I have taken part of a post I wrote earlier for this blog - reworked and expanded it for the assignment.
Earlier this year I
went on a tour of Israel and Palestine with a group of pastors. We were tourists and pilgrims visiting the
Holy Land. We did the things that
tourists and pilgrims do. We saw the
historical sites, we went to museums, listened to lectures, bought souvenirs,
and took pictures of everything.
During the trip I
frequently wore a keffiyeh – the Arab
head-covering scarf. My brother had
bought it for me when he was in Israel earlier.
They’re available for purchase from merchants in many cities in Israel
and Palestine. But I wore mine, not just
as a stupid American tourist, doing the things that tourists do, but because I
understand the symbolic connection the keffiyeh
has with the Palestinian people and their desire for a free and independent
state. I wore my scarf in support of the
Palestinian people and to identify with them.
During most of the
trip it caused me very little trouble.
In the northern parts of Israel, around the Sea of Galilee, it didn’t
even occasion a second glance. When we went into the city of Bethlehem, which
is part of the Palestinian territory, I was hailed by a couple of street
venders, “Hey Mr. Arafat!”
It was at Masada,
near the Dead Sea, that I had my first discomforting encounter on account of my
scarf. Our group had gone up to that
mountain fortress that was at one time a stronghold of King Herod, and later
was the last stand of the Zealots during the Jewish revolt against the Romans
in AD 72. Masada today is almost a
religious site for the Jewish people and a symbol of Israel’s national
identity, a symbol of their national determination to live free or die. While
we were there we saw a family celebrating their son’s Bar Mitzvah in the
remains of the synagogue used by the Zealots before their mass suicide.
As our group was
preparing to leave the remains of that mountain fortress I stepped aside to
take a few last pictures. I approached
the vantage point that I wanted to photograph and realized that my path would
take me right in front of two women who were taking pictures in the same area.
Not wanting to photo-bomb their pictures, I waited as one of the women gave
instructions (in Hebrew) to her friend on how to use the camera. When they were finished I said, “Shalom” and made to pass on by. The woman with the camera then rattled off a
string of Hebrew to me in return. I
apologized (in English) and said that I’d just about exhausted my knowledge of
Hebrew.
“That’s okay,” she
said, “I’m Canadian.”
Then she picked at
my shirt and vest and my keffiyeh and
said, “Why do you wear this Arab scarf?”
Not wanting to engage in a confrontational debate right there and then, and
also because our group was starting to leave, I made polite excuses and
continued on my way. Most of our group rode the cable car down from the top,
but some of us walked the long and rugged “snake path” down the steep cliff side.
When we arrived,
hot and sweaty, at the bottom of the mountain we ate lunch at the visitors’
center and, after the obligatory few minutes at the gift shop, went outside to
wait for our bus. That’s where I saw her
again – or rather – she saw me.
“There’s my Arab
American friend!” she called out. She
waved me over to speak to her. “Do you know what this means?” she asked,
picking at my scarf again. “Do you know what this is?”
“Yes. I do understand the implications of the keffiyeh,” I explained. “I know something of the history of the
conflict between Israelis and the Palestinians.” We engaged in a short
conversation there in front of the visitors’ center about the long history of conflict
between these two groups.
When she learned
that I’m a Christian pastor she said to me, “As follower of Jesus, you must support
the sons of Abraham.”
“But aren’t the
Palestinians, aren’t the Arabs, sons of Abraham too, through Ishmael?” I asked
her.
My new Canadian
Jewish friend waved her hand and dismissed my question, “Pfffft.”
Our bus arrived
shortly after that. I shook hands with
my Canadian Jewish friend and we both said, “Shalom.” The confrontation
was over. It was brief and it was mild,
but it wouldn’t be my final confrontation.
When our time in
Israel and Palestine was over, we returned to Ben Gurion airport to catch our
flight home. As I made my way through
the checkpoints in the airport I was stopped by a security agent because of the
keffiyeh I was wearing. The guard pulled me out of the line of
travelers to ask a few questions.
“What is your
purpose in Israel?” the security agent asked me. I don’t recall what he looked
like; all I could see was the firearm on his hip.
“I’ve been here as
a tourist.”
“Who do you know in
Israel? Do you have friends here?”
“No. I don’t.
I’ve just been here a few days as a tourist.”
He interrogated me
with firm voice and stern eyes. “You don’t have any contacts in Israel or in
the Palestinian territories? Who do you know in Israel?”
“No one. As I said, I’ve been here ten days with a tour
group. Now I’m heading home.”
The guard examined
my passport and my boarding pass, poked through my camera bag, and looked me
over before speaking into his shoulder mounted radio. He spoke Hebrew rapidly – but I recognized my
name being said. He stared at me as we
waited for a response. It was one of
those moments that seems to last much longer than the actual elapsed time. I could see my wife standing on the other
side of the checkpoint ready to cry.
When an answer finally
came back to the security agent from some unseen officer, he returned my passport
and boarding pass. “You should proceed
immediately to your plane, Mr. Carter,” he said to me as he handed me the
documents.
The Catholic
theologian Gustavo Gutiérrez has written, “To place oneself in the perspective
of the kingdom [of God] means to participate in the struggle for the liberation
of those who are oppressed by others (Gutiérrez, 287).” But in my normal everyday life I am not
oppressed or persecuted. I live a fairly
privileged life; as a white American male, I occupy a position of relative
comfort and ease. How can I identify
with those who are persecuted and oppressed?
I’m not stopped in
the streets by police armed with assault rifles. I’m not, in my ordinary life, questioned by
armed guards at military checkpoints when I travel. I
don’t live behind concrete and barbed wire barricades. I had a few brief moments of fear and anxiety
in Israel because of the keffiyeh. What is it like to live every day with that
constant anxiety? I had a difficult few
moments at one checkpoint. What is it
like to have to endure a checkpoint interrogation in order to leave or return
home every day?
Christian
theologians talk about the kenosis of
Christ – that is his “self-emptying,” the giving up of his place in heaven in
order to take on a human incarnation and to live among us. He did not count equality with God a thing to
be grasped, but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in
the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by
becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross (English
Standard Version, Philippians 2: 6 – 8).” He became as we are so that he could
identify with us in our struggles.
It’s not enough for
me, as a minister of the gospel of Jesus Christ, to speak the good news from
the pulpit on Sundays. It is a hollow
gospel that is proclaimed merely from a place of safety and comfort. If the
gospel is about life and freedom for all of God’s people, I cannot sit idly
silent while others struggle to live and be free. It may have been a small
action, but I wore the keffiyeh as a
way to identify with and to, for a few moments, participate in that
struggle.
English Standard
Version. Wheaton, Ill: Crossway Bibles, 2007. Print.
Gutiérrez, Gustavo,
“Theology of Liberation.” Gustavo Gutiérrez:
Essential Writings. Ed. James B.
Nickoloff. Maryknoll NY: Orbis Books, 1996. Print.
As-salamu alaykum wa rahmatullahi wa barakaatuhu wa maghfiratuhu
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