2022/03/27

[[2203 The Peace Testimony and Ukraine - Friends Journal

The Peace Testimony and Ukraine - Friends Journal


The Peace Testimony and Ukraine
March 15, 2022
By Bryan Garman


Photo by Tetiana Shyshkina on Unsplash


The Russian invasion of Ukraine has shaken us all. Innocent civilians have been killed, suffering has worsened, negotiations have failed. Governments around the globe are condemning this depraved military maneuver and are collaborating to defuse it in ways that seemed impossible only a week ago. We hold the citizens of Ukraine and all victims of war in the Light.

For centuries, Friends have proclaimed their commitment to nonviolence. As early as 1654, George Fox insisted that nations “cannot engage in war as a method for settling international disputes, for war is a test of strength, not a search for truth and justice.” War, Quakers believed, proceeded from the “lusts of men.” And while the British persecuted Friends throughout the 1660s, Fox’s followers boldly affirmed their commitment to pacifism in their Declaration to Charles II. “Our principle is, and our Practice have always been, to seek peace and ensue it,” they insisted, “seeking the good and welfare and doing that which tends to the peace of all.”

In 1947, the Nobel Committee recognized Quakers’ long-standing dedication to nonviolence and service, and the American Friends Service Committee and the British Friends Service Council received the Peace Prize on behalf of Friends. In particular, Quaker peace-building activities had caught the committee’s attention during and after World War II. Friends established air raid shelters and centers for war victims in England, and adapted meeting houses and other facilities to create evacuation hostels for children and the elderly. Prominent Quakers continued to lead humanitarian causes in the wake of the Holocaust.

Quakers are clear on their obligation to wage peace, serve those in need, and pursue diplomatic channels, no matter how narrow they might be. But what happens when diplomacy fails, justice is breached, aggression persists, and lives are endangered? How do we justify waiting for diplomacy as tanks approach Kyiv and missiles flatten maternity hospitals? How can we avert our eyes from social media and news cycles that depict the gruesome toll of war? The ways of the world complicate the practice of the peace testimony, calling Friends to develop deep and nuanced knowledge about specific conflicts and compelling them to examine their consciences. To understand the situation in the Ukraine, we must not simply cling uncritically to the peace testimony. We must also understand the dynamic geopolitical and historical forces at play.

Quakers are short on dogma and long on discernment, a process that calls individuals to interrogate circumstances, seek truth, and act upon their conscience. 
Over the centuries individual Quakers have engaged in warfare provided they deemed the cause just. 
  • Somewhere between thirty and fifty percent of eligible U.S. and British Quakers fought in World War I, 
  • and approximately three-quarters chose to bear arms in World War II

Robert L. Smith, a devout Quaker who would become the headmaster of Sidwell Friends, was among those who served in the military in the latter conflict. 
By the time he earned admission to Harvard, Bob was reflecting on the role he should play in turning back the “ocean of darkness” that flooded Europe. 
“Is there that of God in every man?,” he asked. “Can you maintain that ideal in a world dominated by barbaric cruelty?”

There can be, and in the case of stopping fascism there were, multiple truths. The peace testimony provides a moral touchstone and calls us to act according to the leadings of our conscience. It enables us to recognize that faith must be tested in real time and on rugged terrain where change accelerates toward unforgiving and potentially irreversible circumstances. The testimony’s archaic language calls us to do our best to arrest time and wrestle with eternity, 
so that we might discern truth with discipline, so that we might act to save the best of humanity for the future. 
  • This way of being in the world is not infallible, but it may well offer us the best chance we know to seek peace, to pause 
  • so that we can see the divine even in our enemies, 
  • and to weigh competing truths.
Ukraine
Viewpoint



Bryan Garman

Bryan Garman has been working in Friends education for 25 years. He has previously served as head of Wilmington (Del.) Friends School and is the current head of Sidwell Friends in Washington, D.C.. He is a member of the Friends Council on Education board of trustees.
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I must confess I have struggled with this and am gratified that this is an issue for others as well, since I cannot abide by seeing others suffer at the hands of madmen with power who are intent on bullying the world.

FRIENDSJOURNAL.ORG
The Peace Testimony and Ukraine
War is a test of strength, not a search for truth and justice.

