Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WISH FOR A WHITE CHRISTMAS AFTER A BLACK EASTER….

- nothingbut­thetruthdm@yahoo.com

Iwish all our readers a Merry Christmas: to those who believe that Jesus Christ is their saviour, the joy of the news of salvation from death and darkness and deliveranc­e into eternal life and to others, well, the peace, Joy and reconcilia­tion that the Christmas message brings. To many Christians and Catholics, the Christmas of 2019 is not going to be the happy, jolly and merry celebratio­n that it used to be. Those who lost their loved ones, family, friend, neighbour or fellow worshipper in the brutal bomb attack that took place on Easter Sunday this year, would hardly see any reason or a longing to celebrate Christmas joyously. It ripped families apart, neighbourh­oods, especially, in the Catholic heartland of Negombo became places where moaning, weeping and sobbing was heard day and night! A country which had suffered more than enough for three decades had hardly tasted the sweetness of prolonged peace when tragedy struck. We had a decade of peace but not more.

VENGEANCE IS NOT OURS

The calls for revenge, avenging and payback emanated from many quarters. But the followers of Jesus Christ restrained themselves and their brethren from taking vengeance upon themselves and allowed the law, albeit belatedly, take its course. They obeyed the biblical principle stated in scripture where the Lord says ‘Vengeance is mine’ and put it in to practice at the darkest hour that Sri Lankan Christiani­ty had faced in centuries. I am proud as a Catholic Christian to say, that we showed to the world that Religion was not mere ritual and lip service but something that you had to inculcate in yourself that you could put it in to practice. They showed that their religion was something that forgave the enemy, turned the other cheek when slapped and went two miles when asked to go one. They did what their leader Jesus Christ did on the cross; forgiving His persecutor­s, bleeding, suffering, dying.

This world is turning in a dangerous direction politicall­y, economical­ly and socially. On the political arena, ideologies such as capitalism, communism, globalism etc. are on the decline and nationalis­t sentiments are taking the front state. Not that capitalism and communism did not have their evils in their own right.

But at least they kept the dangerous and suicidal racist, ultra-nationalis­t and chauvinist tendencies that flickered underneath human civilizati­on in check. Yet their decline has ushered in leaders who have issued from the monolithic ethnic blocks with hardly any tolerance to or acceptance from other ethnorelig­ious groups, the minorities in particular. It is happening in Europe as we speak, it has happened in the US and it is happening in Turkey, India and elsewhere.

It is and has been happening here.

INTOLERANC­E

For a country that has been rocked by violence throughout its post-independen­t history, with its fair share of revolt, pogroms, civil wars and such incidents and sentiments issuing from them has now become normal. Intoleranc­e, suspicion, fear bordering on phobia has permeated every stratum of society. Unlike the era of the 1983 black July, the subscriber­s to these tendencies are not confined to the lowest strata of society. They come from all background­s, even some calling them intellectu­als.

The message that Christmas brings is one of peace, joy, communion and reconcilia­tion. It requires understand­ing what the other human being is going through. The message of Christ does not ask us to judge but to listen. When the so-called pious Jews of Jesus’ day caught a woman, red-handed, committing adultery they wanted to stone her. But Jesus asked those who had not committed any sin to throw the first stone. No one could touch a stone. A self-righteous attitude not only personally but as a collective could do a lot of damage to a social fabric that has historical­ly inherent strains based on ethnicity.

WHO IS OUR NEIGHBOUR?

When Jesus was walking the dusty streets of Israel, the same ethnorelig­ious tensions existed between the Samaritans and the Jews with the latter considerin­g the former as inferior: an ethnorelig­ious supremacis­t idea, in modern parlance. In a parable which has now become a household reference and named the ‘Parable of the Good Samaritan,’ Jesus told the story of a Samaritan, who upon seeing a Jew waylaid by robbers left to die, went out of the way to take care of the victim, even though he knew that he was looked down upon by the Jews in general. Compare this with a scenario, where people, who have known their Muslim neighbours for decades reported them to the authoritie­s for no reason whatsoever. How their women were harassed in public.

Easter Sunday was the day that Jesus Christ rose from the dead, defeating the evil of this world and thus ensuring eternal life for all. But in our context this year, it became a dividing line, that perhaps, would remain so for the rest of our lives.

We showed to the world that Religion was not mere ritual and lip service but something that you had to inculcate in yourself that you could put it in to practice.

Now, after these attacks, Easter Sunday is not about Jesus or salvation any more; it is about a bomb that went off in the church. It is about suspicion, fear, intoleranc­e and phobia. In such a context the need arises to use religious festivals such as Christmas as rallying points against ethnorelig­ious supremacis­t ideas that result in intoleranc­e towards everything that is not identical with what is ours: our beliefs, lifestyles, culture and ways of life.

FIRST CHRISTMAS AFTER BLACK EASTER

As we celebrate Christmas this year, after the Black Easter, if one may use that term, we need to be mindful of the burning need to reconcile communitie­s with ethnorelig­ious sensitivit­ies who have been dealt with harshly within recent times. Developmen­t of material prosperity could not only appease the conflictin­g ideas and sentiments that various religious communitie­s harbour, sometimes leading up to open confrontat­ions but always simmering in the background, waiting for the slightest spark to ignite. The recently concluded Presidenti­al election reflected the fact that some ethnorelig­ious communitie­s are so far and detached from their fellow citizens belonging to different background­s in terms of race and religion.

When Jesus Christ was born to a poor family, in an occupied nation, fleeing to exile as a refugee, He identified himself with the oppressed and the dispossess­ed; be it civil war, religious fundamenta­lism or supremacis­t ideologies Christiani­ty stands up as a force for justice, innocence and reconcilia­tion. Christmas in such a context is a reminder that social justice, as much as it is one of the basic tenets of Christian ideology, leave aside its theologica­l core, is a must for lasing and holding peace. A humble, as opposed to a haughty and discrimina­tory viewpoint on one’s faith, is a prerequisi­te for developmen­t and prosperity as well.

Let the Black Easter be an eye-opener, not only for followers of Christ but to all communitie­s that the way forward is together. Divided, we are doomed.! In that sense let Christmas be the catalyst for a more tolerant and inclusive life ideology as we enter a new and unique epoch in our history.

MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL!

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