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Terrorist Attack Response Help
The unprecedented attack on the United States committed on September 11, 2001 has brought tremendous challenges to our country and society. Among those challenges are the spiritual and religious challenges before us. Here is a collection of material that may provide some guidance or help in this most difficult time.
This article is written by a missionary who spend much time in Pakistan. The article was given us by Rev. Fred Stock, another missionary who has spent a lot of time in Pakaistan. Fred and Margy Stock have been personal interest missionaries of Whittier Presbyterian Church for a couple of decades.
THE WAR ON TERRORISM:
REFLECTIONS OF A GUEST IN THE LANDS INVOLVED
by
J. Dudley Woodberry
My wife and I had just returned from Peshawar, Pakistan - the birthplace of
the Taliban and Osama bin Laden's main conduit to the world.
In a service celebrating World Communion Sunday, we heard the news: bombs
were falling in Afghanistan. As the
round loaf of bread was broken, symbolizing
Christ's broken
body, I also thought of our broken world. As
the cup was poured, commemorating
his shed blood, I also thought of the blood being shed right then in
Afghanistan, a land that had been our home.
Each bomb landed in or near
a place where we had been. Some
craters were in the actual dirt where we
had walked. When we turned on our radio we heard a recording of Bin Laden
calling on all Muslims to join a Holy War against the infidel West, especially
Americans.
Yet
Muslims had been our hosts during our years of living in Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia, and our ministry had made us guests for shorter
periods in most Muslim lands. On our way back from Peshawar with other aid
personnel who had been working with Afghans, we stopped in Thailand for a few
days to see whether events might indicate the possibility of a return to
Peshawar within a few weeks .As my wife and I walked the beach near a fishing
village, we looked up and saw the crescent moon with dark storm clouds gathering
around it and fishing boats with lights moving out into the darkness.
That scene started my reflections on the peaceful and/or militant nature
of Islam (symbolized by the crescent moon), on the reasons for the anger that is
driving the dark storm clouds of terrorism, and on what the response of
governments and especially Christians should be.
REFLECTIONS
ON THE PEACEFUL AND/OR MILITANT
NATURE OF ISLAM
In the news we have been bombarded by generalizations about the peacefulness
or militancy of Islam or by the equating of fundamentalists (Islamists) and
militants. All fail to grasp the
diversity within Islam and its
roots. The Qur'an is comprised of
recitations by Muhammad, believed to come
from God, to meet the needs that arose on specific occasions.
Some were
peaceful; others were militant. Therefore
either position can be argued for by
selecting specific verses of illustrations from history. The peaceful
interpretation held by a majority of Muslims is based on verses like 2:256
("There is no compulsion in religion") and 5:82 ("The nearest in
affection to the believers are those who say, 'We are Christians.'"). The
dhimmi classification, which applied to Jews and Christians in particular, gave
them the right to practice their faith as long as they were loyal citizens and
performed their obligations. In the
Middle Ages Muslim governments were commonly
more tolerant of Jews and Christians than their Christian governments were of
Jews and Muslims. The militants,
however, base their position
on qur'anic verses like 2:216("Fighting is prescribed for you.");
2:190-192 (you " Fight in the cause of God those who fight you and slay
them for tumult and oppression are worse than slaughter... Fight them until
there is no more persecution and oppression and there prevails justice and faith
in God."); 9:5 ("Fight and slay the infidels."), and 49:15
("The true believers are those who strive with their lives for the cause of
God."). Militants like
Bin Laden use the words I have highlighted in their rationale: Fighting and
slaying is prescribed by God. Americans
cause oppression, injustice, are
infidels (although the Qur'an is referring to polytheists); so Muslims must
strive with their lives for the cause of God.
According to the canonical traditions,
Muhammad taught that a martyr would have his sins forgiven,
be shown
his abode in Paradise, avoid purgatory, and receive the crown of honor
(collection by Tirmidhi). The
"suicide bombers" thus see themselves as performing
a sacred obligation for God and his community and acquiring honor and an eternal
reward. Furthermore, their
experiences have led them to believe
that they do not have diplomatic or military power to overcome God's enemies by
any other means.
Another question that arises is how the rigid faith and practice of the Taliban
fits into Islam. The Taliban have
their historic roots in Hanbalism,
the most fundamentalist of the four orthodox or orthoprax schools of
Islam. By "fundamentalist" I mean that they go back to the
fundamentals of their faith - the Qur'an and practice (Sunna) of Muhammad and
the earliest Muslims - and reject later adaptations.
They hold that their understanding of the society
of the earliest Muslims is the model for society even today, and it applies to
all areas of life. Since there are
plenty of peaceful and militant
examples in Islam, these fundamentalists can be peaceful or militant.
