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The
article by Rev. Burnside first appeared in local Wisconsin newspapers
in December 2002.
Theological
Reflection #3
ISRAEL'S
POLICIES ON PALESTINIANS IMPERILS ITS SOUL
By
Reverend Bruce Burnside
Madison, Wisconsin Newspapers
December 14, 2002
Israeli
security officials scrutinized our entry at Ben Gurion Airport:
"Why are you coming? Aren't you afraid?" We heard that
question frequently during the two weeks that followed. Fear is
epidemic.
We
went to the West Bank during the November olive harvest to support
Palestinian villagers, who are often attacked by Israeli settlers.
Often the settlers steal and destroy Palestinian crops. Today thousands
of Palestinians suffer tortuous and untold economic, physical and
emotional despair from Israel's systematic and insidious policies
that destroy their olive groves, decimate villages, kill countless
innocents and foment despair, all under the sham of security.
This
was the fifth trip for my wife and me. Increasingly we have witnessed
vanishing hope and mounting fear.
We
felt it on a rooftop with villagers in Kufr Laqif, watching military
planes explode flares all around the houses throughout the night,
and we experienced it with a brave, gentle man forced to beg settlers
day after day for ermission to harvest his own olives, which are
now enclosed by settlement fences.
We
met it in the eyes of a dispirited family of 10, made to live in
a metal shipping container after Israeli bulldozers demolished their
house three times.
We
walked through it at the Jenin refugee camp after children and adults
were mercilessly buried alive by bulldozers crushing homes into
a landscape that now looks like moon craters.
We
were told about it by a man at church in Bethlehem who sat between
his mother and brother, "feeling the warmth leave their hands"
after Israeli assassins shot them in their home.
We
saw it at Jayus, where Israeli soldiers launched tear gas and bullets
into a peaceful protest against the building of an apartheid wall
to encircle the West Bank. It will make the Berlin Wall look like
a snow fence in comparison.
We
heard it from children, learning too much hatred and too little
justice.
We
endured it at endless roadblocks designed for humiliation, not security,
which prevent Palestinian travel from village to village, students
from going to school, workers getting to jobs, sick reaching hospitals,
families seeing family, markets being reached. ... We viewed it
in landscapes strangled by hundreds of illegal Israeli settlements
that devour not just Palestinian land and economy but hope itself.
Strangely,
there is another heartbreak. Christian Zionists - many from the
United States - express a religious fervor no less fanatical than
Muslim extremists possessed by a spirit that motivates them to destroy
others in the name of God. Christian Zionists raise millions of
dollars for Israel. They do it to hasten the return of Christ, which
according to their own peculiar interpretation of biblical prophecy
cannot occur until all Jews have returned to Israel to rebuild the
Temple. The dark humor in this odd alliance is that those same Christians
fully expect Christ's return to inaugurate the end of Judaism. It
is a mutual exploitation. Israel, not duped by such motives, is
happy to receive its money but loses no sleep over such eschatological
nightmares.
As
a Christian I also read biblical prophecy but not to unlock hidden
calculations about end times, which Jesus warns is a pointless endeavor.
The biblical prophets voice God's demand for justice among all nations.
Micah warned: "What does the Lord require of you, but to do
justice, to love kindness and to walk humbly with your God?"
And Jeremiah: "Do not trust in these deceptive words: 'This
is the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the temple of
the Lord.' For if you truly amend your ways and your doings, if
you truly execute justice one with another, if you do not oppress
the alien, the fatherless or the widow, or shed innocent blood ...
then I will let you dwell in this place."
A young
Israeli student at Hebrew University named David said to me on our
last day in Jerusalem: "All this madness will end, and justice
will win. History has proven that nations built on militarism and
oppression cannot survive. I only pray that our madness will end
before Israel has lost its soul."
David
is right, justice will prevail. But it is not only Israel that is
in peril of losing its soul. That danger looms before any who side
with hateful rhetoric, evil oppression and inhumane codes that must
be fortified by bulldozers, razor wire, monumental walls, assassins,
torture, curfews, bombs and tear gas. Israel has chosen that policy.
It is time for us to cease supporting it.
Reverend
Bruce Burnside is pastor of St. Stephen's Lutheran Church in Monona,
Wisconsin.
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