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      The Savior in Each of Us:  
	Contradictions of Religion and Politics  
	By Mazin Qumsiyeh 
      Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, May 10, 2010 
      
  We live in an era of psychological warfare and mass hysteria 
	  generated by mass communication that already led us to the catastrophic 
	  first and second world wars.  And after the US dropped nuclear bombs on 
	  civilian cities in Japan, all gloves were off instead of people being 
	  horrified enough to forsake war all together.  Over 100 major conflicts in 
	  the last 60 years  costing tens of millions of lives.  It is even getting 
	  worse as wars are started by a few special interest groups, a few rich 
	  media owners can push for them, and a few soldiers can execute them via 
	  remote control and pilot-less planes that butcher thousands at the push of 
	  a button. The maddening era where sanctions on Iraq were introduced to 
	  satisfy a special lobby caused the death of over a million Iraqi civilians 
	  and then a war and occupation in which a million more have been 
	  killed.  Many claim a clash of religions or of ‘civilizations’ to justify 
	  these abominations when excess greed can explain it better.  But humans 
	  also fail to learn the lessons of history or to reexamine our own dogmatic 
	  beliefs that allow greedy people to exploit us and take us into wars in 
	  the name of ‘nation’ or ‘religion’ or ‘ideology’.  Here in Palestine, at 
	  every turn we are inundated with messages about 
	  conflicting religious and/or political beliefs; group think that 
	  seems hard to dispel.   
  When religion enters into it, it 
	  becomes extremely volatile.  By religion, I do not mean the original 
	  teachings of the prophets, but that which has been hijacked by the greedy 
	  for profits.  Mohammed and  Jesus had far simpler messages of truth mostly 
	  dealing with personal behavior towards God and the needy people in 
	  society.   Here in these hills of Palestine Jesus told the truth 
	  to the many different groups of people that inhabited this multi-ethnic 
	  and multi-religious society.  His message of reform and logic was not 
	  directed only to the tribalistic Hebrew Judeans but to all people.  Some 
	  rejected the message precisely because they could not claim it for their 
	  tribe or advance their social status using the message.  He spoke plainly 
	  to both tribalistic Judeans who believed that they are better than the 
	  goyim and to the Roman officials who believed they were civilized superior 
	  democrats.  He spoke to Idumeans, Jebusites, Hebrews, Ammonites, 
	  Samaritans, and others and taught that all are equal before God.  He 
	  advocated a truly universal brotherhood and sisterhood of humanity. The 
	  same can be said of the original teachings of Mohammed as inspired by his 
	  God.   The five Pillars of Islam are rather simple and include 
	  profession of faith, prayers, fasting, giving of alms to the needy, and 
	  pilgrimage to Mecca if possible. No more and no less. Shi’ Islam 
	  recognizes similar things and adds things like leadership of the 12 imams 
	  and Adl (justice).  If one is to follow the basics of the monotheistic 
	  traditions and not all the literal (mis)interpretations, politicians would 
	  never be able to use religion in their endless wars.
  Jesus prayed 
	  to get strength from his God (the father of us all) on the mount of olives 
	  in Ur-Salem (Jerusalem), the Jebusite Canaanitic town that remained a 
	  small town highly fought over by greedy people who used religion to 
	  justify conquest.  He prayed in the Aramaic language, a beautiful language 
	  that predated Hebrew and Arabic (and whose alphabet gave rise to both 
	  alphabets).  This language is still spoken by a Christian community in 
	  Palestine and other parts of Bilad Al-Sham.  He spoke truth to entrenched 
	  power of Pharisees and Romans who are in the same kind of allegiance that 
	  Israel and the US are today.  He told them that they are deluded, they are 
	  hypocrites.  He did not mince words.  
  Those with different agendas 
	  watched as his original message spread among disenfranchised communities 
	  even during massive repression and persecution for over 300 
	  years.  Finally, unable to destroy it, and to fill an ideological vacuum, 
	  the Roman empire decided to re-brand itself as the “Holy Christian Roman 
	  Empire.”  Powerful Popes were created and the story of Jesus was changed 
	  to suit an agenda that is in many aspects the opposite of what he really 
	  said (1).  How else can one reconcile the idea of Jesus  ‘give to God what 
	  is to God and to Rome what is to Rome’ (separation of religion from 
	  politics) with the welding of religious and political power in Europe for 
	  hundreds of years. The 'Christian' cross was thus changed from a symbol of 
	  a persecuted people of principles to a symbol for crusaders and 
	  colonizers.  In parallel, the Pharisees went on to also change the ancient 
