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Walls In The Desert: Are They Worthy Of Our Faith?

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  • Walls In The Desert: Are They Worthy Of Our Faith?

    WALLS IN THE DESERT: ARE THEY WORTHY OF OUR FAITH?

    Huffington Post
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ben-daniel/walls-in-the-desert-are-t_b_650697.html
    July 20 2010

    Ben Daniel.Presbyterian minister; author, 'Neighbor: Christian
    Encounters with "Illegal" Immigration'

    It's nighttime in Jerusalem, the Holy City, the monotheistic hub of
    Abrahamic traditions, the very footstool of the Divine, and, as I am
    still a little bit jetlagged, I go out for a stroll in the cool of the
    evening. I'm staying on the Mount of Olives at a hotel that is several
    high seasons past its sell-by date. The toilet doesn't always flush;
    the carpet is torn and stained; but what the establishment lacks in
    amenities it more than compensates for in location.

    The view out the front of the hotel is breathtaking; indeed, it may be
    entirely unrivaled for someone like me, a person of faith fascinated
    by the interplay between religious traditions. From my room I look
    past ancient Jewish cemeteries, out over the Garden of Gethsemane and
    the Kidron Valley to the Crusader-built walls of the Old City. If
    my room were across the hall, I'd have an uninhibited view of the
    Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa mosque. For Muslims Jerusalem is, after
    Mecca and Medina, Islam's third most important city. For Jews, it is
    the center of the religious universe, and for Christians, Jerusalem
    is holy because of its significance in the story of crucifixion and
    resurrection. Everybody wants a piece of Jerusalem.

    I spend most of the day down in the Old City's warren of streets. The
    place bustles with locals, tourists, and pilgrims, Jews, Muslims,
    and Christians. Aggressive shopkeepers sell everything from religious
    trinkets to tailored suits. The smells are wonderful, the colors are
    startling, and as far as I can tell, people are getting along with
    each other.

    I'm not naive. I know that deep and complicated disagreements permeate
    Jerusalem's past, present, and future, but as one Armenian shopkeeper
    tells me after I compliment him on the broadly interfaith character of
    the merchandise in his store (he is selling icons, menorahs, stoles,
    and keffiyehs), "If you are from Jerusalem, you respect everyone. We
    grow up together and we are friends. Sometimes the politicians make
    trouble, and the press likes to write about the bad stuff, but here
    we are like family."

    Those are hopeful words, and I mull over them in my head as I walk in
    the gardens behind my hotel. From here, during the day, a person can
    look out over the Kidron Valley as it wends its way into the Judean
    desert. The vista is spectacular, but it's bisected by the ugliness
    of a wall that snakes its way through the landscape, separating Israel
    proper from the West Bank and the people who live there.

    A warm, gentle wind is blowing up off the Dead Sea, and I find myself
    wondering why humans put such faith in walls.

    Last summer I visited another desert wall, the one that stretches,
    almost without interruption, across the U.S.-Mexico border between
    San Ysidro, California and just west of El Paso, Texas, where the
    Rio Grande begins the work of demarcating the frontier along the
    southwest flank of the Lone Star State. They're not so dissimilar,
    these barriers. Both walls were built on land appropriated by military
    might. Both walls were built to control the movements of people who
    had lived on the land and had moved freely through the geography
    of the place long before the current topography became a political
    reality. And in both places the walls were built in the name of
    national security. In Israel, as in the United States, pundits have
    proclaimed the walls to be a success, but I believe that all depends
    upon how one defines success.

    There are practical problems with walls. No wall can be built higher
    than even the crudest of improvised rockets can fly, nor deep enough
    to stop a tunnel. Nothing built by one pair of hands can escape
    destruction by the hands of another, and the walls that humans do not
    destroy are breached, over time, by the forces of nature. The sands
    of the desert shift. The water that flows down wadis and arroyos will
    move anything that blocks its course. Walls are insanely expensive
    to maintain.

    The spiritual questions posed by claims of the walls' success also are
    problematic: are walls worthy of the faith we put in them? Will they
    bring us peace? Do they make a positive contribution to common good?

    Do they in fact make us better neighbors?

    If I were looking for success, searching for what it looks like
    when people live in healthy communities, I'd forget the wall in the
    Judean desert and look to Jerusalem's Old City, where people must live
    peaceably if they will live together at all, or I'd look to some of
    the smaller border towns I've visited where people tell me life was
    better when walls didn't separate families and communities. Before
    the wall was built in the Sonora desert, there was less crime, greater
    prosperity, and no one died of thirst and exposure out in the remote
    desert while trying to come north.

    The walls in the Judean and Sonoran deserts both were built after an
    influx of new people migrated into a place and felt a need to control
    those already living there. Such migration is part of the human story.

    As long as there have been people, some of those people have moved
    and settled down in places where they were not born, and when new
    people move in, conflicts erupt -- often violently. It is a drama
    as old as the myths that define us. Cain settled down and became a
    farmer. His brother Abel chose the nomadic life of a shepherd. Things
    didn't work out between them, but our past doesn't have to determine
    our future. I have to believe that humans are capable of living next
    to one another without building barriers.

    As I breathe in the holiness of the desert air and make my way to bed,
    Robert Frost's famous words come to me:

    Something there is that doesn't love a wall That sends the
    frozen-ground-swell under it, And spills the upper boulders in the sun,
    And makes gaps even two can pass abreast.

    The hopeful part of me thinks that "something" just may be the Spirit
    of God.




    From: A. Papazian
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