Featured Post

It seems Pope Francis needs to brush up on his Tertullian!

It has been reported (in The ChristLast Media, I must note) that the current Pope does not like the phrase "lead us not into temptation...

"Let no freedom be allowed to novelty, because it is not fitting that any addition should be made to antiquity. Let not the clear faith and belief of our forefathers be fouled by any muddy admixture." -- Pope Sixtus III

Monday, May 08, 2006

Is the horrific slaughter in Darfur at an end...

...or are the criminal mass murderers in Khartoum merely going to start killing the Christians in the south again? Religion of Peace and Love, indeed.

It seems as if our prayers for Sudan’s western region of Darfur may have been answered. The genocide there, which has taken the lives of hundreds of thousands and torn millions from their homes, may soon be over. Last Friday’s headlines declared that a peace agreement had finally been reached with at least some of the Darfur rebels. Encouraged by the appearance that the plundering of janjaweed and Khartoum’s troops may be over in Darfur, it is also a good moment to remember another part of Sudan that has been ravaged by genocide and jihad, and its relation to the current tragedy...

Forgiveness? What's the catch?

Some in the media and in the Darfur advocacy community have criticized the southern Sudanese movement to reach out to the Darfurians. The Washington Post quoted Mohamed Ibrahim, the co-chair of the Darfur Alert Coalition, condemning Sudan Sunrise and its partner, the Sudan Council of Churches USA, for “creating a conflict by spreading the false claim that the perpetrators of the violence in southern Sudan were from Darfur.” “Violence in southern Sudan” is a dismissive reference to the two million people killed in the south and Nuba mountains in their efforts to resist Khartoum’s imposition of Islamic law and “Arabization.”

In fact, during this first phase of Sudan’s genocide, before the signing of the U.S.-brokered Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the Khartoum government and the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), many Darfurians swelled the ranks of Sudan’s army. They were conscripts, and they were African cannon-fodder for the regime in Khartoum that has always been adept at creating, to its own advantage, division between the different Sudanese peoples. The refugees from Darfur, when they meet southern Sudanese who have come to Chad to help them, ask for forgiveness from those they thought were their enemies.

Once again, bad government is the real problem. Big time.

There are some who are upset that the issue of forgiveness has even been raised. They think that it implies some sort of moral superiority. But this is certainly not the case here, and this misunderstanding misses the importance and necessity of forgiveness. One of the speakers at Sudanese Standing Together—a former Lost Boy—was the Reverend Abraham Nhial, who made it quite clear when he opened the meeting Saturday evening that forgiveness is not about manipulation, but about forgetting oneself for the sake of another.

“Forgiveness is costly,” Nhial declared, as he stood before hundreds of Sudanese—all of whom had brought from Sudan their own personal history of sorrow and death. Nhial explained that true forgiveness is not forgetting or denying the wrong that has been done, or saying that the wrong was something acceptable, but of putting it aside for the sake of those who are forgiven.

“You must not wait for someone to ask your forgiveness,” Nhial continued. “You must forgive even if they do not say they are sorry.”

“Who will forgive the Darfurians?” Nhial challenged, his eyes searching out particularly the southerners and Nuba around the room. And they stood, almost as one person. Nhial then asked the Darfurians to stand. As the rest of the room applauded, Nhial said, “We stand with you. We love you.”

Why, those...those...Christians! How dare they?

On Sunday morning, after a worship and prayer service at the Best Western, we all marched together to the National Mall to attend the rally. As we rounded the corner and came in view of the tens of thousands who were already waiting for the rally to begin, the crowd applauded and cheered excitedly for the Sudanese. They were by far the largest contingent of Sudanese—or even Africans—attending the rally. It appeared as if most of the rally attendees had no idea whom they were cheering for.

“Are you from Darfur?” I heard one woman ask an extremely tall young Dinka from southern Sudan.

And they seemed to have little awareness of who has been the perpetrator of the genocide—both now in Darfur and the one that took place previously.

“Was it Western (U.S.?) troops that killed people in southern Sudan?” a young student asked one of the former Lost Boys.

So it was good that no section or seats had been reserved for the southern Sudanese at the rally. As they searched for a place to stand, they were able to spread among the crowd. Over and over I heard southern Sudanese telling their story of over two million people dead and five million displaced to the friendly, inquisitive Americans.

That was pretty much the extent of the mention of southern Sudan’s genocide and the attempt to eradicate the people of the Nuba Mountains. None was forthcoming from most of the rally speakers. Many of the speakers were never involved in grassroots activism for Sudan in the years of jihad waged against the south and the Nuba Mountains. Even some of those who were involved spoke of the genocide of Darfur as if it were the only time Sudanese had ever suffered in such magnitude. The Clinton administration’s National Security Council point person on Africa, Gale Smith, spoke far more forcefully about the genocide in Darfur than she ever spoke about Sudan while in office. Another speaker even framed stories of his past activism for southern Sudan as if it had been activism for Darfur.

Well, what did you expect from the regime of ol' King Goober II? Morality? Ethics? Anything other than solipsism? Silly naive Americans.

As I took in the enormous sea of faces, the signs, the tee-shirts, the passion for the victims of genocide, and the determination to do something about it, I was torn between pride in the caring people of America and sorrow that there had never been an outpouring on this scale over the starvation, slavery, aerial bombardment, torture, and death that took place in Sudan’s first genocide.

Some mass murders are obviously more important to our moral and intellectual superiors than other mass murders.

My southern Sudanese friends seemed to have no such problem, however. They shouted “Stop the genocide in Darfur” as loudly as anyone else at the rally. They stood beside their Darfurian and northern Sudanese friends—grateful for the outpouring of support for peace in Darfur.

It would be nice if moslems all over the world would learn a lesson from these "Crusaders" they wish to destroy, but I am not going to hold my breath.

Now we hear there is a peace agreement. The main rebel group, the Sudanese Liberation Army, has agreed on terms with the government of Sudan. Southern Sudanese in the United States and the government of south Sudan have witnessed us spending all our political and material capital on Darfur. Now is an appropriate time to turn an eye once again to southern Sudan, and to the new government that is trying to forge a democracy out of jihad-ravaged land. As Khartoum continues playing chess with the West, using the deadly combination of the proxy militias, rebels, and its own troops to distract and preoccupy, they are always setting up their next move. If south Sudan is lost because we fail to see the next move that is coming, it will be unforgivable.

Lord, have mercy on those poor people whose only "crime" is belief in Thee.

No comments:

About Me

My photo
First of all, the word is SEX, not GENDER. If you are ever tempted to use the word GENDER, don't. The word is SEX! SEX! SEX! SEX! For example: "My sex is male." is correct. "My gender is male." means nothing. Look it up. What kind of sick neo-Puritan nonsense is this? Idiot left-fascists, get your blood-soaked paws off the English language. Hence I am choosing "male" under protest.

Labels

Blog Archive