	  Hebrew religion.   Rabbinical Judaism was concretized in a 
	  Talmud written 300 years after Christ and was in many ways a reaction to 
	  the success of Christianity among Jews and non-Jews alike.  The Safad and 
	  Babylonian texts of Rabbinical Judaism have negative things to say about 
	  Jesus and about 'goyim' while emphasizing the notion of Jews as a “people” 
	  separate, unique, and chosen.  It was an understandable(over) reaction to 
	  maintain the old ways in the face of a changing world.  The history of 
	  ideas always pits conservative versus more liberal ideas.  For example, we 
	  saw a retrenchment and strengthening of catholic doctrine as the more 
	  liberal Protestant traditions developed.   
  The new 
	  religions under the names of 'Christianity' and 'Judaism' became varied 
	  and many.  Large segments of Berbers in North Africa and much of the 
	  population of Khazaria converted to the Pharisee traditions of Judaism 
	  resulting in large Ashkenazi and Sephardi “Jewish” communities (2). 
	  Beautiful cultures unfortunately destroyed in the frenzy of Zionism. Most 
	  of the rest of Europe had converted to the form of Christianity preached 
	  by Paul (himself a converted Judean) which was later adopted by the Roman 
	  empire .  Other forms spread in Western Asia and North Africa.  But even 
	  the Roman church split into Western and Eastern branches as the empire it 
	  was wedded to also split (Rome and Byzantium).   The orthodox 
	  and the catholic branches had to then  contend with the new protestant 
	  evolution.  In the 7th century, the daughter religion of Islam spread, 
	  shedding many of the rituals and authority vested in Rabbis and Priests 
	  but also having to adapt to existing cultures and norms in different 
	  countries.  Its success was largely due to the way in which entrenched 
	  authoritarian rulers bickered and fought among themselves ignoring the 
	  needs of the people.  Millions took up Islam willingly as a liberating 
	  religion.  As Europe descended into the abyss in the Middle ages, the 
	  Islamic civilization rose and prospered developing sciences, laws, forms 
	  of government, philosophy and much more.  The secret to its success was 
	  the liberal traditions and openness that allowed Muslim scholars to 
	  collaborate with other scholars and to write books that question just 
	  about everything.  Unlike today, reading and writing books was a key 
	  feature of our world.  Islam itself was to undergo reformation and 
	  transformation becoming different sects and communities (Sunni, Shi’a, 
	  Druze, Sufi, Bahai, Alawaites etc).  
  Evolution of these 
	  monotheistic religions and their connections to each other should not 
	  blind us to their connections to earlier traditions.  The stories of 
	  slavery and redemption, floods and revival, death and resurrection and 
	  many more are stories found in earlier pagan traditions (3). Today’s 
	  Hindu, Buddhist, Confuscian, and other traditions are all connected in 
	  similar ways (4).
  So here we are today.  Last week, a psychologist 
	  who lived in Israeli society for 27 years, Avigail Abarnable described it 
	  as follows: 'I think Israel is like a cult that happened to get its own 
	  country. It really is bizarre. It took a long time for me to free myself 
	  from the strange belief system I grew up with and the way I used to see 
	  the world' (5). But Zionist Jews are not the only ones living in a 
	  make-belief world of group think and thus acting in highly destructive 
	  ways (to others and to self). As noted above, this has happened before and 
	  we who followed other religious traditions were not immune.  The shameful 
	  history stretches from crusaders to ‘manifest destiny’ colonization of the 
	  ‘new world’ to Afrikaners creating an apartheid regime as ‘ordained by 
	  God’.   But it all starts at the individual level.  How many of 
	  us are able to free our minds from self-imposed shackles?  What percentage 
	  of the human population drops the beliefs that parents and a childhood 
	  education burn into malleable minds. My father’s side of the family 
	  followed the traditions of the Eastern church (Greek Orthodox). with 
	  paternalistic and hierarchical structures that are hard to reconcile with 
	  the ministry of Jesus.  It was the mixed marriage in our family that 
	  thankfully gave me a bit of leeway.  So I actually admire more those who 
	  do not have that and are still able to break free.  This includes the 
	  Catholic Workers movement and liberation theology advocates who went back 
	  to live and work among the poor and disenfranchised people. This includes 
	  Jews who are anti- or post-Zionist who connect with fellow human beings to 
	  work for equality instead of racism.  This includes the Muslims I see here 
	  every day linking hands with other human beings to resist colonial 
	  oppression in their villages (Al-Ma’sara, Al-Walaja, Bil’in, Ni’lin etc.).    
	  
