Tuesday, October 23, 2012

July 12 - a day in Taybeh

This was such a wonderful day of our trip. We started in the morning with a visit to the town's Catholic church. After hearing a bit about the church from the priest, we went outside to witness the beginning of a vacation Bible school. Tons of kids around, with youth leading actions and dance moves at the front. Quite fun! We didn't know the first few, so had to follow along with the kids... but you'll be glad to know that the Macarena and the Chicken Dance are universal.

The priest then took us on a tour of the Parable House - a 300 year-old house that the church uses to teach people about the parables. The priest showed us examples of things that occur in parables but that might be a bit far from our every day realities. The part I found the most interesting, though, was the lower room in the house. This was where the animals would have stayed, and it was explained to us that this was probably similar to the building in which Jesus was born - the family would have lived upstairs, but made space for Mary and Joseph down below with the animals. Cool.

Wonderful Palestinian hospitality never ceased to amaze me, and we finished our time at the Catholic church with drinks, cookies, and a peace dove carved out of olive wood for each of us - so that we too could be reminded to work for peace.

Our group then split up to go to the houses of a few different families in the town. And then we had a cooking lesson! Very fun. The family I visited with a few others had a lovely home and we had a great morning. We cored little eggplants and zucchini, then stuffed them with rice, spices, tomatoes and beef. The dish took a long time to cook, so we passed the time with tea, fruit, and Arabic music videos. Good times. And when it was ready, it was delicious!

We then had a *very* special treat in getting to see the Taybeh Brewery. Very cool. And I was able to bring home a nice Taybeh Beer beer glass for a certain father who enjoys a nice cold one now and again.

Back to the hotel, then, for a bit of free time. I wrote in my journal: "The setting of the guest house here is idyllic. I am sitting on our huge balcony - terrace, really - in the shade, lots of wind, looking out over hills, olive trees, the Dead Sea. Perfect."

We heard, later that afternoon, from Jean Zaru, a Quaker Palestinian woman and one of the founding members of Sabeel. She spoke to us about faith, women and the occupation. While women in the West Bank face inequality from many different perspectives, Jean told us that she is inspired by the truth that we are all equal, made in God's image.

We had an interesting activity that evening - a lectio divina. This is, briefly, where you take a piece of scripture and meditate on it. We used the graffiti we had seen on the wall the morning before as our scripture - we were each to pick one bit of graffiti and then share some of our reflections on that piece with the group. I chose, "I was just following orders." It raised many interesting questions for me... Who wrote this - an Israeli or a Palestinian? Feelings of guilt in this conflict could be very entwined - if an Israeli wrote it, perhaps they were feeling guilty for things they had done while serving in the military. If a Palestinian, maybe they felt bad for not being braver, for leaving a house that was about to be demolished or something. It follows that liberation and freedom would be entwined. The occupation affects both sides in a negative way, I think, so ending it would bring freedom to liberty to so many.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

For your reading pleasure...

A blog post from another participant in the Sabeel conference that I attended this summer. Sam writes about non-violent resistance, and the clear example we saw at the Tent of Nations. (My earlier musings on the Tent of Nations are here.)

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Questions from Laura I - Faith and politics

Every once in a while, I fancy myself an academic. Not in the go-into-debt-write-papers-get-a-degree sense of the term... more so the pose-random-overarching-questions-just-to-have-an-interesting-conversation sense.

So I've been thinking about a few recently. The first set are about faith and politics. Separately but also related. Jeffrey Simpson made some comments about this in the Globe and Mail last week. A few interesting thoughts from this:
  • religion is a powerful force in the Conservative Party of Canada (Simpson's evidence: recent vote in the House of Commons on abortion)
  • some churches campaign vigorously against abortion
  • other foreign policy positions of the current government are popular with evangelical churches
  • evangelical churches are growing, "traditional" Protestant denominations are shrinking
  • "Social Gospelers" are "all but extinct in the modern NDP"
  • Evangelicals support the current government both financially and with votes
So here are my rambling, disorganized questions on which I will base my PhD someday (or at least occupy a dinner's worth of conversation):

1. Why are "traditional" Protestant denominations losing members and evangelical churches growing? Is it because of their politics that people get involved in evangelical churches?