Bryan Osborne

We need to stop isolating Ukraine as sort of priority and be supportive of the some eight power based conflicts around the globe incl Palestinian and Yemeni conflicts.
  • These two are supported by Britain and other NATO partners via proxy arms sales. 
  • In the Yemen today more than 80% of the population are dependent on foreign aid relief to just eat and drink every day. 
  • The way we have isolated Ukraine is just shameful.

알라딘: 일상의 분별 - 모든 일에서 하나님의 뜻을 찾는 법 박준형

알라딘: 일상의 분별


일상의 분별 - 모든 일에서 하나님의 뜻을 찾는 법 
박준형 (지은이)대한기독교서회2020-08-20























전자책
11,200원

책소개

박준형 선교사의 신작『일상의 분별』은 ‘분별이란 무엇인가’에 대한 이론적 고찰을 넘어 ‘우리의 일상사에서 어떻게 분별할 것인가’, ‘동시대적인 문제를 어떻게 분별할 것인가’에 대한 실질적이고 구체적인 기준과 방법을 제시한 책이다.

책은 크게 5장으로 구성되어 있다. “chapter 1 분별을 위한 열 가지 전제 조건”에서는 분별하는 그리스도인이 경계하고 조심해야 할 열 가지 함정에 대해서 소개한다. “Chapter 2 한국교회가 분별에 실패하는 열 가지 이유”에서는 한국교회가 현 시점에서 점검하고 재검토해보아야 열 가지 사항을 성찰해본다.

“Chapter 3 분별하는 신앙인이 되기 위한 열 가지 실천 가이드”에서는 회중이 주인 되는 교회를 꿈꾸며 성숙하고 지혜로운 회중이 되기 위한 열 가지 관점을 소개한다. “Chapter 4 세대 간의 차이를 분별하는 열 가지 지혜”에서는 자녀양육, 이성교제, 결혼, 죽음, 임종 등 세대별, 세대 간 관련 문제들을 분별할 때 유념해야 할 열 가지 조언을 제시한다. “Chapter 5 동시대적 물음을 분별하는 열 가지 지혜”에서는 정치, 성폭력, 낙태, 자살, 신앙과 과학 등 동시대 관련 문제들을 분별할 때 유념해야 할 열 가지 지혜를 제시한다. 살면서 마주하는 수많은 문제들 속에서 어떻게 분별해야 할지 막막한 이들에게 이 책은 분별을 생활화할 수 있는 구체적이고 실제적인 가이드를 해줄 것이다.




목차


들어가는 글 | 날마다 분별하는 삶, 날마다 새로워지는 삶

Chapter 1 분별을 위한 열 가지 전제 조건
하나. 무분별한 집착은 삶을 갉아먹는다
둘. 바빠지는 것을 경계하라
셋. 사소한 일이라도 어물쩍 넘어가지 마라
넷. 완벽주의의 함정에서 벗어나라
다섯. 주어진 능력과 한계를 인정하라
여섯. 마음속에 감추고 있는 것을 털어놓는 습관을 기르라
일곱. 번복은 신중하게 하라
여덟. 이 세상에 당연한 것은 없다
아홉. 과거의 기억을 재생산하라
열. 운명과 운을 믿지 마라


Chapter 2 한국교회가 분별에 실패하는 열 가지 이유
하나. 목사가 교회의 주인이 되다
둘. ‘아멘’만 있고 ‘왜?’를 상실하다
셋. 피동성과 피상성의 옷을 입다
넷. 신앙이 개인주의에 갇히다
다섯. 성경의 ‘문자’에 갇히다
여섯. 믿음을 신앙의 완성으로 착각하다
일곱. 최고가 되려는 유혹에 사로잡히다
여덟. 속사람을 변화시키는 미덕을 상실하다
아홉. 정의에 둔감해지다
열. 천국의 소망을 잊다


