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Dear
[% recip.FIRSTNAME({ifEmpty='Friend'}) %],
This
Sunday is Palm Sunday. In preparation for that Holy Day, we at
Hope for Peace & Justice thought the following commentary
by Rabbi Arthur Waskow was most appropriate. We hope you will
hear his prophetic wisdom and forward this to your family and
friends.
PHARAOH OR FREEDOM IN AMERICA?
by Rabbi Arthur Waskow *
There are four traditional questions that are recited at the Passover
Seder. But the real first question is this:
"Is Pharaoh
our god, or is the Breath of Life?"
From Rabbi
Jesus marching in Jerusalem against the Roman Empire just before
Passover time ("Palm Sunday") down to Fannie
Lou Hamer chanting Black American freedom songs like "Go Down,
Moses," the Exodus story has been used for centuries as an
inspiration for resistance to tyrants. We should also pay attention
to the other side of the story: its brilliant description of Pharaoh's
addiction to top-down, unaccountable power. We should pay attention
because we are living through this history in America today.
The story begins
at the end of the Book of Genesis with a Pharaoh who feeds the
whole nation during famine -- at the price of taking over all
their land, turning yeoman farmers into serfs. Then comes a Pharaoh
who turns his absolute power into a military addiction -- an
aggressive army of chariots and an internal police that scapegoats
the Israelite "foreign element," enforces
slavery, and attempts genocide. Finally this addiction to coercion
shapes a Pharaoh who cannot step back from his own need for control
and violence, even though it brings about disaster for himself
and his country.
Pharaoh begins
by hardening his own heart to the plight of the poor and powerless,
and after a series of disasters (the "plagues")
brought on by his own arrogance, his addiction takes over.
God -- read "Reality" --
takes over, and from then on it is God Who hardens his heart.
What is this like? -- Use heroin once, twice, thrice - and you
are making a free choice. But at some point the addiction takes
over, Reality takes over, God takes over. Now it is the heroin
that is doing you, not you doing heroin.
If you choose hard-heartedness so long you get addicted to it,
at some point you are no longer choosing: God, Reality, is hardening
your heart.
And arrogance is not only a moral and spiritual malady. It breeds
stupidity. For those who are utterly convinced of their own absolute
rightness cannot hear the warnings of others, cannot pay attention
to the signals from the world around them.
Pharaoh depends
more and more on violence to control the rebellious world ---
rebellious workers, his own rebellious daughter, the rebellious
earth itself. Even when Pharaoh's own advisers shriek at him, "You are destroying Egypt!" he
can no longer turn back.
At each stage, at each plague, Pharaoh pauses for a moment, but
then falls back into its addictive march to disaster.
We have seen
this happen in Washington -- twice. In June 2002, the Environmental
Protection Agency reported to the UN a bleak picture of the probable
effects of global "warming" on
the US itself. A few weeks later, a reporter asked the President
what he thought of the report. "Ohhh, bureaucrats!" sneered
the president. Even a warning from his own advisers that his policies
were endangering America did not deter him.
Just a few
months ago, the same scenario. The Iraq Study Group, made up
of Establishment luminaries (structurally, our equivalent of "Pharaoh's own advisers"),
warned that the Iraq war was weakening America. They called for
a staged withdrawal of troops from Iraq and for direct discussions
with Syria and Iran. But the Bush Administration's pharaoh-like
addiction to power and violence took over once again, and it
decided to send more Americans to die in Iraq and decided to
threaten - and perhaps to consummate - a war against Iran.
Today, we face
not merely a single person but a set of interlocking institutions
that are our "Pharaoh" --
Big Oil, the swollen military, the Imperial White House. This Pharaoh
has so addicted itself to its own uncontrollable power that it
can no longer make a free choice.
Unfortunately, when those who have great power insulate themselves
in arrogance and violence, the disasters they create do not wound
only themselves. They wound the whole society.