  In the past few days, the deluge of Orwellian news 
	  continued.  Settlements continue to be built even as the US, Israel, and 
	  the Palestinian elite leaders and the media spinners claim otherwise.  The 
	  apartheid wall is being built around Palestinian towns (it was deemed 
	  illegal by the International court of Justice and described as part of the 
	  illegal settlement activities).  Settlers driven by the mythologies of 
	  Zionism regularly harass Palestinians and destroy agricultural lands and 
	  property.  Arab rulers who long ago sold Palestine for assurances about 
	  their thrones give a green light for more negotiations that are divorced 
	  from International law and human rights.  1.5 million people (most of them 
	  refugees) get a trickle of food and supplies in their open air prison 
	  through tunnels. Israeli leaders openly brag that this inhuman act to an 
	  entire people is a collective punishment (6). By International law, this 
	  is actually defined as state terrorism and crimes against humanity. And 
	  Jerusalem remains under attack (7). Yet the International community only 
	  utters feeble voices while continuing to shield and protect the apartheid 
	  state. Europeans give funds which they know go to aid the occupation but 
	  they hope by designating it as Palestinian humanitarian aid, it would be 
	  good public relations. 
  And what are Palestinians doing?  With very 
	  few exceptions, we are not rising to the existential challenge facing us 
	  when we know that in the 1920s and 1930s our grandparents did rise to the 
	  challenge. The cheap and easy roads are taken today. Many non-governmental 
	  organizations (NGOs) both in Palestine and abroad are now run by single 
	  individuals (usually males) who worked to drive out any serious challenge 
	  to their 'leadership' (even when those they drove out were the most 
	  productive individuals). The situation also extends to political 
	  leadership whether in the many factions or in the Palestinian ‘authority’ 
	  (both in Gaza and the West Bank). A tradition strengthened by a history of 
	  authoritarian rule and cronyism. But of course this discourse is also true 
	  of Israeli NGOs and political leaders.  Corruption there is rampant and 
	  the amount of money laundered is many folds that among Palestinians. 
	  Bribes in the millions were paid just for one housing project in West 
	  Jerusalem called ‘HolyLand.’ Israeli NGOs are run by those who scare Jews 
	  around the world to keep donating so that these self-appointed “leaders” 
	  can continue their life style of 'leadership' and self-import (e.g. the 
	  racist Nadia Matar of ‘Women in Green’).  Any act of hatred to Jews big or 
	  small, fake or real, is used to keep the cash flowing.  The victimization 
	  cash machine never stops. Business is business.
  Gilad Shalit who is 
	  a soldier in a terrorist colonial army, is described as ‘victim’, 
	  ‘kidnapped’ and ‘held illegally’ while 10,000 Palestinian political 
	  prisoners whose rights are denied daily remain nameless and faceless in 
	  Israeli and Western media.  Millions were raised to support residents of ‘Sderot’ 
	  in the name of victimhood.  But this Israeli town was built on the land of 
	  Najd, one of hundreds of destroyed Palestinian villages ethnically 
	  cleansed to create the ‘Jewish state’ . The individuals who shot 
	  these  home-made projectiles come from a community of refugees ethnically 
	  cleansed and looking over the fence at their empty lands.  They were left 
	  to rot in refugee camps and then bombed and besieged to starvation.   
	  Would you expect them to toss flowers at the usurpers?
  British 
	  candidates regurgitate notions of Jewish victimization and need to support 
	  Israel to court the elite rich self-appointed British Zionists.  The 
	  latter represent less than half of the British Jewish population, itself 
	  less than 0.5% of the population; there are 3% Muslims.  Instead of 
	  welcoming Elie Wiesel, a racist tribalist, President Obama should receive 
	  real ethical Jews (8).  Ben Gurion’s cult credo of “better feared than 
	  loved” is reaching a dead end especially since lies can no longer be 
	  covered by taking advantage of the suffering during WWII (9). The boycott, 
	  divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement is forcing people to rethink and 
	  reflect on how their governments were hijacked and their people’s 
	  interests were sacrificed at the altar of the new idol of 
	  Zionism.  Zionists will continue to try to stoke anti-Jewish feelings 
	  (misnamed 'anti-Semitism'), chauvinism (of and against Jews or gentiles), 
	  fear, conflict, and war around the world to serve their self-perceived 
	  interests.  Iran, like Iraq before it, is now in the cross hairs. But the 
	  world is finally beginning to wake-up.
  Here we are 2000 years later 
	  still awaiting miracles from outside instead of believing that we can 
	  effect change as Jesus taught.  The 1960s civil rights movement had a 
	  saying: ‘free your mind and your ass will follow’.  Time will tell how 
	  many people (Westerners and Arabs, Christians, Muslims, or Jews) will run 
	  like scared lemmings over the cliff and into the abyss before enough 
	  people finally stand-up and free their minds. How many can speak truth to 
	  power without worrying about offending (new) Pharisees or (new) Roman 
	  authorities or worrying about material riches?  As Jesus taught ‘What good 
	  will it be for a man if he gains the whole world, yet forfeits his soul?’ 
	  (Matthew 16:26). In the Qur’an it is stated: ‘God does not change what is 
	  within a people until they change what is within themselves’.  The savior 
	  is not coming back on a cloud this year and the answer lies within us not 
	  with the sermons of Rabbis, Priests, or Imams.  The choices are clear. 
	   "Another world is not only possible, she is on her way. On a quiet 
	  day, I can hear her breathing." Arundhati Roy  
  Notes: 
	   1)Marc Ellis terms it ‘Constantinian Christianity’ in his book ‘Out of 
	  the Ashes’ where he argues that Zionism is taking a similar detour as it 
	  tries to rebrand Judaism into colonial nationalism. 2) see Shlomo Sand, 
	  Israel deliberately forgets its history
	  
