July 1996, pgs. 64, 105
Christianity in the Middle East
Crusaders Heirs Honor Peace Promoters
by Rev. L. Humphrey Walz
Amidst Medieval pageantry replete with lordly capes, sounding trumpets
and shining swords in Chicagos Holy Name Cathedral, the Papal
Order of Knights of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem conferred their
Order of Merit upon a Muslim, a Jew and a Protestant. Carlo Cardinal
Furno, the Orders global head, flew from Rome to preside over
the April 21 presentation of the award for distinguished contributions
to peace in the Holy Land of three faiths.
The Muslim honored was social scientist Asad Husain, president
of the liberal arts American Islamic College in Chicago. With a
Ph.D. in international relations from the University of Minnesota,
several germane books to his credit and teaching experience at King
Abdul-Aziz University in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, as well as on American
faculties, his current responsibilities include directing the Summer
Institute of Islamic Studies at Northeastern Illinois University.
His citation read, in part:
Harmony among diverse peoples and religions has been a lifelong
endeavor
Asad Husain was born in Patna, Bihar, India
In
1969, he was appointed to the Consultative Committee of Indian Muslims
in the USA and Canada. Also that year, he became Professor of Political
Science at Northeastern Illinois University.
In 1975 he was invited by King Abdul- Aziz University in Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia to found the Institute for Muslim Minority Affairs.
In the last 20 years, this institute has come to be one of the most
highly respected academic institutes in the Muslim world and has
very close relations with the Vatican. In 1987, Dr. Husain was elected
President of the American Islamic College, the first liberal arts
college of the Muslim community in the United States. From this
position he has continued his extensive interfaith activities.
Dr. Husain was among the founding organizers of the Council
for a Parliament of the Worlds Religions. He was a member
of the Islamic Host Committee which designed interfaith programs
for the 1993 Parliament. He was selected from among the Muslim Community
to serve as one of the Presidents of the 1993 Parliament of the
Worlds Religions.
Dr. Husain has assisted the Archdiocese in its interfaith activities.
He served as one of the judges of the Interfaith Awards during the
Sesquicentennial of the Archdiocese. He is also one of the founding
participants in the Jewish/Muslim Dialogue of Chicago.
The others honored for keeping peaceful dialogue alive among
the three great monotheisms of the world were Rabbi Mordecai
Simon, executive vice-president emeritus of the Chicago Board of
Rabbis, and the Rev. Stanley L. Davis, Jr., a United Church of Christ
minister and executive director of the Northern Illinois Region
of the National Conference of Christians and Jews.
A media alert the previous week had noted that the honorees had
been selected for demonstrating, among other things, that discussing
religious differences and similarities can bring enriched
experience to millions.
The ceremonies were also a milestone in the historic transformation
of the Order from militaristic to benevolent. French Duke Godfrey
de Bouillon, its founder in 1199, had led a contingent of German
Crusaders to help wrest the magnificently fortified city of Jerusalem
from its schismatic Eastern Orthodox Christians, unbelieving
Jews and dominant Muslim infidels. Their brilliant siege
was savagely gory, but ultimately brought the city under Rome-dominated
Western Christian control for a few decades.
The Knights initial assignment was to guard the site of Christs
burial and resurrection as designated by Emperor Constantines
pious archeology-minded mother, Helena, in the 4th century. Their
task was originally conceived in strictly military terms. However,
within a couple of hundred years their educational enterprises were
spreading the gospel of peace in the Mediterranean basin, France,
Spain and Poland.
In 1888 they became the first international order to receive women
into membership. In 1995 they issued their call to prayer
for peace and justice in Jerusalem, where priceless treasures of
spiritual history are found for Christian, Muslim and Jewish believers
To this they appended the comment that if there can be peace
in Jerusalem, there can be peace in neighborhoods and communities
around the world.
Their Order of Merit was created in 1949 to honor distinguished
non-Catholics. The 1996 event honoring a representative of each
of the three monotheisms was added deliberately to encourage inclusive
mutual recognition and cooperative peacemaking.
American Friends Join Middle East Council of
Churches Emergency Appeal for Victims in Lebanon
The Middle East Council of Churches has raised $287,000 for immediate
relief assistance to some hundreds of thousands of Lebanese displaced
by the massive Israeli bombardment of southern Lebanon. The American
Friends Service Committee has established a channel for further
gifts through Lebanon Aid Fund, 59 E. Van Buren, #1400, Chicago,
IL 60605. Its appeal includes the following disturbing facts:
Hundreds are seriously injured, thousands of buildings damaged
or destroyed, nearly one-half million have fled their homes. Attacks
against power stations, and a naval blockade of all ports up to
and including Beirut harbor have brought further hardship.