Chapter 3 분별하는 신앙인이 되기 위한 열 가지 실천 가이드
하나. 이성과 감정의 균형을 잡아라
둘. 성령의 체험을 통해 믿음을 확고히 하라
셋. 고대 활자로 된 성경을 21세기 언어로 살려내라
넷. 주변부의 관점에서 성경을 읽어라
다섯. 교리보다 사람의 목숨을 중시하라
여섯. 창조적인 전통주의자가 되라
일곱. 찬양으로 세상을 품으라
여덟. 공동체와 함께 중보기도를 시작하라
아홉. 하나님이 주인공인 간증을 하라
열. 치리를 두려워하지 마라



Chapter 4 세대 간의 차이를 분별하는 열 가지 지혜
하나. 마땅히 행할 바를 가르치라(자녀양육)
둘. 하나님을 기억하며 연애하라(이성교제)
셋. 결혼은 이벤트가 아니라 소명임을 기억하라(결혼)
넷. 일에 함몰되지 마라(서른 즈음)
다섯. 영과 영의 완전한 연합을 꿈꾸라(부부관계)
여섯. 자신을 구원할 의미를 찾아라(중년부부)
일곱. 타이어를 새로 갈아끼워라(노년)
여덟. 더 자주 고민하고 더 용감하게 말하라(죽음)
아홉. 후회 없이 마무리하도록 도와주라(임종)
열. 죽은 자의 삶을 회고하고 기념하라(추모)


Chapter 5 동시대적 물음을 분별하는 열 가지 지혜
하나. 예수로부터 참된 정치학을 배우라(정치)
둘. 야수의 송곳니를 뽑아라(성폭력)
셋. 사랑의 폭력만이 답이다(역차별)
넷. 나는 어떤 여관 주인이 될 것인가를 생각해보라(난민)
다섯. 가장 중요한 기준은 사람을 살리는 것이다(낙태)
여섯. 죽음을 함부로 재단하지 마라(자살)
일곱. 과학은 신앙의 적이 아니다(신앙과 과학)
여덟. 하나님과 나의 관계를 먼저 정립하라(일과 신앙)
아홉. 무기로는 평화를 이룰 수 없다(총과 복음)
열. 사적 믿음만으로는 빛과 소금의 역할을 감당할 수 없다(공적 믿음)
접기



저자 및 역자소개
박준형 (지은이)
 

서강대를 졸업하고 삼성그룹에 입사해 이문화 경영 및 글로벌 에티켓 전문가로 활동했다. 2000년 삼성을 떠나 미국 버몬트 SIT 대학원에서 ‘이문화 관계학’을 공부한 후 캐나다 밴쿠버로 이주했다. 밴쿠버 정착 후 시청의 자문위원으로 지역사회에서 봉사해 오다가 창의력이 사라지는 현지 공교육의 한계에 변화를 시도해 보고자 2004년 캐나다의 아동 작가들과 함께 ‘어린이를 위한 창의적 글쓰기 사회(Creative Writing for Children Society, 이하 CWC)’라는 비영리 기관을 설립했다. 그는 이 기관이 주최하는 꿈의 워크샵을 통해 아이들의 문제해결 능력의 기초가 되는 창의력과 영어의 근간인 ‘글쓰기’를 접목하는 실험을 시작했다.

벌써 설립 17년 차를 향해 가는 CWC는 캐나다와 미국뿐만 아니라 한국과 중국에 있는 아이들을 초청해 창의적 글쓰기 워크샵을 개최하고 있다. 정기 워크샵 뿐만 아니라 한국의 캐나다 대사관과 서울시와 공동으로 ‘창의적 글쓰기 대회’를 개최하기도 했으며, 2011년부터는 중미 과테말라 어린이들의 교육과 복지를 개선하기 위한 G12라는 글로벌 교육 프로젝트를 CWC의 사회공헌의 일환으로 추진해 오고 있다.
그는 CWC를 운영하는 동안 수많은 아이를 만나고, 그들이 학습적인 측면에서뿐만 아니라 정서적인 측면에서도 믿을 수 없을 정도로 자신감을 찾게 되는 모습을 보면서 ‘창의적 영어 글쓰기’가 단지 영어학습의 방편이라기보다는 아이들의 잠재력을 개발하는 효과적인 학습법이라는 확신을 갖게 되었다.
이문화 컨설턴트 겸 저자로 국내의 대기업과 정부 기관 그리고 서울대학교 등에서 강의를 했으며, 다양한 미디어를 통해 ‘문화 및 글로벌 에티켓’에 대한 글을 써왔다. 저서로는 『볼프강의 글로벌 비즈니스 에티켓 1,2편-김영사, 2000』, 『나는 매일 매너를 입는다-한올 출판사, 2002』, 『팽귄나라로 간 공작새-진명출판사, 2002(번역서)』,『변화의 파도를 타라 1,2권-SFC, 2004』, 『Cultural Detective, Nipporica Associates USA 2004』, 『글로벌 에티켓을 알아야 비즈니스에 성공한다-북쏠레, 2006』, 『내 아이 창의력을 키우는 영어 글쓰기-웅진리더스북, 2008』, 『크로스컬처-바이북스, 2010』, 『분별: 대장간, 2017』과 『일상의 분별: 대한기독교서회, 2020』이 있다. 접기


