, Christian wrote often of the monks'  "martyrdom of love" - not their eventual  deaths, but their choice to live out - day by  day, moment by moment - a solidarity with  the suffering of those with whom they shared  their daily lives. Remarking that their choice  to stay was a choice to live "in constancy" with  others who suffered, he placed the brothers  in communion with the Muslims with whom  they lived, noting that "this place [Algeria] has  other inhabitants who are also our brothers in  constancy in this difficult time."
He often returned to the example of Christ  washing the feet of his disciples before his  Passion. In a Holy Thursday sermon, Cherge  wrote: "From experience, we know that  small gestures cost a lot, especially if they are repeated each day. We wash the feet of our  brothers on Holy Thursday, but what would it  be like to do this daily? And to all who come?"
For Cherge, martyrdom of love is accomplished   only through "all sorts of little things."
AII sorts of little things. What kinds of little things? Might we also learn  them?
For when I think about this moment we  find ourselves in, it is not the bombed-out  cities that frighten me most, the ravaged  homes and mosques, churches and town  squares - though these losses are devastating.
It is the destroyed relationships. In this I fear  that all of us have become guilty, be it from the  hatred that has built up in our hearts, to the  indifference - its own form of violence - that  has kept us from caring anymore. We have  come to believe the fiction that we can live  without one another. There will be no brick  and mortar that will repair this, no shortcut  that will bring us back again after we have  so dehumanized others and in doing so lost  much of our own humanity. We will only  make our way back day by day, moment by  moment, through all sorts of little things.
I have witnessed these little things carried  out by ordinary people, often refugees, who  have discovered within their hearts some  wellspring of kindness that survived war and displacement. It is in large part because of  them that I have not given up yet. I think of a  young refugee who fled years of bloodshed in  Deir ez-Zor in Syria and was stranded on an  island in Greece. He sat his friend down in a  folding chair outside the camp and lovingly   gave him a haircut.  I stood back in awe, witnessing this little  thing.
Or Sanaa, a Syrian woman I met in Jordan  who lost her brother in the war, and who  I watched leaning over a kitchen table and  helping her son with his homework.
An exhausted Palestinian day laborer who  gave up his seat on the bus after a day of work,  recognizing that an old man was carrying a  heavier burden, still.
A Syrian priest who was kidnapped and  escaped, forgiving the one who betrayed him.
A former prisoner who still bore the scars  of torture on his body, singing as he prepared a  meal for his friends.
A community of monks and nuns, who  decided to stay.


How can God possibly be indifferent to  such gestures? How can any of us? When  we have given up on institutions to save us,  on governments or aid agencies, on political  leaders, we place our hope in these small,  almost invisible acts to repair the world. Little  things are elevated to their proper place in the  story of salvation, as miracles, a dialogue of  pots and pans, often carried out by anonymous  saints - mothers and fathers and their children,  gardeners and bakers - who remind us through  their tenderness how to be human again.
Somewhere in a Syrian village, a father  plants a tree. A young man crosses the sea with  his violin wrapped in cellophane. A Muslim  man walks into a Christian chapel in a country  at war, turns toward Mecca, and joins the two  communities in prayer.
And the world holds out another day,  in expectation of almond blossoms, or a  symphony. ~