In the aftermath of the tragedy of April 18, when more than
90 civilian refugees were killed inside a United Nations peacekeepers
compound, the government of Israel said that it would accept an
immediate cease-fire if Syria and Lebanon promise to restrain Hezbollah
guerrilla fighters from firing on Israeli positions.
However, even with an immediate cease-fire, the nearly 500,000
terrified citizens of southern Lebanon are not likely to return
to their villages soon. When they do, once again they will face
the need to rebuild their homes and lives.
Presbyterian Proposals on Jerusalem
When the annual General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, USA,
meets from June 29 to July 6 in Albuquerque, it will debate a resolution
that has been submitted for advance study on The Peace of
Jerusalem. Its 10 paragraphs are supplementary to the 1995
Assembly resolution on "The Status of Jerusalem: Crisis for
Christians, Muslims and Jews. We believe that the following
excerpts will be of special interest to our readers:
The 208th General Assembly (1996)
- Calls upon Israel to: a) regard closure of Jerusalem, or other
West Bank areas, and of Gaza, only as a temporary, emergency measure,
not to be used as a form of collective punishment; b) refrain
from both expanding existing settlements and building new settlements
in Jerusalem, the rest of the West Bank, and in Gaza....
- Calls for shared political expression in Jerusalem by both
Israeli and Palestinian entities as
the preferred way both
to secure freedom of religious observance for Jews, Christians
and Muslims, and to assure that all peoples will have full access
to the essential cultural, economic, educational, medical and
other services that Jerusalem provides....
- Recognizes the continuing challenges facing Palestinian and
Israeli leaders, especially as they try to meet the often-contradictory
concerns of groups within their societies, and urges them to act
out of concern for the greatest good of all their people.
- Calls upon the U.S. government to be proactive in the efforts
to secure the rights of Israelis and Palestinians, and not merely
stand by as the political, economic and military power of Israel
continues to establish facts on the ground that pre-empt
the final status of Jerusalem....
Chicagoans for Justice in Jerusalem
On June 6, the 29th anniversary of Israels takeover of East
Jerusalem and adjacent territories, JACC (The Jerusalem Action Committee
of Chicago) led a Demonstration for Peace in Jerusalem
at the traffic-heavy intersection of Wacker Drive and Wabash, a
portion of which the mayor had recently renamed Jerusalem
3000 Way.
Religious co-sponsors of the event were the (Quaker) American Friends
Service Committee and the Muslim Student Association (University
of Chicago chapter). Other co-sponsors were Amnesty International
(U. of C. chapter), Arab-American Community Center, Arab Culture
Club (U. of C. chapter), Networking for Democracy, Palestine Aid
Society, Union of Palestinian Womens Association and the Eighth
Day Center for Justice.
Handbills explained the rally as in protest against:
Israeli policy. 29 years ago, on June 6, 1967, Israel
conquered East Jerusalem, along with the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip. Those 29 years have been characterized by vast confiscations
of Palestinian land, the building of Jewish-only settlements, the
destruction of Palestinian homes and property, and discriminatory
practices on a massive scale. Since March of 1993, Jerusalem has
been closed off from the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and only those
Palestinians who have been issued permits from the Israeli government
can enter the city. These policies continue today, unaffected by
the peace process.
U.S. policy. Despite occasional rhetoric, the U.S.
has supported these Israeli policies with vast financial, military
and diplomatic aid.
Chicago policy. Chicagos Mayor Daley has given
his public support to Jerusalem 3000, the year-long
Israeli celebration of the 3000th anniversary of the
biblical conquest of Jerusalem by King David. Jerusalem 3000
is widely perceived as a propaganda effort of the Israeli government
to cement international recognition of its annexation of East Jerusalem.
In a public event, the City of Chicago renamed part of Wacker drive
Jerusalem 3000 Way. The mayor, two aldermen, the Israeli
Consul General, and Jewish community leaders all spoke at the event,
which was organized by local Jewish organizations. While the speeches
and resolutions referred again and again to the Jewish claim to
Jerusalem, not one mention of the Palestinian claim to the city
was made. Despite repeated phone calls and letters, the Mayors
office has refused to discuss the issue. This constitutes a rebuff
not only to the many Arab-Americans of Chicago, but to all who favor
a vision of Jerusalem shared equally between the two peoples. |