최근작 : <우리는 영어로 책을 씁니다>,<일상의 분별>,<크로스 컬처> … 총 14종 (모두보기)


출판사 제공 책소개

이게 정말 하나님의 뜻인가요?
날마다 분별하는 신앙인이 되기 위한 실천 가이드!

우리는 아침에 일어나서 무엇을 먹을까, 무엇을 입을까와 같은 사소하고 일상적인 결정으로부터 결혼, 이사, 취업 같은 큰 결정에 이르기까지, 하루에도 수많은 결정과 선택을 하면서 살아간다. 세계적인 경제학자 노리나 허츠(Noreena Hertz)에 따르면, 인간은 하루 통상 1만 번 정도의 결정을 하며 산다고 한다. 이 과정에서 대개는 혼자 판단하여, 때로는 가족이나 지인의 의견을 물은 후에 결정을 내리게 된다.

그리스도인의 경우, 삶에서 중요한 선택을 해야 할 순간이나 신앙의 문제에 부딪쳤을 때 하나님의 뜻을 ‘분별’하고자 한다. 그러나 사실 어떻게 분별해야 할지 막막할 때가 많다. 분별에 대한 기준이나 방법을 모르기 때문이다. 박준형 선교사의 신작『일상의 분별』은 ‘분별이란 무엇인가’에 대한 이론적 고찰을 넘어 ‘우리의 일상사에서 어떻게 분별할 것인가?’에 대한 실질적이고 구체적인 기준과 방법을 제시한 책이다.

저자는 그리스도인의 분별은 단순한 의사결정과는 차원이 다른 것이라고 말한다. 그 과정의 중심에 우리의 일상을 초월하는 하나님이 계시고, 그분으로부터 확답을 받는 것이기 때문이다. 다시 말해 분별이란 우리 문제의 주체를, 결정의 주체를 우리가 아니라 하나님으로 옮겨가는 대단히 전복적이고 의도적이며 영적인 과정이다. 사실 우리가 원하는 것을 구하고 성취해내는 것은 자아성취나 자기완성이지 분별이라 할 수 없다. 분별은 우리가 원하는 바를 하나님께 내어 맡기고 하나님의 뜻에 따라 결정된 것을 우리가 무모할 정도로 순종하며 받아들이는 행위이다.

“모든 일에서 하나님의 뜻을 찾는 법”이라는 이 책의 부제처럼 저자는 큰일이 닥쳤을 때만 혹은 영적이고 신앙적인 문제에만 분별이 필요한 것이 아니라 우리의 모든 일상 가운데서 분별이 필요하다고 강조한다. 그리스도인은 크고 작고, 화려하고 수수하고, 폼나고 초라하고, 세상적이고 교회적인 구분을 넘어 모든 일에서 하나님의 뜻을 분별해야 한다는 것이다. 덧붙여 아무리 바쁘더라도, 또한 가장 하찮고 별 볼 일 없어 보이는 일조차 건너뛰지 말고, 세심히 분별할 것을 주문한다. 분별을 생활화하지 않으면 큰일에 부닥쳤을 때도 분별할 수 없기 때문이다. 이 책은 또한 일상에서의 분별뿐만 아니라 오늘 날 그리스도인들이 마주하고 있는 동시대적인 문제에 대한 분별도 중요하게 다루고 있다. 그리스도인들의 삶의 자리는 시대와 사회를 떠나서 존재할 수 없기 때문이다.

