Once inside St Peter’s Basilica, just to
the right in a very small chapel shielded with a Perspex-like window, is
Michelangelo’s Pietà. It is so much smaller than what I had imagined. It was in
1972 that it was attacked with a hammer, and despite my tender age then, I
remember it happening as if it were yesterday.
Michelangelo’s depiction of Mary with her
crucified son shows a youthful mother cradling the body of her son. Mary is not
distressed and broken-hearted. She appears serene and other-worldly. Yet if words
could fall from these stone lips, they would utter, ‘This is my son; my beloved’ echoing the words of the Father at Jesus’ baptism.
As much as our tradition invites us into
the suffering and death of Jesus, we are equally invited into the mystery of that suffering and death. It
is not pointless. It is not an end in itself. In the mystery is the revelation
of God’s supreme love poured out through his son’s selfless and gracious act.
Then from this death the potential of every human being is realised. Jesus
becomes but the first of us all to remade anew.
Little wonder, then, that Michelango’s
image provides us with a vision of hope, of anticipation and expectation. His
mother gathers a broken body and she offers him, her beloved, to all. This mother, this Mary knows what awaits.
May your Easter be holy. Accept this gift.
Peter Douglas
HEAD OF SCHOOL SERVICES, NORTH
From the Lone Wolf to the
Management of Savagery Amidst violence worldwide, it is time to take religion
seriously
by Jocelyne
Cesari - Professor of Religion and Politics at the University of Birmingham,
Senior Research Fellow at the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World
Affairs at Georgetown University and Visiting Professor at the Harvard Divinity
School
In the early phases of the war
in Syria, ISIS did not appear as a major threat to the West. Jihadists made
their way to Syria to fight the regime of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad with
little interest to carry out attacks in their respective countries. The
November 13 attacks in Paris reveal a shift of strategy, but also, a change in
actors of the global jihad.
Until this point, global
attacks were the defining feature of Al Qaeda, especially in the West.
Ironically, a few days before the Paris attacks, Al Qaeda leader Ayman
al-Zawahiri sent a message to the Muslim youth to intensify their fight in the
West.
Many observers have noted that
the November 13 coordinated attacks endorsed by ISIS illustrate not only a
change of players but also of the rules of the game. Yet they fail see that this
strategy is not driven only by the material, institutional, and geopolitical
features of the Islamic State. It expresses a binary vision where the merciless
and relentless "fighters of God" aim to destroy the "forces of
Evil." We should not underestimate the influence of such a vision, which
provides an ideology of resistance to the disenchanted youth, and therefore
will require mobilization of religious and cultural narratives that could offer
credible alternatives to this "cosmologic" vision.
The November attacks in Paris
and Beirut follow a war strategy inspired by Abu Bakr Naji (a pen name), author
of the tract called the Management of Savagery, which was released online in
2004 and used by the Iraq branch of Al Qaeda in 2005-07. In this pamphlet, he advocates
for restless violence and massacre in order to scare and exhaust the enemy. In
his own words:
"The tyrants plan and plot
together for the continued humiliation and pillage of the Ummah, the
suppression of the jihad, and the buying off of the youth and the (Islamic)
movements. Therefore, we must drag everyone into the battle in order to give
life to those who deserve to live and destroy those who deserve to be destroyed
... Thus, we must burn the earth under the feet of the tyrants so that it will not
be suitable for them to live in ..." (p.176)
The means to achieve this goal
are not only military, but also psychological. It entails attacking everywhere
and at anytime in order to destabilize populations across countries. It is what
Naji calls "waves operations"--which never end and maintain high
levels of fear among masses. The fight is also about capturing the hearts and
minds of youth in the lands of savagery by raising their belief and turning
their energy and enthusiasm into lethal weapons against the "armies of
Evil." The November massacres in Paris and Beirut, and the downing of the
Russian jetliner in the Sinai, are signals that the whole world will be the
target of successive waves, which will be more intense and restless than those
of Al Qaeda ones.
A military response to destroy
ISIS's infrastructure in Iraq--and to dismantle its material resources beyond
oil--is with no doubt an important component of any attempt to defeat them. But
will it diminish their global appeal? Probably not.
First, because only a military
response cannot defeat such an apocalyptic vision. Beyond the combat zones in
Syria and Iraq, ISIS provides a narrative--or "ideology of
resistance"--not only against the pitfalls of domestic and international
politics, but also against the personal disenchantment and anxiety of the
youth. What is needed is an alternative global narrative that is appealing
across nations and cultures. Attempts of counter-narratives are doomed to fail
from the start if initiated by western political actors.
Second, such a narrative has to
include some religious references, because interventions based only on secular
motivations run the risk of actually increasing the solidarity and empathy of
Muslims with ISIS, especially if those interventions are pitching the West
against Islam, as some American politicians have already done.
Like an efficient military
strategy, the search for an alternative narrative is actually a global issue
and requires involvement of all Muslim countries, and most importantly, non-state
Muslim actors.
In these conditions, it is
imperative that political leaders take religions seriously both domestically
and internationally and include it in any response to ISIS. However, it is
easier said than done because of the secular culture that prevents or inhibits
governmental and international agencies to take into account the religious
dimension of peace building, conflict resolution, and any form of positive
development.
The main reason for this
inhibition is related to the dominant but false perception that religious
groups and actors are not as rational, nor inclined to compromise, as non-
religious ones. It also neglects the crucial influence of political and
cultural contexts that fashion and shape the readings and interpretations of religious
texts.
In other words, the
understanding of the context in which religious actors are operating is key to
identifying the ones that could support international initiatives in favor of
peace or rapprochement.
It also means that such
international policies inclusive of religion will require specific information
and understanding that cannot be gathered in the high peak of crisis or
conflict, but rather through a prior understanding of religion across nations
and regions.
It is also important for Muslims
and non Muslims alike to stop repeating that Islam needs a reform. ISIS are the
heirs of the eighteenth-century reform in the Arabic peninsula, known as
Salafism, which is based on the imitation of the Prophet Mohammad at Medina.
This interpretation undermines the principles of plurality and flexibility of
opinions that are central to the Islamic tradition.
The exportation of this
"reform" from Saudi Arabia to the whole world since the 1970s,
benefited also of the discredit of traditional clerics seen as tools of the
authoritarian nation-states. It has therefore gained influence across Muslim
countries while presenting itself as "the true" Islam. The challenge
is for Muslims to regain ownership of their tradition in all its diversity. For
this purpose, centers for education and transmission of Islam outside
authoritarian Muslim countries are deeply needed.
To avoid isolating Islam as the
"problem," it would also be critical to create a global network of
religious groups and actors of all denominations and traditions who work
locally in favor of peace, economic development, and social justice. The key
word here is "local."
Too often, the action of
religion at the international level consists of high profile religious figures
signing a document enunciating the broad principles of peace and tolerance. In
most of the cases, these documents do not have any impact on the ground.
For example, the "Amman
Message," initiated by the King of Jordan in 2004, is a remarkable
document bringing prominent Muslim figures to assert--or re-assert--the
tolerance of the Islamic message. Regretfully, this document is not known or
referenced by religious actors in different localities. In contrast, a more
positive action would provide greater visibility to groups and actors who are
not automatically religious scholars and authorities, but who act positively in
the name of religion.
Introducing religious actors
and organizations into policymaking is not angelic or naïve; it is sorely
needed to overcome the one-sided perception of religion that is dominant, not
only within political agencies, but also among religious radical actors as
well.
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