Tuesday, May 13, 2025
SABBATICAL 6: "When There is No Peace"
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In the Zoughbis' Home |

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The Arrest of Mothers' Day 5: 2024 |
Wi'am: A circle of empowerment |
And this is the kind of transformation that seemingly happens at Wi’am every day, and the kind of programming and empowerment centered here. If there is a spirit of peace here, and there is, it's not static, calcified and proud. It's Christ-like, humble and ongoing. In this sacred space, hope is embodied in relationships, celebrations, classes and support groups. In this sacred space, a whole city sees beyond occupation and apartheid the possibility of a just peace. Through the eyes of a young man who has experienced the worst of the world, and now offers back his very best.

Sunday, May 11, 2025
SABBATICAL 5: "Waiting as One, as One, as One"
After 63 years spinning around the sun.
Encouraged by my much more daring daughters and egged on by UCC friends traveling together, I found my way back to Razzouk Tattoo and asked for a tattoo (calligraphy) that reads (right to left, of course) "Christ is risen!" in Arabic. The folks at Razzouk were enthusiatic, wonderfully professional, and appreciative of the old man's spiirt in me.
I look at it now, my first tattoo, and it connects me to every soul, every single soul I meet now: the Muslim woman pushing her child up the steep hill on her way to pray; the dear Jewish friend with whom I reconnected (here!) after nine long years; the two-year-old in church this morning, wailing like the sky was falling during communion itself; Zoughbi and Tarek here in Bethlehem, so exhausted by all this violence and apartheid's (seemimgly lethal) grip; Lareen and Omar and Issa and the determination embodied in them all. "Christ is risen" has nothing to do with human triumph, and nothing to do with supercessionism or religious one-ups-man-ship. It has everything to do with us, with all of us, with this strange and strangely transfigured human family. All of us. Rising.
The Arabic word “Intifada” means “uprising” or maybe even “shaking off.” It strikes me now that that's what Holy Fire Saturday is really offering, that's what Easter is really all about: that we are not alone as we rise to the struggle for freedom, for justice, for peace; that we are wholly blessed as we lean into community and solidarity, press together to watch for...
Come, then, Holy Fire! Come, Shekinah, Sophia! Come, Sister Christ!
Saturday, May 10, 2025
POEM: "Fire Flees Every Tomb"
For Omar Haramy and Lareen Abu Akleh
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Demolished, Silwan |
No scheming settler can demolish:
A father's madness, sadness in Silwan,
As his children climb with their backpacks
Through apartheid's wreckage
On their way to school.
What no army, no checkpoint,
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
SABBATICAL 4: "Nonviolence is Anti-Occupation"
Tuesday Afternoon, Hebron
Issa Amro (founder, Youth Against Settlements) and Jeff Halper (Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions) have been nominated by Norwegian MP Ingrid Fiskaa, for the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize. In acknowledging this recognition together, they've written:
The nomination represents not only recognition of our joint efforts to confront Israeli repression, violence, displacement and denial of Palestinian national rights, but of the collective resistance the entire Palestinian people have sustained over the past century and more – supported, as our nomination signifies, by Israeli Jews of conscience willing to stand up for Palestinian rights in opposition to their own government and society.We met Issa this morning just outside his home, high above the Old City of Hebron--where he lives, and where he continues to build a nonviolent grassroots Palestinian movement in solidarity with Israel Jews and allies around the world. Along the steep path up, we passed an ancient olive tree (maybe 2000 years old) torched by Hebron's settlers. Miraculously, the tree survived, and branches were already sprouting green shoots. Hope. In an olive tree. Nature's resistance to apartheid and cruelty.The H2 area in Hebron is inhabited by approximately 35,000 Palestinians and 400 radical settlers now living in four downtown settlements. These same 400 settlers are "protected" by as many as 4000 Israeli soldiers at outposts and checkpoints in the Old City. While Palestinians in H2 live under military law, Israeli settlers move freely under Israel’s civil law. Due to this kind of militarization (wholescale closure of shops and commercial buildings; extended curfews, restrictions on pedestrian movement, prohibitions on vehicle movement), the Palestinian population in H2 is declining. Which seems to be the purpose of it all.
Issa Amro, Omar Haramy (Sabeel) |
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Issa, Recovering, July 2024 |
Monday, May 5, 2025
SABBATICAL 3: "I Witness Silwan"
The staring eyes say to people that we see them and they should see us too...we want to say that we are here — we love our land and our home.
- Jawad Siyam, Director of Madaa-Silwan Creative Center
What kind of art are we moved to make now...to bring light to the hidden places and resolve to those plead for solidarity and strength?
This morning's tour introduction to this project, and tour of some of the vantage points, is a reminder of the power of resistance, the gift of nonviolence, and the urgency of community practice. See this link to learn more: I WITNESS SILWAN.
Lower/Center: Eye of the Man Healed at Siloam |
By noted Palestinian artist Sliman Mansour, capturing the moment the man is healed and able to see in John 9. A joint project of Sabeel and I Witness Silwan. Connecting the Gospel story with the gift and responsibility of sight in a time of urgency, brokenness and transformation.
Eyes of Shireen Abu Akleh |
Bottom/Center: Eyes of Malcolm X |
Center/Right: Eyes of George Floyd |
Sunday, May 4, 2025
SABBATICAL 2: "Take, Eat"
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Figure 1 |
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Figure 1 |
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The Bread: Cathedral of St. Jacob |
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Dalia Qumsieh, LLM |
Friday, May 2, 2025
SABBATICAL 1: "Desperate Exasperation"
There exists a solidarity among men as human beings that makes each co-responsible for every wrong and injustice in the world, especially for crimes committed in his presence or with his knowledge. If I fail to do whatever I can to prevent them, I too am guilty.Karl Jaspers, 1945
Budour Hassan |
Though that ceasefire was tenuous and brief, it allowed the women and men she interviewed to "plan for something other than their own deaths." Just a little. Some version of a future. "Something other than their own deaths." And that phrase hits me hard. I see those around me wince too. That planning for their own destruction has been, and is again, a way of life for Gaza's people. Made in the image of God--but reduced to roaming bombed out streets anticipating their own demise. And of course, in the violent weeks since the collapse of that ceasefire, this is the daily round for so many, the strange way forward that is no way at all.