The Wahhabism of Saudi Arabia is a modern example of this Islamism
- which was militant when the families of Ibn Saud and Ibn Abd al-Wahhab were
conquering most of Arabia and destroying popular saint veneration from the 18th
century to the 20th century. Today,
however, its expression in the Saudi
government is largely peaceful.
From these same roots have grown the current Islamist groups starting with
the Muslim Brethren in the Arab World, some of whose leaders I met with secretly
in the 1960's when they were outlawed, and
I was writing my doctoral
dissertation on the theology of their founder.
They were pious and idealistic,
but there goal was so important to them that they would commit terrorism if
other means were blocked. One
member greatly influenced Bin Laden
in his student days in Saudi Arabia while others taught in the schools and
mosques of southwestern Arabia which produced a number of the plane hijackers on
September 11.
The Taliban are another such group.
These movements normally arise from the
interaction of a feeling of trauma, local conditions, and a millennial ideology.
The trauma and local conditions included the fighting between the seven
major mujahideen groups (with their rival ethnicities and leaders),after they
had driven the Soviets out of Afghanistan. The original Taliban
(literally, "students") were largely orphans who had lost their
fathers in the previous 15 years of fighting and were raised in the religious
schools(madrasas) around Peshawar where they learned little beyond the Qur'an
and the ideology that all would be well if they got rid of external enemies and
initiated a social system based on that of the early Muslim community.
After initial success against mujahideen militias, they were seen as a source
of law and order - hence got Pakistani support and recruits from Pushtuns (also
called Pakhtuns and Pathans) in Afghanistan and Pakistan. But power corrupted
many of them and many Afghans came to resent their strict laws and punishments
and the increasing number and influence of outsiders called "Arab
Afghans" that they harbored.
REFLECTIONS
ON THE ANGER DRIVING TERRORISM
Terrorism is a response to a build-up of grievances real or imagined.
Therefore, one cannot drive out terrorism without dealing with the grievances
that lead to it. The first and most
obvious of these is the Israel-Palestine
Bin
Laden, the Taliban's Mullah Omar, and Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei
ask where were the Americans when they wanted justice?
And Arabs and
Muslims around the world agree - especially since Jerusalem is the third holiest
Muslim site.
Next another obvious grievance is the continued sanctions against, and occasional
bombings of, Iraq ten years after the Gulf War. The reasons are obvious,
but pictures and reports of civilian casualties or U.N. reports of the thousands
of children dying from malnutrition and disease - the major victims - continue
to inflame passions. For many Arabs
Saddam Hussein was another
Nasser uniting the Arab World, to many Muslims another Saladin fighting the most
recent Crusade, and to many Third World people another Robin Hood stealing from
the corrupt rich to share with the poor. Sanctions against Syria, Libya, Iran,
and Sudan -- plus bombing of a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan without
convincing proof of its military use-- have fanned the flames of hatred.
A third grievance is the stage on which all the others play - the Muslims
sense of being humiliated and in
danger. For over a millennium the
Islamic empires
were the superpowers, and the Sunni Islam of the majority did not develop a
theology of suffering, for God seemed obviously to be on their side.
Then Western colonial powers divided the Muslim World between them.
Today Muslims
have not only been humiliated by the Jews in Palestine, but by the Christian
Serbs in Bosnia and Kosovo, by the atheistic or Christian Russians in Chechnya,
and sometimes by the Hindus in Kashmir. After the bomb
blasts that killed 24 Americans in Saudi Arabia in 1995 and 1996,
Bin Laden is
quoted as saying, "They have raised the nation's head high and washed away
a great part of the shame that has enveloped us.
"The ascending of the West is seen, fourthly, as affecting Muslims
in a number
of ways. It has corroded morality
with the flow of alcoholism, drugs,
materialism, sexual immorality, and arrogance through movies, television, and
two-way travels. Modernist Muslim
states have tended to continue the adoption
of Western law codes rather than what is believed to be the divinely ordained
Islamic laws. Economically the
world is seen as controlled by Western
global economic ideas based, for example, on charging interest which is not
allowed by Islam. To sum up,
Islamists are angered by the fact that they
believe they have s superior culture but the West, especially Americans, have
the superior power.
Lastly, with their superior power Americans have espoused democracy but backed
Muslim regimes that Islamists feel have tried to crush their own aspirations in,
for example, Iran under the Shah, Kuwait, Algeria, and Saudi Arabia.
For many years Americans have built the Saudi military bases and over
seen the training and equipping of both there military and national guard.