- They chose to ignore evidence that Al Qaeda was preparing
a major strike inside the US,
- chose to ignore warnings of plans for a airliner hijacking,
- chose to ignore scientists' warnings about the onrushing
climate crisis of global scorching,
- chose to ignore all the warnings that an invasion of Iraq
would mire the US in a disastrous and unending occupation,
- chose to ignore all the evidence that Saddam had no mass-destruction
weapons, and chose to invent evidence that he did,
- chose to smear, humiliate, and fire honest officials who
questioned these falsities;
- chose to ignore warnings of hurricane disaster in New Orleans
and chose to ignore the plight of hundreds of thousands of people
who could not evacuate the city,
- chose as Attorney-General, Chief Justice, and Associate
Justice of the Supreme Court supporters of Presidential power to
order the use of torture despite US and international law,
- chose to ignore the health and educational needs of Americans
in order to funnel obscene amounts of money to those already rich.
The results of this arrogance have been enormous disasters.
Plagues:
- Iraq.
- New Orleans.
- The advance of global scorching and the melting of the Arctic
ice.
- The disappearance of health insurance for one-fourth of
the American people.
- The debacle of care for veterans at Walter Reed Army Hospital.
- The Oil/ / Bomb/ Power interlocking Pharaoh sent the present
US government to war, killing more than 3,200 Americans
so far and somewhere between 100,000 and 500,000 Iraqis, partly for control
of oil.
Katrina's ferocity owed a great deal to the global
scorching that heated the Gulf beyond all historical
records. And much of that scorching came from the over-use
of oil. The hurricane's
fury owed a great to the oil wells that made tatters of the
Gulf Coast wetlands that had absorbed past storms. Many died
because after the hurricane disaster, the National Guard that
usually rescues and protects was far far away, fighting for
oil. An entire city shattered, thousands dead, many
more homeless. In great part for oil.
People die - and Big Oil makes the highest profits in world history.
In the biblical
account of Pharaoh's downfall, YHWH, the "Breath
of Life," acts almost independently of human resistance. Pharaoh's
oppression of the poor brings the earth itself into rebellion,
and that is ultimately what topples him. In our world, it is possible
for grass-roots energies to check the power of institutionalized
pharaonic power.
We are not
Pharaoh's "advisers." We are
the sovereign people of the United States. Through elections,
through mass demonstrations in Washington, through en-masse constituent
visits to local district offices of members of Congress, through
direct actions of refusal to cooperate with the machinery of
war and oiloholic addiction, we can draw on the God-power inherent
within us to check the unbridled use of Pharaoh's power in our
lives. Against our lives.
Congressional
votes to force an end to the Iraq war are the first firm action
by our representatives to say to the interlocking institutions
of Big Oil, Big Army, and Big Presidency --"We will not obey
your murderous orders, Pharaoh!" -- just as the ancient midwives
Shifra and Puah refused to obey Pharaoh's murderous decree. I wish
Congress had set the deadline much sooner, but they have remembered
the Constitution, have remembered that the American people is sovereign,
and have taken the first step forward in standing up to Pharaoh.
Will they keep
moving forward? On the war? On the oiloholic addiction and its "drug lords" -- Big Oil -- that are dooming us
to global scorching? On ending and punishing the disgusting use
of torture and the illegal behavior of the FBI — our modern
Pharaoh's modern "overseers"? It is only if we take our
stand that our representatives will stand fast.
The midwives who refused Pharaoh's murderous orders revered the
God Who is the Breath of Life, more than they feared the Pharaoh
who claimed to be god --- and whom all Egypt obeyed as a god until
that moment. Today it is the same question that we need to face:
Is the Oil / Blood/Bomb interlock our god, or not? Is our oiloholic
addiction our god, or not? Is Pharaoh our god or not? That is the
root of our crisis, as it was so long ago.
Palm Sunday, Passover, our memories of Martin Luther King on April
4 -- are all moments for us to face this question - the first question.
-----------------------
* Rabbi Arthur
Waskow is director of The
Shalom Center and the author
of many books - some on US foreign and military policy and some
on Jewish thought and practice. Most recently he is a co-author
of The Tent of Abraham (Beacon, 2006). Permission is granted
to use this essay in celebrations of Palm Sunday, Passover, or
April 4, so long as this credit passage is included.
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