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Michael
Henderson |
Is 2008
going to be the year of unconditional forgiveness and reconciliation? Not
if election campaigning is anything to go by. Correspondence I receive from
the United States and articles I read both about the state of the country
and its relations with its allies and its perceived adversaries reflect
depths of division. So friends of America certainly hope that by this time
next year those elected can help the country come together.
Perhaps we have to wait for 2009 for new beginnings. I have
just completed a new book No Enemy To Conquer – Forgiveness in An
Unforgiving World which my publisher wants to bring out at the start of
next year as a contribution to new ways of doing things. The book is
stories of men and women of different faiths and races learning to walk
with ‘the other’, men and women who despite terrible sufferings and
ideological differences are prepared to put aside long-cherished hatreds
and a desire for revenge for the sake of a new future. It is stories of
Christians and Muslims, Protestant and Catholic, black and white. It also
includes insights from leaders of different faiths, whether a Jewish rabbi,
a Muslim prime minister, a Buddhist monk, or a Christian Archbishop.
I suppose that because I have been known to write on these
sorts of subjects people also send me encouraging stories of hope. I have
just received one that came too late for my book. It concerns a small
country with fewer than 100,000 inhabitants but it is where this remark
‘2008, the year of unconditional forgiveness and reconciliation’ was
coined. It is just one of many stories that rarely make other than
local headlines but yet illustrate for us all that new ways are possible
whether we are from large or small countries.
Few readers will now remember the name Maurice Bishop. But
nearly thirty years ago his seizure of power in the island of Grenada,
deposing the prime minister, and developing close relations with Cuba
alarmed President Reagan and the United States. In 1983, after disputes
within the governing party he and a number of his cabinet were brutally
murdered. Two weeks later the US, citing concern for political instability
and the threat to the safety of American students, and joined by several
countries of the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, invaded Grenada.
To this day the invasion date, October 25, is celebrated as Thanksgiving
day. The events of those years have been described in one Jamaican paper as
‘one of the saddest moments in Caribbean political history’.
On New Year’s day 2008 Nadia Bishop, daughter of the murdered
leader and now a lawyer resident in the US, returned to her country and
announced that it was time to forgive and be reconciled with those who
killed her father. At a press conference she said, ‘I invite you to join
here in unconditional forgiveness that is not dependent on anyone accepting
responsibility for anything nor a request that forgiveness be granted to
them.’ The day before she had met in prison with some of those convicted of
the murders and they had expressed their regrets for the events and had
apologized to all those who had suffered losses. She described their three
hour meeting as warm and joyous, with forgiveness and reconciliation
welcomed by all. ‘We mutually freed each other from the bonds of negativity
that have existed between us these past 24 years,’ she said. ‘The best word
to describe what happened at the prison is “grace”. God’s grace was with us
in that room, we all felt it and we were all blessed by its presence.’ As
well as forgiving them she also apologized to those who would have felt
harmed by her father and the revolution.
Marcelle Belmar, sister of one of those who was killed along with her
father, supported her at the press conference. For years Marcelle had felt
that these men should remain behind bars but her feelings had now changed.
‘At the prison I was able to embrace them, was able to express love, and to
pray with them. Just as how they felt relieved, it took off that great
burden from me…and I just want to say too it is our pride sometimes that
causes us not to forgive.’
Nadia described forgiveness as a journey not a destination.
‘Let us from this day forward tell a new story about our people, a story of
forgiveness, of reconciliation, of renewed purpose, of renewed faith, of
renewed hope, a story of success and triumph over adversity, and the
transformation of the individual and collective pain in our lives into a
new purpose for our lives and for our country.
We are
a Christian nation. But how many of us practice forgiveness, even once,
much less forgiving seventy times seven.’
She said that one could see clearly that Israelis and
Palestinians must come together to achieve peace and stability and also
what needs to be done with warring factions in Darfur. ‘But if we can’t
find common ground with our brothers and sisters in our own country, how do
we expect peace to exist anywhere else in the world. Let each of us this
year be the change that we want to see in the world.’
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Michael Henderson is the author of
Forgiveness:
Breaking the Chain of Hate |
Articles Archive of
Michael Henderson
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