2. Why are evangelical churches more politically active than traditional Protestant churches? Are Protestant churches afraid of scaring people away from their already-dwindling numbers? Is it like Joe Biden - we believe things but we are not going to force them on anyone else? Separation of church and state?

3. Is all of this related to the lack of overtly religious people in the NDP? What happened to the "Social Gospelers"?

4. For those churches that do choose to be politically active, why abortion? Why same sex marriage? Why not poverty, homelessness, inequality, the environment, etc.?

5. What about other faiths? What do they think about the interaction between faith and politics?

Leave some thoughts, pose more questions, discuss amongst yourselves, live into your faux academic-ness. :)

and even more July 11 - Ramallah and Taybeh

After our morning at the wall and with Sabeel, we headed to Ramallah. I wrote in my journal, "This felt like a real big city, where people live and work. It was neat to see that." We had free time in Ramallah and split off into smaller groups... I obviously chose the group that was prioritizing sampling Ramallah's renowned ice cream. (remember how ice cream is usually tops for me?) We visited Baladna - recommended by several of the Palestinians in the group - and it did not disappoint.

We also went to see two churches in Ramallah, and then to a shady patio for a cold drink (I know... rough afternoon). We stayed there for awhile and chatted - it was a perfect way to spend an afternoon. On the way back to the bus, we stopped in to a store to look for a bathing suit for someone who had forgotten hers (stay tuned for stories of the Dead Sea!). Like grocery stores, it is always cool to see what shops are like in a different country.

When we were finished in Ramallah, we headed to Taybeh. It was a beautiful drive through the West Bank countryside - rocky hills and valleys. Not like anything I've ever seen before. And lots of olive trees. Beautiful.

We stayed in a guest house in Taybeh with beautiful big, windy balconies where we could look out over the town and the fields of olive trees. We met one of the priests from the town, who told us a bit about Taybeh. The town is the only Christian town in the West Bank - other faiths are not excluded, it's just that there are no mosques or synagogues in the town. About 1500 people live there. The town is surrounded by settlements, but they have not had too many issues with settlers coming in. Two other notable things about Taybeh: it is mentioned in the Bible - after Lazarus' resurrection, Jesus came to Taybeh. (Taybeh used to be called Ephraim.) Also interesting - there is a successful brewery in the town. Only in the all-Christian town would you find such a thing... :) But more about that another day.

Taybeh
Trying, to no avail, to find the wifi signal

olive trees

Sunday, October 7, 2012

And now for something a little different... Happy Thanksgiving!

I noticed yesterday, to my dismay, that #100ThingsIHate was trending on Twitter in Canada. While this kind of cynicism normally drives me up the wall, it seemed particularly ridiculous on Thanksgiving weekend. There is so much to be thankful for. Seriously.

So I set out to tweet #100ThingsILove. It didn't start a trend, unfortunately, but it was a good exercise for me to think about what I'm thankful for. Here is my list (in no particular order):

Saturday, October 6, 2012

more July 11 - Christians in Palestine

The morning of July 11 was a time to think about Christians living in Palestine and where they fit into what we were seeing. The Christian population in the region has shrunk considerably in the past few years - it is now down to less than 2%. Many Christians have been able to immigrate because they have a strong educational background; this is because churches often have schools attached.

Photo: J. Yanishewski
We started the day at Sabeel's office in Jerusalem. We heard the story of Rev. Sari Ateek, the son of Rev. Naim Ateek, Sabeel's founder. Sari now serves a congregation near Washington, DC, but he shared with us that day what it was like growing up in Haifa and Jerusalem, and experiencing the occupation. He remembers the intifada when he was in school, and told us about the beginnings of suicide bombings, a few years before he graduated from high school. With the conflict at this whole new level, he went to the United States for college.

