Viewpoint After the observance, lifes complexity quickly
returns
By ARTHUR JONES
Many of us attended commemorative
events for Sept. 11. In the immediate aftermath of those events, what had we
heard that was practical? And, more broadly, what points do we find it hard to
ponder?
I attended two gatherings. One meeting was interfaith, another
primarily Catholic (and as I write this, Im scheduled to attend a prayer
service at a mosque on Sunday).
At both gatherings, as soon as the discussion went beyond the
immediate commemoration, it was amazing how complex the terrain became.
First, however, the high notes of this particular time.
Nationwide, the coming together to honor the dead was fitting, heartfelt and
built unity. The period that followed Sept. 11, 2001, has been a unique moment
for interfaith and inter-religious communities.
To some extent, Sept. 11 may have shown the larger community and
interfaith organization members their worth, the value of believers linked
together organizationally across denomination and faith lines. These
organizations did help hold the hands of all Americans. Understanding,
compassion and concern was strengthened by the existence of interfaith
organizations.
Next, American Muslims were the religious group hardest hit --
specifically and lastingly affected by the fallout from Sept. 11.
Much was said about the need to get to know better these American
neighbors.
One recommendation I liked as a starting point surfaced at a
California intentional conversation sponsored by the Marymount
College of Rancho Palos Verdes board of trustees at the Mary and Joseph Retreat
Center.
Some 55 people, Christians, Jews and Muslims attended.
Though only mentioned in passing, analogy was drawn between our
feelings today and the surprise and shock that followed the 1957 launching of
Sputnik, the worlds first satellite, by the Soviet Union.
As a consequence, U.S. school systems and colleges added Russian
to their languages curriculum.
The idea was proposed at the intentional conversation
that to better understand and function in our wider world, U.S. schools should
add Arabic to their curriculum. Many Americans, as individuals and small
groups, have apparently taken it upon themselves to learn more about their
Islamic neighbors. Those are good initiatives in neighborliness.
Take that thought global. Knowing our Arab world neighbors would
be enhanced enormously if, when we conversed, we could do it in their language,
rather than ours.
Apparently, convincing school systems is easier said than
done.
Akhtar Emon, an American Muslim who attended the California
intentional conversation -- hes an engineer, now retired,
much involved in building mosques in the region -- has tried for more than
three years.
The Los Angeles public school system would like 35 teachers of
Arabic. The University of California would like high school students with
fundamental Arabic as college students, he said, because otherwise the
university system ties up highly specialized professors of Arabic studies in
teaching elementary language courses.
The university would help educated Arabic speakers through their
teacher accreditation, said Emon. But, chicken and egg, he added, the school
system wants him to find the teachers -- and the students who would be
interested.
The school systems want the Arabic teachers but not the cost of
training them. (To see some of Emons handiwork, try
www.hadi.org/alif and www.islamicity.com.)
That said, on to the difficult territory.
At both sessions I was the person rounding out and summing up the
mood of the discussion. At each I pulled on the same unwilling-to-be-addressed
difficulty.
There exists no justification for the pre-emptive and barbarous
attack that Sept. 11 represents. Thats the given. And yet, might the
world have been different, and less accommodating to murderous anti-American
terrorist assaults had we, the United States and the West, for the past three
or four decades, made a sustained assault on world poverty and stuck to it?
While admitting that terrorists do not play by rules of justice, I
mentioned Paul VIs, If you want peace work for justice, and
Development is the new name for peace.
The analogy I used, which I borrowed from Sr. Rose Waldron, a
Daughter of Mary and Joseph who served in Burundi, was this. Around 1980,
UNICEF wanted to eliminate malaria worldwide. The discussion was widespread and
had a fine precedent in the elimination of smallpox.
The easy way of identifying the costs involved in defeating
malaria was that it was about the equivalent of that spent on one nuclear
submarine.
Nothing much was done.
And 22 years later, the United States has its first cases of West
Nile virus.
The intelligent audience understood the analogy.
Quite understandably, for we are a diverse society, not all those
present liked it. Some Americans continue to believe that the United States is
remarkably generous in throwing money at the rest of the world.
Another person -- and both points were well made and well taken --
commented that the oil sheiks had the money, let them spend that. Those who
work among Americas poor said, and again one can easily agree,
theres work to be done in this nations undeveloped and
underdeveloped regions.
How I see it, perhaps myopically, is that in the family of
nations, as in the smaller family, one takes care of ones own and also
tries hard for others.
But after Sept. 11, as before Sept. 11, get into the issue of the
United States having humanitarian roles in the world equal to its economic and
military roles, and the rifts are wide indeed.
Arthur Jones is NCR editor at large. He can be reached at:
arthurjones@attbi.com
National Catholic Reporter, September 20,
2002
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