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Michael
Henderson |
I sat
next to a lady in a plane and when she learned I was a journalist, she
said, ‘Oh, I haven’t subscribed to a newspaper in months and I feel so much
better. It’s like when I gave up smoking.’
Certainly, if we don’t cancel our subscriptions
or turn off the TV we have to learn how to live peacefully with negative
headlines and stories. And it is no wonder that many follow the lady’s
prescription.
Every now and then, those of us who feel deprived without our
regular news infusion, however gloomy, are treated to a pleasant surprise.
As, for instance, the way the Amish killings were rapidly followed by
stories of Amish forgiveness. In fact, as one who often writes about
forgiveness, I am much encouraged by the number of forgiveness stories I
come across these days and even stories of conflicts ending.
I have just attended a lecture by one of the world’s top
writers on climate change, Geoffrey Lean. He painted an alarming picture of
the reality of the changes that are going to affect all life on the planet.
But I came away from the lecture buoyed with hope because while not
underplaying the threat he informed us that it was producing incredible
advances in attitude and technology that were helping overcome the dangers.
He showed us what the ordinary person could do to make a difference.
When one reads the news of Darfur or Lebanon or Zimbabwe or
Israel and Palestine it is also important to keep in mind the larger
perspective. Even as recently as twenty years ago none of us could have
conceived of Nelson Mandela becoming a free man and prime minister of
South Africa, nor of the Berlin Wall coming down and the Soviet Union
imploding. Just as a generation before. our parents would not have thought
of France and Germany being not only in a European union but also friends.
And twenty years ago none of us could have expected the progress towards
peace we are seeing in Northern Ireland which I touched on two months ago.
I return to that part of the world again this
month because, even the historic events of March have been topped by April
and May. I wrote then of the historic rugby match between England and
Ireland on ‘the day hatred went missing’ and the hangover of history ‘was
put to bed’. I wrote too of the complete reversal of policy by Sinn Fein
with regard to support for the police and justice service. Now we have been
witness to the startling sight of the venerable curmudgeon Rev Ian Paisley
agreeing to share power with Sinn Fein in the government of Northern
Ireland. Though he stopped short of a handshake for the camera.
Just as one never expected Sinn Fein to
recognize the police, one would never have predicted that stepping stone on
the road to peace taken two months later. The Times of London
underlined its significance with the main front-page headline, ‘Old enemies
agree to share the future’, and with another headline inside, ‘No time for
handshakes but this was history in the making.’
The paper’s story began, ‘The words that nobody
thought they would ever hear from the mouth of the Rev Ian Paisley came at
12 minutes past noon. “We have agreed with Sinn Fein.” Paisley, the leader
of the Protestant Democratic Unionists, who had sworn ‘never, never,
never’, to share power with Sinn Fein had reversed a 40-year policy of
‘never sitting down with terrorists’. He said, ‘We must not allow our
justified loathing of the horrors and tragedies of the past to become a
barrier to creating a better and more stable future. In looking to that
future we must never forget those who have suffered during the dark period
from which we are, please God, emerging.’
A few weeks later, after the formal acceptance
of power by Ian Paisley as First Minister and Martin McGuinness as Deputy
First Minister of Northern Ireland, The Times editorialised, ‘The
past cannot be allowed to become a ball-and-chain on the future. So Mr
Paisley and Mr McGuinness were each wise to pay tribute to those who have
suffered – and to conclude that the proper memorial is their cooperation.’
The headline in The Independent in London was ‘The miracle of
Belfast’ and the Irish Independent ‘Happy are the peacemakers’.
Being Irish as well as English I particularly rejoice at the
news and as a Christian it is a great relief to me that Northern Ireland,
will no longer be held up as a reproach because of the way Christians
fight each other and may soon have a new role. Indeed, an Irish
nationalist, Jim Lynn, a Roman Catholic brought up in the rough Falls Road
area of Belfast speaking in London, talked of what England and Ireland
could now do together. He spoke along with a Protestant from the North, Dr
Roddy Evans, and they described some of the extraordinary events that led
up to political progress including Catholics and Protestants together
holding Bible studies at the Clonard Redemptorist Monastery in Belfast
which has been described as ‘the cradle of the peace process’. They paid
tribute to the role of the Irish and British prime ministers and of
President Clinton and Senator George Mitchell. Lynn said, ‘It is my hope
that what we have experienced will be used in the world, including in the
Middle East.’
So my message to that lady today would be: Keep
an ever hopeful perspective, resubscribe and pray.
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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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