Saturday, December 22, 2007

The Last Vocation of Christianity

The 2007 Christmas message of Michel Sabbah, the Latin Patriarch and Archbishop of Jerusalem, is very cogent: it sharply criticizes the occupation while counseling against "talk about creating 'religious' States" in historic Palestine. The last vocation of Christianity may very well be to be the mediator between Jews and Muslims in the Middle East.

Moreover, in the message Sabbah cites Jeremiah 6:14, perhaps the most fitting rejoinder to Annapolis:
They dress the wound of my people
as though it were not serious.
'Peace, peace,' they say,
when there is no peace.

Update

Yoshie Furuhashi, "La última vocación del Cristianismo," Traducción Julio Fernández Baraibar, Critical Montages, 25 December 2007.

1 comment:

  1. You might figure an Iraqi communist raised in an Islamic tradition had
    one of the more eloquent and poetic messages about Christ for the world.
    CJ


    https://www.bu.edu/agni/poetry/print/1975/5-sayyab-messiah.html

    The Messiah After the Crucifixion
    by Badr Shakir al-Sayyab
    translated from the Arabic by B. M. Bennani



    After I was brought down, I heard the winds
    Whip the palm trees with wild laments;
    Footsteps receded into infinity. Wounds
    And the cross I was nailed to all afternoon
    Didn't kill me. I listened. A cry of grief
    Crossed the plain between me and the city
    Like a hawser pulling a ship
    Destined to sink. The cry
    Was a thread of light between morning
    And night in sad winter sky.
    Despite all this, the city fell asleep.

    When the orange and mulberry trees bloom
    When my village Jaykour reaches the limits of fantasy
    When grass grows green and sings with fragrance
    And the sun suckles it with brilliance
    When even darkness grows green
    Warmth touches my heart and my blood flows into earth
    My heart becomes sun, when sun throbs with light
    My heart become earth, throbbing with wheat, blossom
    and sweet water
    My heart is water, an ear of corn
    Its death is resurrection. It lives in him who eats
    The dough, round as a little breast, life's breast.
    I died by fire. When I burned, the darkness of my clay
    disappeared. Only God remained.
    I was the beginning, and in the beginning was poverty
    I died so bread would be eaten in my name
    So I would be sown in season.
    Many are the lives I'll live. In every soil
    I'll become a future, a seed, a generation of men
    A drop of blood, or more, in every man's heart.

    Then I returned. When Judas saw me he turned pale
    I was his secret!
    He was a shadow of mine, grown dark
    The frozen image of an idea
    From which life was plucked
    He feared I might reveal death in his eyes
    (his eyes were a rock
    behind which he hid his death)
    He feared my warmth. It was a threat to him
    so he betrayed it.
    "Is this you? Or is it my shadow grown white
    emitting light?
    Men die only once! That's what our fathers said
    That's what they taught us. Or was it a lie?!"
    That's what he said when he saw me. His whole face spoke.

    I hear footsteps, approaching and falling
    The tomb rumbles with their fall
    Have they come again? Who else could it be?
    Their falling footsteps follow me
    I lay rocks on my chest
    Didn't they crucify me yesterday? Yet here I am!
    Who could know that I . . . ? Who?
    And as for Judas and his friends, no one will believe them.
    Their footsteps follow me and fall.

    Here I am now, naked in my dank tomb
    Yesterday I curled up like a thought, a bud
    Beneath my shroud of snow. My blood bloomed from moisture
    I was then a thin shadow between night and day.
    When I burst my soul into treasures and peeled it like fruit
    When I turned my pockets into swaddling clothes
    and my sleeves into a cover
    When I kept the bones of little children
    warm within my flesh
    And stripped my wounds to dress the wound of another
    The wall between me and God disappeared.
    The soldiers surprised even my wounds and my heartbeats
    They surprised all that wasn't dead
    even if it was a tomb
    They took me by surprise the way a flock of starving birds
    pluck the fruit of a palm tree in a deserted village.

    The rifles are pointed and have eyes
    with which they devour my road
    Their fire dreams of my crucifixion
    Their eyes are made of fire and iron
    The eyes of my people are light in the skies
    they shine with memory and love.
    Their rifles relieve me of my burden;
    my cross grows moist. How small
    Such death is! My death. And yet how great!

    After I was nailed to the cross, I cast my eyes
    toward the city
    I could hardly recognize the plain, the wall, the cemetery
    Something, as far as my eyes could see, sprung forth
    Like a forest in bloom
    Everywhere there was a cross and a mourning mother
    Blessed be the Lord!
    Such are the pains of a city in labor.

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