그럼 어떻게 도대체 분별해야 할까? 사실 분별은 기도한다고 어느 날 갑자기 하늘에서 뚝 하고 떨어지지 않는다. 신앙의 연수가 오래됐다고 해서 분별을 잘하는 것도 아니다. 특정한 사람에게 허락된 은사도 아니다. 분별은 하나의 보편적인 기술이고 훈련이고 연습이기 때문이다. 이 책 전체에는 일상에서 우리가 어떻게 분별을 훈련하고 연습해야 하는지에 대한 조언과 안내가 자세히 소개되어 있다.

이 책은 크게 5장으로 구성되어 있다. 
  1. “chapter 1 분별을 위한 열 가지 전제 조건”에서는 분별하는 그리스도인이 경계하고 조심해야 할 열 가지 함정에 대해서 소개한다. 
  2. “Chapter 2 한국교회가 분별에 실패하는 열 가지 이유”에서는 한국교회가 현 시점에서 점검하고 재검토해보아야 열 가지 사항을 성찰해본다. 
  3. “Chapter 3 분별하는 신앙인이 되기 위한 열 가지 실천 가이드”에서는 회중이 주인 되는 교회를 꿈꾸며 성숙하고 지혜로운 회중이 되기 위한 열 가지 관점을 소개한다. 
  4. “Chapter 4 세대 간의 차이를 분별하는 열 가지 지혜”에서는 자녀양육, 이성교제, 결혼, 죽음, 임종 등 세대별, 세대 간 관련 문제들을 분별할 때 유념해야 할 열 가지 조언을 제시한다.
  5.  “Chapter 5 동시대적 물음을 분별하는 열 가지 지혜”에서는 정치, 성폭력, 낙태, 자살, 신앙과 과학 등 동시대 관련 문제들을 분별할 때 유념해야 할 열 가지 지혜를 제시한다.

분별하는 사람은 어떠한 난관이나 어떠한 문제에 봉착하더라도 변함없고 한결같은, 요동치지 않는 삶을 살게 된다. 저자는 우리가 분별을 잘하게 되면, 하나님을 더욱더 잘 알게 되고 그럼으로써 하나님과 연합한 성숙한 신앙인이 되며, 지금보다 더 좋고 아름다운 모습, 더 나은 역사로 변화하게 된다고 말한다.

살면서 마주하는 수많은 문제들 속에서 어떻게 분별해야 할지 막막한 이들에게 이 책은 분별을 생활화할 수 있는 구체적이고 실제적인 가이드를 해줄 것이다. 

2022대선 특집인터뷰 | 도올 김용옥 '동학사상과 오늘의 리더십을 말하다' (1, 2부) [한겨레TV]


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2022대선 특집인터뷰 | 도올 김용옥 '동학사상과 오늘의 리더십을 말하다' (1부) [인터뷰 X 한겨레TV]
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2022대선 특집인터뷰 | 도올 김용옥 '동학사상과 오늘의 리더십을 말하다' (1부) [인터뷰 X 한겨레TV]
“촛불혁명이 지향했던 것은 ‘혁명'이 아니라 ‘개벽'이었다. 그것은 인간이 바뀌어야 하고, 우리가 사는 방식이 바뀌어야 한다.”“지역소멸위기, 기후위기 그리고 먹거리 위기, 이런 것을 해결하지 못하는 대통령은 꿈도 꾸....


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“촛불혁명이 지향했던 것은 ‘혁명'이 아니라 ‘개벽'이었다. 그것은 인간이 바뀌어야 하고, 우리가 사는 방식이 바뀌어야 한다.”
“지역소멸위기, 기후위기 그리고 먹거리 위기, 이런 것을 해결하지 못하는 대통령은 꿈도 꾸지 마라.”


철학자 도올 김용옥 선생이 동학 창시자 수운 최제우의 〈용담유사〉를 ‘현재’ 우리말로 옭겼습니다. 지난해에는 최제우의 〈동경대전〉을 해설한 책을 내셨는데요. 도올 선생은 이 책들에서 “동학은 조선혼의 총체이며, 1894년 갑오농민혁명에서부터 1919년 삼일만세운동, 그에 이은 대한민국 임시정부 수립, 그리고 최근의 촛불혁명에 이르기까지 그 혁명적 운동의 저류에 동학의 정신이 흐른다"고 역설하고 있습니다.