	  http://mondediplo.com/2008/09/07israel  3) see Hidden Histories by 
	  Basem Ra’ed,
	  
	  http://www.plutobooks.com/display.asp?K=9780745328300&  4) I highly 
	  recommend Cambell’s four-volume series ‘The Masks of God’ and with Bill 
	  Moyers ‘The Power of Myth’  The field of  comparative mythology and 
	  comparative religion is critical to challenge religious dogma and 
	  Puritanism. 'Reading the metaphor in terms of the denotation instead of 
	  the connotation' Campbell eloquently stated about religious texts. 5) 
	  Listen To Affected Voices And We Will Have Middle East Peace
	  
	  http://www.countercurrents.org/lieberman030510.htm  6) The Tunnel 
	  Rats: Keeping Gaza alive
	  
	  http://60minutes.ninemsn.com.au/stories/1029053/the-tunnel-rats  7) 
	  Discrimination is flourishing in East Jerusalem “You don't need judges 
	  in Jerusalem to know that a serious crime was committed against the city 
	  with the Holyland housing development that involved bribes to officials. 
	  But corruption on the hill in West Jerusalem is nothing compared to the 
	  theft of land, identity rape, and the body of lies and criminal 
	  discrimination against 270,000 residents of the eastern part of the city. 
	  ….” 
	  
	  http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/discrimination-is-flourishing-in-east-jerusalem-1.287733
	   8) Examples like Ilan Pappe, author of ‘The Ethnic Cleansing of 
	  Palestine’ or Mark Braverman, author of of ‘Fatal Embrace’ or Marc Ellis, 
	  author of ‘Out of the Ashes’ 9) see Norman Finkelstein’s ‘The Holocaust 
	  Industry’, and Lenni Brenner's '51 Documents: history of the Nazi-Zionist 
	  collaboration'.
  Final note: I was reluctant to write this essay and 
	  after it was written, I was reluctant to share it.  You can see above why 
	  and why I finally did.   Mazin Qumsiyeh, PhD A Bedouin in 
	  Cyberspace, a villager at home 
	  http://www.qumsiyeh.org     Professor, Bethlehem and 
	  Birzeit Universities Chairman of the Board, Palestinian Center for 
	  Rapprochement Between People, 
	  http://www.pcr.ps      http://www.qumsiyeh.org/thesaviorineachofus/
	 
       
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