We talked about the fact that this conflict is made even more complicated and difficult by the fact that it isn't just politics - there is a strong religious element. Sari talked about the difficulties with the education system in the region - the different sides of the conflict have their versions of history, and that is the information that is provided to school children. He mentioned the situation of Israelis in particular, and how they often don't hear any of the other versions of history until they enter college - after they have completed high school and their mandatory military service.

Sari expressed his hope to us that there would be a strong Palestinian leader in the near future - someone who could get all Palestinians to renounce violence so that Israel would no longer be able to use security as the rationale behind their actions in the West Bank. While I'm not sure that that would solve everything, it would certainly help.

"One night, we went to sleep in Palestine and woke up in Israel."

We also heard from Cedar Duaibis, an amazing woman who helped to found Sabeel. She lived through the Nakba in 1948, so told us her family's story. Her family was living in Haifa, but they fled to Nazareth in 1948. She described Haifa as being, "on fire." She described how people fleeing left their keys with neighbours so that plants could be watered while they were gone - everyone thought that they would return. Those coming into Haifa found tables set for dinner, hot food, bath tubs running - people fled with just the clothes on their backs. Eventually Nazareth was taken over as well. Cedar said, "One night, we went to sleep in Palestine and woke up in Israel."

Cedar described for us then the advent of Palestinian Liberation Theology. During the Nakba, the Bible was being used as a source of oppression - it was described as the deed of the Jewish people to the land. So Palestinian Christians started questioning - they were trying to live by the Bible, to live faithful lives... and yet it was being used to oppress them. How could this be God's plan? People stopped coming to church - they were not able to listen to the readings that were being used against them. For Cedar and many other Palestinian Christians, this internal conflict with her faith was more difficult than the one surrounding her.

"There is good news in the Bible for everyone - even Palestinians."

Photo: J. Yanishewski
Rev. Naim Ateek, the founder of Sabeel, found that churches were providing social services to those in need, but were not discussing theology. He said, "There is good news in the Bible for everyone - even Palestinians." While the basis of liberation theology in Latin America focused more on poverty, Rev. Ateek focused on injustice. He set out to answer these questions of Palestinians by reading the Bible through Palestinian eyes. This work was published in Rev. Ateek's book, Justice and Only Justice: A Palestinian Theology of Liberation. Sabeel was founded to put Palestinian Liberation Theology into practice. The Center runs programs to help Christians draw on their faith when working for justice and reconciliation.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

July 11 - Graffiti on the wall

We started the day at the wall, walking along the West Bank side in Bethlehem to see the graffiti. A beautiful form of creative resistance. We saw expressions of hope, anger, peace, love. Many pictures are included below (you can click on the images to make them bigger).

After our walk, we went through the checkpoint again, this time singing a modified version of "O Come, All Ye Faithful." Another art form as creative resistance. Love it.

While we were going through, we observed one old man who had trouble walking on his own going through the checkpoint. He had someone else assisting him for much of the walk through the checkpoint - which was a considerable distance for someone who obviously had difficulty walking - but was on his own for the turnstiles. No accessibility accommodations, that's for sure. I gained a whole new understanding of the checkpoints that morning - how inconvenient they are for those who cross every day to go to work or school, but also how crossing them can be next to impossible for some...

O come all ye faithful, those who care for justice,
O look ye, o look ye at Bethlehem
Come and behold it, under occupation
O come let's not ignore it, O come let's not ignore it
O come let's not ignore it - tell the world.

Sing all ye people, sing in indignation,
Be with the citizens of Bethlehem
Sing out for justice, freedom from oppression
O come let's not ignore it, O come let's not ignore it
O come let's not ignore it - tell the world.
Deborah Maccoby, Just Peace UK 2002