지난 2월7일 〈한겨레TV〉는 2022년 대선 특집으로 도올 선생을 초대하여 ‘왜 동학이 오늘의 사상인가, 우리 역사에서 동학이 차지하는 위상은 어떤 것인가’ 하는 얘기를 나눠보고 ‘동학정신에 비추어볼 때 이번 대선의 의미는 무엇이고, 우리에게 필요한 리더십은 어떤 것인가’를 질문했습니다. 많은 시청바랍니다.
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Religion, Politics, and the Origins of Palestine Refugee Relief: Romirowsky, A., Joffe, A.: 9781137378163: Amazon.com: Books

Religion, Politics, and the Origins of Palestine Refugee Relief: Romirowsky, A., Joffe, A.: 9781137378163: Amazon.com: Books



Religion, Politics, and the Origins of Palestine Refugee Relief 2013th Edition
by A. Romirowsky (Author), A. Joffe (Author)
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ISBN-13: 978-1137378163
ISBN-10: 1137378166Why is ISBN important?


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This book examines the leading role of the Quaker American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) in the United Nations relief program for Palestine Arab refugees in 1948-1950 in the Gaza Strip. It situates the operation within the context of the AFSC's attempts to exercise new influence on the separate issues of pacifism and disarmament at a time marked by US efforts to construct a Cold War security regime in the Middle East and British efforts to retain influence and bases in Arab countries. Using archival data, oral histories, diplomatic documents, and biographical and autobiographical accounts, the authors provide a detailed look at internal decision-making in an early non-governmental organization where beliefs regarding the requirement to provide refugees with skills for self-reliance clashed with intractable political and cultural realities and the realization that only full repatriation or resettlement elsewhere would solve the problem (a lesson that UNRWA and the international community learned only decades later). Faced with impossible solutions, the Quakers withdrew. The story of AFSC involvement in Gaza shows that refugee relief is always political and that humanitarianism can prolong the problems it seeks to solve. (less)



Religion, Politics, and the Origins of Palestine Refugee Relief
by Asaf Romirowsky and Alexander H. Joffe
New York: Palgrave Macmillian, 2013. 254 pp. $100.

Reviewed by Susan M. Jellissen
Belmont University, Nashville

Middle East Quarterly
Winter 2015

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Romirowsky and Joffe trace the involvement of the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)—a Quaker organization founded long before 1948 to assist civilians caught up in the maelstrom of war—in its pivotal role as relief provider to Arab refugees in Gaza under the auspices of the
United Nations Relief for Palestine Refugees (UNRPR). Painstakingly combing through personal memoirs, cables, and diplomatic communiqués, the authors construct a rich history of the immediate post-1948 period. The AFSC was determined that its relief mission be short-lived to thwart any "moral degeneration" that might occur from a continuing refugee status. Its preferred solution was "repatriation" (return to homes in the territory that became Israel) but quickly changed to resettlement in adjacent Arab states, such as Jordan, Egypt, and Syria, as a more judicious option. This approach was also seriously considered by the U.S. government—then and now the principal source of monetary aid to the refugee operation—along with a program of political and economic development in the Middle East directly connected to larger Cold War policies.

But the idea of refugee resettlement in Arab states soon fizzled out. As the authors illustrate, both field personnel and those at the policy-making level within AFSC understood that the refugees were being used as pawns by the Arab governments in their propaganda war against Israel. Once UNRPR's mandate expired in 1950, the United Nations established the U.N. Relief and Work's Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) as its replacement, and from then on, the fix was in. For reasons ranging from bureaucratic inertia to self-interest, but most importantly Arab governments' clear desire to maintain the refugee problem, UNRWA has, for the last sixty-five years, provided "relief" to a population that has increased nearly ten-fold and whose questionable refugee status is handed down to each successive generation as their prized—and lucrative—legacy.

