August 22, 2013

"Light and Darkness"


Received an email from a friend – thoughts to share – thus to my friend thank you for the courage to share – c

 

Twice a week I have the great privilege of driving along the western shore of the Sea of Galilee on my way to work.   At 7:30 in the morning the sun sits above the Golan Heights and shines down like a spot light on the lake.  There are usually some fishing boats out on the water, and not many cars on the road.  The last two days the mornings have been hazy, so the light from the sun is refracted into separate beams which then merge into one giant silver "spot" on the surface of the water.  It was breathtaking.

 

Normally this this sight fills me with tranquility and joy.  Yesterday and today, however, all I could think about was that here it was so quietly beautiful, and yet just a few kilometers away people were butchering each other.   It has been this way for more than two years now across the border in Syria.  What made yesterday so wrenching for me was that the 6 a.m. news had broken the report of Assad's latest chemical attack on his citizens. 

 

According to the report already on Wednesday morning, at least 1,300 people were known to be dead so far.  Pictures coming out of Syria were showing rows upon rows of dead children with blue lips, young men writhing uncontrollably, doctors trying to do what they could with no facilities and no supplies.  And all the while in the background you could hear the wailing of the mothers.  Later reports stated that entire families were destroyed, entire neighborhoods wiped out.

 

What was the response of world leaders?  Oh this is terrible.  Oh, it must be condemned.  Oh, the United Nations should investigate.  Never mind that this is not the first time that chemical weapons have been used.   Never mind that only this week did UN inspectors come to investigate "alleged use of chemical weapons", attacks which happened 6 months ago.  Never mind that the UN inspectors can only leave the hotel if accompanied by a Syrian government official.  Never mind that so far no official has been sent to the hotel.

 

The words from a song in the musical "1776" keep going through my mind:

 

"They piddle, twiddle, and resolve.  Non one d--m thing do they solve.   Piddle, twiddle and resolve.  Nothing is ever solved."

 

In the 1930s when Hitler's agenda became more and more apparent, the responses of most European and American leaders were not much different than those now.  More than 50 million people lost their lives in WW II.

 

The gas being used in Syria today was originally developed in Nazi laboratories.  It's use was later perfected by Sadam Hussein in Iraq and in Syria by the father of the current Assad.  The proclivity to gas children must run in the family.  In addition to the reserves already in Syria, many of Saddam's stores were moved to Syria towards the end of his regime.   Israeli military sources estimate that Syria has tons of chemicals ready to be used.

 

The Nazis developed several types of chemical weapons.  They experimented to see which were the most effective in which kinds of situations.  They perfected their technology.  I have seen the marks scratched in the cement walls and floors and ceilings by the victims of this technology.  I have seen the marks in rooms in Majdanek and Auschwitz and Ravensbruk and Sachsenhousen and Dachau.   I have seen what is left of Chelmo and Belzec and Trablinka and Sobibor, where not just entire families, but entire towns were killed by chemical weapons.  These places are not talked about as much simply because there were literally just a handful of survivors left to bear witness.  With generations of a family murdered, and no neighbors left, who is going to tell the world? 

 

I have walked the grounds of Chelmo, Poland where the use of poisonous gas was first experimented with on a large scale, and where portable gas chambers in trucks were first used.  I have walked the grounds of the concentration camps in downtown Belgrade where Serbian Jews served as the targets of experiments for the Nazis to perfect the use of both poison gasses and portable gassing trucks.  I have read the Nazi mechanics' and engineers' reports about how to improve the efficacy of the trucks by making the dispersal of the gas more efficient, and which types of gas were best.   The diligence of Nazi engineers benefitted Sadam Hussein a generation ago and benefits the Assad regime today.

 

And what are world leaders doing?  They piddle, twiddle and resolve.  Nothing's ever solved.

 

If two years ago the world had supported those in Syria fighting for more freedom, perhaps the situation would not be what it is today.  Hundreds of children and women and their fathers and brothers and grandparents would not have known the agony of death my poisonous chemicals.  Over 100,000 people would not have been killed.  Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq would not have to be caring for the millions of refugees who have fled Syria and crossed into their territory. 

Al Qaida and Islamic Jihad fighters would not control most of the Syrian towns which border with Israel.  Many Syrian civilians would not be subject to daily public floggings under the Sharia'a law which came with the foreign "Islamist" (how I hate that word) rebels.   The coming winter would not bring with it the threat of starvation for millions or death from the cold.

 

My heart weeps.  After thousands of years, why is it still so easy for us as people to continue to destroy each other? 

 

And yet, despite the evil, there are still people in the world who are genuinely good and who go about doing good because of that.

 

I  think of all of those from LDS Charities and other organizations who continue to give so much of their time and service and means to help relieve the suffering of the refugees.  I respect those who contribute to the Church's Humanitarian fund so that the means are there to use.  I applaud LDS Charities for their part in getting tens of thousands of refugee children in Jordan vaccinated.  I praise the Israeli army doctors, nurses and medics who day and night treat Syrian victims of war at the field hospital the Israeli army set up near the Syrian border, and the staffs of the Sfat and Nahariya hospitals in Israel who continue to treat the most severely wounded.  What all of these people are doing is  light in the great darkness.   All of these individuals are light the separate beams of light which broke through the clouds this morning and joined together to bring light to the surface of the water.

 

May each of us also bring light to those around us in whatever way we can.

 

Israel

 

“Light and Darkness”

cji
8/23/13

Looking to my right is light

to the left is found darkness

first the Sea of Galilee at dawn

then hear the screams of Syria

thousands dying from gas

while world leaders sit idle

China and Russia at play

always to embrace warfare

anywhere and everywhere

putting forth resources each

light and darkness to teach

misery and death to share

claiming all in hatred fair

making others to blankly stare

pretending their stand idyll

ignoring the screams of Syria

presenting beauty of dawn

picturing useless starkness

wanting all to see the light!


Copyright © 2013 – cji

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