Budour joins us this morning in East Jerusalem, reflecting on this terrible moment and her work with Amnesty International, documenting that genocide, listening carefully to its victims and survivors, marking (in real time) the collapse of systems and institutions once trusted: international law, organized religion, even nonviolence to some degree. "My people are steadfast in our commitment to nonviolence," she says, "but we are justified in asking, 'Has it worked?'" Trained in international law herself, she lives and works out of Ramallah for Amnesty, rising every day to listen to the unimaginable, to chronicle the obscene. Though she is blind herself, it's clear to us all that she has seen more than we ever will, and understands realities most of us would rather not. When asked, late in the hour, what she does with the pain she is witnessing day after day, she replies simply, but sadly: "I will never recover from this."
Thursday Afternoon
If we are capable of compassion and at the same time are powerless, then we live in a state of desperate exasperation.
Czeslaw Miloscz, 1960s
Bishop Younan |
I'd heard words very much like these on previous trips, with other delegations. "We cherish your visits; but go back and do something about the politics at home. See our suffering. Beat your own damn swords into plowshares. We're counting on American leadership." I'm humbled to realize it's been, maybe, 15 years since I heard them first.
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On my long sabbatical flight from New York to Amman, Jordan, I picked up Pankaj Mishra's The World After Gaza, a thoughtful and even piercing reflection on the events of October 7, 2023 and the genocidal war following. An Indian writing from his own context of rising Hindu nationalism, dangerous and near, Mishra begins with his own concern for nationalist rhetoric, racial hierarchies and the "moral perversion" that follows. Germany, our United States, this Israel.
As Indian voters succumbed to Hindu supremacists, I found myself turning to Indian critics of the nation state, such as Rabindranath Tagore, who denounced nationalist Asians as 'callow schoolboys of the East': they, he argued, had fallen for a Western idea with 'high-sounding distinction' but which was actually 'one of the most powerful anaesthetics that man has invented', under whose influence people can carry out a 'systematic porgramme of the most virulent self-seeking without being in the least aware of its moral perversion -- in fact feeling dangerously resentful if it is pointed out'.
I found Tagore's critique--that 'the people accept this all-pervading mental slavery with cheerfulness and pride because of their nervous desire to turn themselves into a machine of power, called the Nation, and emulate other machines in their collective worldliness'--echoed in the writings of Ahad Ha'am, the pioneering Hebrew writer and opponent of Herzl who likewise deplored the nationalist 'tendency to find the path of glory in the attainment of material power and political dominion.'
Mishra, The World After Gaza
Much like Mishra, each of today's speakers insisted that what is happening here is similar to what's happened in these other places: the dream of a impenetrable nation state ("a machine of power"), willing and able to brutalize another people for security's sake, thereby justifying its own excesses and cruelty. And everytime...racial hatred stirs and rages at the heart of the project. What's especially clear here--but should be in other settings--is that the "machine" is destroying lives, families and whole communities. And faith requires our response: our love, yes; but our loving, active, resisting response. "If I fail to do whatever I can to prevent [these crimes]," said Jaspers in 1945, "I too am guilty."
I'll need more time to reflect on these last two paragraphs (Mishra's and my own)--so stunningly do they implicate my own country's "nervous desire to turn [itself] into a machine of power" (MAGA again) in 2025.
Thursday Evening
In our conversation this morning, Budour Hassan noted that her own academic background includes studies in the history of the Shoah, the 20th century genocide in Europe. And she said that it is particularly painful, especially difficult to see that genocide "weaponized" (her word) to justify and perpetuate this one in Gaza. How is it, she asks, that the oppressed become oppressors, again and again through human history? And yet, to suggest that this too--all that's happening in Gaza now--is genocidal is to face a vicious backlash and accusations of antisemitism. It strikes her as cruel and inhumane. There's no doubt, she added this morning, that Israel is imposing conditions on Gaza that are "calculated" (her word) to bring about a whole people's destruction and erasure.
Fr. David Neuhaus |
Like Father David, Pankaj Mishra worries that the violence of the past hundred years is not only catching up with us, but compromising our capacity for human "being" and human collaboration in a world frought with animosity and distrust.
These events (the Shoah, Vietnam, Iraq) which took place in living memory undermined the basic assumption of both religious traditions and the secular enlightenment: that human beings have a fundamentally 'moral' nature.
The corrosive suspicion that they don't is now widespread. Many more poeple have closely witnessed death and mutilation, under regimes of callousness, timidity and censorship; they recognize with a shock that everything is possible, remembering past atrocities is no guarantee against repeating them in the present, and the foundations of international law and morality are not secure at all.
Mishra, The World After Gaza
"Remembering past atrocities is no guarantee against repeating them in the present." In fact--reducing one people's wellness to a pattern of victimhood rehearsed and vulnerability defended only betrays democratic possibilities. Institutions for mutual support and community life cannot withstand the fear, the scapegoating, the rage passed on from generation to generation.
St. George's in East Jerusalem |
Lives are at stake now, he said: Jewish lives and Palestinian lives, Israeli lives and American lives, and our moral capacity to do good by one another. And the church that follows the Lord of Love can only respond. In love. In courage. In respect for the sanctity of all life. All lives. "Go and act."