As the authors note, a continuing and permanent refugee status became a necessary condition for the fostering of a "Palestinian" identity. Rather than use its influence among the Arab states to implement a resettlement program, which would have ultimately been to the refugees' advantage, the U.S. government pandered to a set of ideas that would prove inimical to long-term regional stability as well as to Israel's security. This ill-conceived approach continues to this day, sustaining the most powerful weapon in the Arab arsenal against the legitimacy of the Jewish state.


Review: Religion, Politics, and the Origins of Palestine Refugee Relief
DEC 15, 2016, 8:02 PM
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“Religion, Politics, and the Origins of Palestine Refugee Relief” by Asaf Romirowsky & Alexander Joffe (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013). ISBN: 1137378166.

On the surface, this impressive scholarly work looks narrow in scope: it examines the brief role played by the Quakers in providing relief for the Arab refugees created after the Arab invasion of the newly established State of Israel, work which lasted only from 1948-50 and focused only on the Gaza Strip. But along the way it contains some important broader lessons, and offers many poignant insights about the Israeli-Palestinian-Jewish-Arab-Muslim conflict (my term) in general and the political dimension of the refugee problem in particular.

For some background: Since its creation in late 1949, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) has devoted itself to maintaining specifically the Arab refugees above (and their descendants), providing them health, welfare, and education services as well as being a major source of their employment, while all other refugees from all other global conflicts fall under the purview of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Much has been written about the problematic history of UNRWA and its active promotion of the anti-Israel Palestinian narrative, including the infamous “Right of Return” according to which Palestinian Arabs and their generations of descendants are allegedly entitled to return to territory that is now the State of Israel.


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Far less well known is that the international community initially provided relief to the Arab refugees through very different means.

In December 1948, the U.N. asked three organizations, the Quakers’ American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), the International Committee of the Red Cross, and the League of Red Cross Societies, to provide relief. The AFSC was assigned to the Gaza Strip. It is the AFSC story that is explored in this book, and it in particular offers important lessons regarding the roads not taken in UNRWA’s later, and now seemingly permanent, relief effort.

Leaving aside the book’s many carefully researched details about AFSC’s work, consider just this single passage, from a March 1949 AFSC document prepared for the U.N. just two months after AFSC had been in the field:

Following a review of the refugee situation in Palestine generally and more particularly in the Gaza Strip, the AFSC wishes to state its position regarding the continuance of the refugee relief program. The AFSC wishes to withdraw from direct refugee relief in the Gaza Strip at the earliest possible moment compatible with the fulfillment of its moral obligation to the refugee population. It is obvious that prolonged direct relief contributes to the moral degeneration of the refugees and that it may also, by its palliative effects, militate against a swift political settlement of the problem. (p. 86)

This remarkable early passage, Romirowsky and Joffe suggest, “is perhaps the single most perceptive statement made with respect to Palestine refugee relief across some six decades” (87). For one thing, the AFSC acknowledges what it sees as a moral obligation to the refugees, one which derives both from their general Quaker outlook as well as from their short time developing personal relationships with the refugee population. Yet at the same time they remain adamant that their commitment was to be limited in duration, for fear of both contributing to the “moral degeneration” of the refugees and to forestalling a “political settlement” of the problem, namely the Arab-Israeli conflict.

How prescient these remarks seem, nearly 68 years later.ADVERTISEMENT

By becoming a perpetual welfare organization, UNRWA has now produced several generations of dependent people who feel absolutely entitled to the aid that the world bestows upon them—a concern that we now learn was fully apparent at the beginning, as ASFC field reports document both the refugees’ “strong feelings” that the U.N. “has the total responsibility to feed, house, clothe” them and the occurrence of refugee “demonstrations” demanding that U.N. “compensate” them and “maintain” them.

More importantly, the AFSC saw immediately that the refugees were being used in the service of political agendas. After its extensive work in global refugee relief after World War Two the AFSC understood the importance of resettlement and rehabilitation: that is, of finding the refugees new, permanent homes and equipping them to make a living. Their efforts to this end in Gaza, however, were repeatedly foiled, as revealed in internal AFSC documents. The Egyptians (for example) had a policy, one staffer notes, of refusing

all requests for refugee transfer out of the Gaza Strip, even for individuals called to a specific employment opportunity … The policy is in fact … a reflection of some obscure notion that “possession” of 200,000 Gaza refuges is some sort of lever in international bargaining. (139)

More generally, he reported, “The Arab Governments do not want the refugee problem solved on its merits, and will willingly accept solution only if their political price is met” (140).ADVERTISEMENT

To this day the Arab world continues to refuse to resettle these refugees—now, via their descendants, numbering in the many millions—in order to use them as “levers” in their ongoing battle against the Jewish state.

