"The spirit we have, not the work we do, is
what makes us important to the people around us."
A Benedictine Sister of Erie, Joan Chittister is
a best-selling author and well-known international lecturer on topics of justice, peace, human rights, women's issues, and contemporary
spirituality in the Church and in society. She presently serves as the co-chair of the Global Peace Initiative of Women, a partner
organization of the United Nations, facilitating a worldwide network of women peace builders, especially in the Middle East. A speech
communications theorist, Sister Joan's most recent books include The Way We Were (Orbis) and Called to Question (Sheed & Ward), a First
Place CPA 2005 award winner. She is founder and executive director of Benetvision, a resource and research center for contemporary
spirituality in Erie.
Upcoming events
Sr. Joan will give major addresses at two events in August. She keynotes the
Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) on Saturday, Aug. 19, during its
annual assembly in Atlanta, Georgia. She will speak to leaders of religious
communities across the country on the theme, "Remembering the Vision, Embracing
the Dream."
www.lcwr.org
On Monday, Aug. 21, she is the opening speaker at the Chautauqua Institutes
week-long celebration of Five Women Healers. Her topic will be "A Spirituality
of Healing: What do you weep for?"
www.chautauqua-inst.org
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By Joan Chittister, OSB
In the First World War, when diplomacy had ended and war was at full
bore, when communication systems were archaic and innocent people were trapped
on both sides of the line, we used carrier pigeons to shuttle messages from one
side of a border to the other. This time, it seems all we have left to use if
we want to know whats happening on the other side are people. Common
people.
Diplomacy in the Middle East is at a standstill now, too.
Our communication systems have broken down.
Innocent people on both sides of multiple borders have begun to look at
one another with fear and loathing.
There are few left who care for both.
Politicians are not talking to politicians: Israel is not talking to
Lebanon. We are not talking to Syria. Iran and Syria are concerned about
Lebanon and disturbed about U.S. willingness to allow unmitigated violence
against innocent people to continue. More than that, culture and languages make
us strangers to one another. And yet, understanding is the only hope we have of
peace.
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People, in general, have no idea what is really going on. We see one
another on our TV screens -- screaming, shooting, crying, dying, of course --
but by then it is far too late.
So, as Convener and Co-chair of the Womens Global Peace
Initiative, Dena Merriam and I decided to make some contacts ourselves, however
small, however simple those contacts might be.
As professional religious figures here, we decided, having created
conversations in both Israel and Palestine, that this time we wanted to enlarge
the dialogue. We wanted to go to Syria to talk to religious leaders there, to
try to make connections among the groups involved in this conflict who count
most -- the Israeli, Palestinian, Syrian and American people themselves.
The first step to opening that conversation was a conversation with U.N.
Ambassador Mohammed Javad Zarif from Iran and Syrian Ambassador to the United
States Imad Moustapha.
In this column, I want to include you in that conversation, too.
Ill tell you the four main themes I heard and the conclusions I drew from
them. You decide what the answers say to you. Do they make sense to you or not.
Why? Because the way you judge these positions can be very important to our own
country in the near future.
The two ambassadors, in separate conversations, made the following
points:
First, however isolationist we might all want to be right
now, the truth is that we are deeply involved in the Middle East. I asked
Ambassador Zarif: What do your instincts tell you about this present
situation -- the struggle about nuclear energy with Iran, the relationship of
Syria to Lebanon, the unchecked Israeli invasion of Lebanon? He answered:
It is the most serious, most depressing moment in my 27 years of public
service. Anything can happen at any moment because no one is in
control.
Point: This is a dangerous situation. Dont discount it.
Dont shrug it off. Dont simply assume that it will end next week.
What happens in the Middle East will affect us all.
Second, none of us can afford to excuse ourselves from the issues, as in
This is not our problem. Whats the most dangerous thing
about it? I asked. The ambassador responded to this question just as
forthrightly as he had the first. There are no moderates left on the
streets, he said. And in the Arab world, anti-Americanism is rising
in all parts of the population.
Point: People are taking sides everywhere, pointing fingers,
laying blame. The longer this goes on, the more hardened positions become. It
is necessary to bring people together to work out these issues , not to isolate
them.
In our own lives, despite the fact that we are far removed from the
principals in this struggle, from the bombing and the screaming and the
terrified babies, from the women running through the streets from their
shattered homes, we are the attitude-builders in our own country. We must bring
objectivity and concern to every conversation here if U.S. policy itself is to
be more help than harm in these negotiations.
Third, until both sides believe their concerns are being heard, the
tension is not going to go away. Ask yourself, Ambassador Moustaffa
said to us in the consulate office in Washington, how it can be that
despite over 50 years of struggle, there is only one side to the
story?
Point: There is a great deal more to the present struggles than
the dedicated intention of rabid radicals to destroy Israel. Israel, reasonable
people everywhere know -- even people in the Middle East, has a right to exist.
Existence is not whats at question: land is, human rights are, access to
resources are. These issues must be resolved at the highest levels and in
behalf of each of the groups involved if the radicals in each group are to be
marginalized.
Fourth, no negotiating can happen until there is a cease-fire in
Lebanon.
Of all the things that must be done in this situation, what must
be done first? we asked both ambassadors. The answer came swift and
clear: Your government must engage. They must talk to us. And your
government must demand the cease-fire. Why us? we asked.
Because, the ambassadors agreed, it is the United States who has the ties with
Israel that can make it happen and because the longer it takes us to do it, the
more we stand to hurt, not help, both Israel and this country itself.
This is the first time that Israel has been met with enough force to
require it to negotiate, one ambassador said.
Point: The longer this situation goes on uncurbed, the stronger
Hezbollah will become. The more support it will get from average Muslims who
have remained neutral in the face of this conflict for years. The more the
United States will be seen as the real problem, the most important target for
radicals of all stripes.
From where I stand, I think it is crucial to remember, for the sake of
our own sense of perspective and depth of decisions, that it was a Muslim who
foiled the plot of extremists against planes headed to the U.S. this week. Why is that
important? Because it is a sign, however small, that the whole Muslim world is
not against us. Yet. But they will be -- unless we change our policies. Until
we strengthen our relations with Lebanon so that there is no need for Muslim
countries to have to look to Hezbollah for their security, they will get it
where they can and fight what they think they must in order to keep it.
We still have enough time for people, not pigeons, to make the contacts
we need to avert this disaster. But, perhaps, not as much time as we think.
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