A significant number of the alleged hijackers in the September 11
REFLECTIONS
ON GOVERNMENTAL AND CHRISTIAN RESPONSES
Since much of the anger that has led to terrorism has resulted from years
of certain people feeling that the foreign policy of the United States and
others with power has been unjust, the first area that must be addressed is
foreign policy. Although Americans
cannot police the world, there are issues
like the Palestine conflict where we can help the opposing parties work out
solutions, and we must strive for a maximum of justice rather than just do what
is politically expedient at home. Since
one person's "terrorist" is another
person's "freedom fighter" and many governments in the coalition
against terrorism expect support for suppressing their own opposition
groups, such action will require a delicate hand - be it in Palestine/Israel,
Kashmir, Chechnya, Sri Lanka, or Kurdish areas of Turkey. Also the world
community needs to build on the opportunities the new coalition brings for
reproachments between nations.
Next, relief and development in Afghanistan cannot stop at the end of the
military action, as much of it did after the expulsion of the Soviets
in1989. Twenty-two
years of fighting, three years of famine and five years of Taliban
rule in Kabul and much of the country have made the situation
Third, as Americans call for revenge we need to be aware of the limitations
of military action alone. To kill a
"terrorist" makes him a "martyr"
that inspires new "terrorists" as the Israel-Palestine conflict has
shown. Furthermore a broader action, particularly if it kills civilians, just
increases the militants as the same conflict shows.
Coordinated international
pressure on a country harboring terrorists until they give them up proved
effective with Pan AM fight 103 and the Libyans - although less effective with
Iraq.
Fourth, although the Afghans were not able to hold together a united government
on their own in the early 1990s, American and other foreign powers need to keep
as low a profile as possible in any help they give to establish a new government
because the one thing that history has shown to unite the Afghans is a foreign
power on their soil. Christians need first to trust God to bring some good out
of the evil of current events according to Romans 8:28: "In everything God
works for good with those who love Him, who are called according to His
purpose." We have already seen
how the tragedies of September
11 have turned the "me now" generation in America to God and to each
other. Also, the arrest of
Christian relief and development workers "for
preaching Christianity" has made the world, including the Muslim World,
learn of the involvement of Christians in meeting the human needs of Muslims.
The
Taliban's subsequent expulsion of all Christian aid organizations from Afghanistan
got their personnel out of harms way and focused worldwide prayer for the
region.
The church needs next to prepare for the increased human need that there
will be among Afghans after the military action takes place. The Christian organizations
are already international in personnel. They
may, however,
need even more Europeans, Asians, and Africans if anti-Americanism develops in
Afghanistan outside the Taliban, which has not been the case thus far. Or more
single persons or couples without children at home may be needed if conditions
get more dangerous.
Christians need also to become more equipped to help moderate
Muslims reason with extremists. In
Afghanistan when my wife and I pastored the church
in Kabul, two people were arrested for giving out four gospels of Luke.
We were able to give a Muslim lawyer a defense based totally on the Qur'an,
and all the religious charges were then removed. Subsequently, when we
pastored the expatriate church in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and got too noticeable,
the government prohibited us from meeting in one facility.
We were
able to share with Saudi officials documentation to show that Muhammad allowed
churches as long as the Christians remained loyal. Recently with workers
in Afghanistan, we have been able to share with personnel involved arguments
from the earliest Muslim sources in support of religious freedom. We can thus
help moderate Muslim friends in this way because ultimately it is moderate
Muslims who can best deal with extremism in their midst.
Finally, we can look forward to a time of increased receptivity to the gospel
among Muslims. The attempt of the
Cultural Revolution in China to get
rid of Christian and foreign influence led to considerable church growth.
Likewise research at Fuller Theological Seminary's School of World Mission has
shown that wherever Muslims have tried to enforce Sharia law, as the Taliban
have done, and there are friendly Christians in the region, there is greater
receptivity to Christian faith.
Earlier in these reflections I described how my wife and I were walking down
the beach in Thailand just after our evacuation from Peshawar, Pakistan, and how
we observed dark storm clouds moving across the crescent moon, which symbolized
for me what was happening in our world. By
the time we walked back,
the darkness had settled in, but we noted dozens of fishing boats with lights
and a group of people on the beach gathered around candles - each lighting up
the place where they worked until the dawn came - and we knew what we needed to
do.
As I noted, we learned of the start of the Allied bombing of Afghanistan as
we were beginning a communion service. A
few days earlier I had been privileged
to preach and lead a communion service with aid workers who had just been
expelled from Afghanistan. As we
reflected on how God had cared for
us in previous crises such as the tearing down of
the church building in
1973, imprisonments, and evacuations, we felt led to make a pile of stones as
God's people did when they crossed the Jordan to commemorate God's care (Joshua
4). Each person carried a stone to
the pile that will be taken back to
Afghanistan when the time of destruction is over and the time to build returns.
October,
2001