Sunday Tribune

KWAZULU-NATAL

Solidarity of peaceful resistance has shown itself to be a powerful force to overcome and triumph over adversity. The following is an extract from the foreword by Amitabh Bachchan of 26/11: Stories of Strength

- Extracted with permission from Penguin Random House India from the foreword of “26/11: Stories of Strength”, published in collaborat­ion with the Indian Express and edited by Kavitha Iyer. The copyright of this article rests with the author

anti-apartheid activist and clergyman Father Gerald Patrick Kearney, popularly known as Paddy, died in Gateway Hospital in Durban on Friday at the age of 76. According to his former publicist, Ella Thompson, Kearney was admitted to hospital after he was diagnosed with pneumonia, where he later suffered a heart attack and died. His brother and niece were at his bedside when he died. Kearney joined the Struggle against apartheid at a young age. He participat­ed by fighting the regime through religion. A memorial mass in his honour was held at Emmanuel Cathedral in Durban.

THE GATEWAY of India at first appears to be an odd frame for the type of conversati­ons that follow. It was, after all, built to commemorat­e a state visit of a foreign invader.

But rather than tearing down the Gateway after our liberation, we absorbed it and attached our own meanings to it by being hospitable and showing an openness to the world – while leaving it intact as a reminder of the British Raj, a time that also passed. And it passed because of our collective might. We overcame it by the solidarity of peaceful resistance.

The Gateway, therefore, in its contempora­ry complexity of meanings is a locus of reflection and debate. There could not be a more appropriat­e symbol to commemorat­e the cowardly attacks on November 26, 2008 at various places across our city of Mumbai.

To me, these attacks were a wake-up call. But the question I asked myself was: “Wake up, yes, but wake up to what?”

I woke up to a new era of violence, a new kind of violence – one inflicted by terrorism.

I woke up to the fact that terrorism is not an ideology. It is an act of scaring a peaceful people; an act of evoking the fear of sudden, untimely death. It is an act of negotiatin­g at gunpoint.

Terrorism is not an act of faith. Terrorism can never replace another ideology. Whatever the political rhetoric may be, terrorism is neither a form of justice nor an instrument of justice. It is the whimsical randomness of evil.

So how does an unarmed, peaceful humanity fight the fear of terrorism’s sudden violence? How does anyone who believes in a life of merit and hard work begin to believe in the authority of guns and bombs? Will armed mercenarie­s decide the future of our children? Will the threat of violence point us to the causes that we fight for? Will terror decide what is true or false, correct or incorrect, good,bad and right or wrong? No.

An estimated 2 million people were killed during the Partition of our country in 1947, and several times more displaced. When people are divided by distrust, when friends and neighbours stop trusting each other, when a nation turns into hostile islands of fear, then our world is broken into fragments, divided by narrow domestic walls.

This is precisely what terror aims to achieve. Terror does not preserve anything, it is designed to destroy. Once unleashed, terror cannot be stopped by a debate. An act of terror, therefore, is not open to negotiatio­ns or wisdom. It can only be repelled, repulsed and destroyed by a more powerful reaction. There are no two ways about that. A corrective action is necessary.

Terror must be rooted out. We know that the war on terror worldwide has not eliminated the root cause of terrorism so far. And it doesn’t look likely, if the same method is expected to generate different results. And here is where I think we must fall back on Mahatma Gandhi’s satyagraha, which in its truest form is the persuasion of truth.

More than 70% of our nation is moderate. And as moderates, we must recognise that to vilify a foe is no victory at all, but to understand a foe is the first act of strength in resistance.

And to understand a foe, one must first understand oneself. To understand ourselves, we must ask not what we are against, for that is defining ourselves by the ideas of our foe, by their power. Rather, to understand ourselves, we must ask what we are for. We can only understand ourselves together.

To understand ourselves as a collective is to find the time for debate, discussion, argument, listening to each other, trying to understand differing points of view, engaging, challengin­g our ways of thinking and honouring each other with compassion. These are the answers to violence and death. If we are to be for anything, then to start with, what we must be for is each other. That is solidarity, and history has shown that our country’s solidarity is as strong as an oak tree.

The time has come for us moderates to unite once again. It is time to invoke the Mahatma’s satyagraha of peaceful, nonviolent non-co-operation. We must boycott not only violence, but also everything that breeds it. We must rise up in one voice as a nation of moderates, and say: “No!”

To the terrorist that one “no” will have the most impact. It’s very simple: a parasite cannot kill and survive in the same host at the same time. We must refuse to host terrorists. And today standing at the foot of the Gateway, this is my prayer:

“All those who live for humanity, all those who live for the children of tomorrow, must now realise that it is time to rise, and say, ‘No!’ Uproot every weed from your surroundin­gs. Do not threaten, do not fight, do not kill, do not injure. Simply refuse to co-operate, at any cost. Do not feed the evil; do not host the parasite called the terrorist. And then, may we all live in the dream of Gurudev’s words: ‘Into that Heaven of Freedom, my Father, let my country awake’.”

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LEON LESTRADE | African News Agency (ANA)
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