At Christmastime, we frequently consider that lovely passage from Luke's Gospel:
Anthrax has been around for a long time; it's just now that people have figured out how to post it. The problems in the Middle East have been around for a long time; it's just now they figured out how to use our own commercial air system to bring it home in a gruesome way. If we're going to get past a lot of the propaganda -- both of the combatants and the press -- and understand what's going on, we're going to need some help. Our government has declared a war against terrorism. Such a declaration -- and singling out countries that sponsor it -- assumes everyone is working from a "rule of law" perspective. This is patently false; the Middle East, more than any other place on earth, is driven by two forces that almost always take precedence over any rule of law and make virtually any country a potential "sponsor of state terrorism" -- shame-honour and careerism. Shame-HonourAnyone who has watched The Godfather or its sequels is familiar with the whole concept of shame-honour. Your honour is the most important thing; if anything come to you to make you look bad in front of the world, you have to avenge it, and avenge it in a way that everyone else gets the message. Everyone is subject to a shame-honour reaction at one time or another, but there are places on the earth -- and the Middle East is one of them -- where shame-honour is an obsession, something that drives people to retaliate with a ferocity that we in the U.S. aren't used to. The Bible, being the supremely Middle Eastern document that it is, is well familiar with the concept. Consider the following from the days of King David:
Here we have the classic pattern of shame-honour: David sent his envoys to the Ammonites, they dishonoured them (and David,) David sent his army and not only defeated the Ammonites, but also the Arameans, and made an example out of the Ammonites in front of the Arameans and everyone else. David was the man after God's own heart, but he was a realist with Middle Eastern politics. One of bin Laden's -- and other's -- greatest gripes is that U.S. troops are in Saudi Arabia. For him, Saudi Arabia is shamed by this; so he attempts to restore the honour of Saudi Arabia and Islam by attacking the U.S.. He doesn't care that U.S. troops are there to prevent another power -- Iraq -- from taking the country over. But he and other have other goals in mind, and that brings us to the other force that drives things in the Middle East. CareerismEveryone wants to get ahead in life. But there's a line where getting ahead becomes the all in all, where one places the good of one's family and country behind him or her to get to the top. At that point it becomes careerism. As is the case with shame-honour, careerism is an obsession in the Middle East, and it makes for very violent and volatile politics. Once again we have a good example of this in the Bible:
This was just one of several instances of Solomon liquidating his enemies at the beginning of his reign. Abishag took care of Solomon's father David in his last years; Solomon knew a veiled power challenge when he saw one. A look at modern Middle Eastern politics reveals that power holders there today do essentially the same thing when taking -- and keeping -- power. People professed to be shocked at many of the things they read done in the Old Testament that are either commanded by God or implicitly sanctioned. One should keep in mind, however, that old habits die hard. God's ways with the people he picked were progressive in nature and it's asking too much to expect all of the change all at once, especially in the tough neighbourhood that was and is the Middle East. Our government must recognise that it ultimately is not fighting terrorism but careerism. The Clinton administration understood the concept of careerism completely; it is hard to find people in American history that made the taking and holding of power more of a single minded objective -- with the wreckage of "friends" and enemies alike to go with it. But calling these people simply "terrorists" is not enough; these people are fanatical careerists who see terror as simply another weapon to be used to get to the top. Bin Laden's greatest objective has been the toppling of the House of Saud and taking over Saudi Arabia, and he has done so with help from others in the Kingdom who are interested in the same thing. A Different WayBut God did not intend for this state of affairs to go on indefinitely:
The concept of servant leadership is very much in vogue in management circles these days, but it is at its heart a Christian concept. When servant leadership becomes the norm, the kind of careerism, power holding and challenging, and shame-honour that we see in the Middle East -- and here also -- have to go. This is one of the principal reasons why the Middle East embraced Islam after Christianity; Islam makes it simpler to continue in the old ways. The West's embrace of Christianity has left a lot to be desired of, but at least enough of servant leadership has sunk in to make institutions beneficial to many people and not just those at the top possible. So now we must face all of this during the holiday season. No matter how things come out in the short run, if we do not face our problems for what they are, we will spend a lot of holiday seasons worrying about whether we -- let alone the sheep -- have anthrax -- or worse. This piece was originally written for Christmas 2001. |
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