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| AGW Welcome | The Witness Magazine |
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A Myth: We Are Not at War with Islam
I look at my Iraqi sisters and brothers of Islam, and I wonder about: The myth of precision: For two straight wars we have been assured that our smart bombs would land only on the bad Muslims and not the good ones. The myth of time: We have been told that we would be in and out. Yet by the end of the 1991 hostilities, we left between 300 and 800 tons of depleted uranium in that part of the world. Its half-life is 4.5 billion years. Radioactivity forever on Muslims. The myth of coalition: Coalition sounds like a pulling together. In reality it appears to be rending asunder the hard-won United Nations global alliance, dismantling our European partnerships, and stirring up animosity between a Christian/Jewish coalition and a global Muslim coalition. The myth of democracy: A former Islamic fundamentalist leader who has made a radical transformation toward tolerance writes, "I am frightened from the breakdown of democracy, transparency, international law. Is this the end of the democratic free world? They kill our women and children and talk about freedom, peace, and democracy." The myth of our rightness: I tremble when I read of the myth circulated at the core of our leadership. That we are uniquely endowed by Providence to save the world from evil forces if only we would take the risks of leadership. Because of our moral superiority we must not be limited by petty agreements such as mutual nuclear restraint, landmines, or global emissions. Whatever happened to the understanding that "we have all sinned and come short of the glory of God?" What about checks and balances? About all people being equal? Muslims, too.
For the sake of Muslims, Jews, Christians and the whole Earth, we had better embark on a massive, urgent search for the myths of peacemaking in our religious traditions. Not the myths that foster cataclysmic damage but the myths that tell the truth of history that is deeply embedded in the primitive stories of faith. We are on the road to war with Islam if our guiding myths say so. We are on the road to peace with Islam if our guiding myths say so. The myth behind the policy is what ultimately matters.
Also featuring this author: Read "Promoting franchises to end religious violence: an interview with William Swing" in Engaging Religious Pluralism, the December 2001 issue of The Witness. |