In similar ways AFSC communications document the difficulties in formulating definitions of “refugee,” the widespread fraud that was present in the registration of refugees, and the problem that internationally supported schools were being used to brainwash Arab children with hateful anti-Israel propaganda. It was largely because the AFSC objected to such a corrupt, and apparently unending, relief system that it chose to exit from Arab refugee relief in 1950. Meanwhile the organization that inherited the task—UNRWA—has gone on to propagate these problems, exactly as the AFSC feared.

Today, unfortunately, the AFSC leverages its history and past good work in order to contribute to the global battle against Israel. The AFSC’s support for the BDS movement is one element. Another is the way in which anti-Israel radicalism are introduced into Quaker schools through the intellectual leadership provided by the AFSC. The many local Quaker fellowships around the country, although greatly reduced in number from their 20th-century heyday, are important tools for the AFSC to shape local BDS efforts, usually in association with other Christian, pro-Palestinian, and “anti-war” groups. All this is predicated on a distinguished history that the AFSC both leverages and disregards.

Romirowsky and Joffe have done a terrific job shedding light on a previously unilluminated corner of this intractable conflict, in so doing making crystal clear some key lessons that should have been, but were not, learned.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHORAndrew Pessin is a philosophy professor, Campus Bureau Editor at The Algemeiner, co-editor of "Anti-Zionism on Campus," and author most recently of the novel, "Nevergreen," an academic satire examining campus cancel culture and the ideological excesses that generate it. For more information, visit www.andrewpessin.com.



















Editorial Reviews

Review




Review


'Romirowsky and Joffe trace the involvement of the American Friends ServiceCommittee (AFSC) a Quaker organization founded long before 1948 to assist civilians caught up in the maelstrom of war in its pivotal role as relief provider to Arab refugees in Gaza under the auspices of the United Nations Relief for Palestine Refugees (UNRPR). Painstakingly combing through personal memoirs, cables, and diplomatic communiqués, the authors construct a rich history of the immediate post-1948 period. [ ] As the authors illustrate, both field personnel and those at the policy-making level within [the] AFSC understood that the refugees were being used as pawns by the Arab governments in their propaganda war against Israel. [ ]This ill-conceived approach continues to this day, sustaining the most powerful weapon in the Arab arsenal against the legitimacy of the Jewish state.' -Susan M. Jellissen, Belmont University, USA, Middle East Quarterly



About the Author
Author Asaf Romirowsky: Asaf Romirowsky is a Middle East historian. Author Alexander H. Joffe: Alexander H. Joffe is an archaeologist and historian.
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Product details

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Palgrave Macmillan; 2013th edition (December 18, 2013)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 263 pages
==
Religion, Politics, and the Origin of Palestine Refugee Relief
by Asaf Romirowsky and Alexander H. Joffe
(New York: Palgrave Macmillan: 2013) 254 pp.

Reviewed by Joseph S. Spoerl, Professor, Philosophy Dept., Saint Anselm College

This book is a carefully researched study of the earliest efforts to provide relief to the Palestinian Arabs who became refugees during the first Arab-Israeli war, or Israel’s War of Independence, in 1948. While other groups, such as the Red Cross, provided emergency aid, this book focuses primarily on the role of the American Quakers (or “Friends”) operating through the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC). In addition to surveying all the available literature on the subject, the authors did extensive research in the Quaker archives in Philadelphia.

For about 18 months, the AFSC provided relief to Palestinian Arab refugees in the Gaza Strip. The AFSC built schools and clinics and taught vocational skills. Unlike other organizations, the AFSC actually took the trouble to conduct an accurate census of refugees and thereby reduced the refugee rolls, fought corruption and fraud, and got costs under control.

The Quakers had the quaint idea that it would be morally harmful to the refugees for them to remain on relief for too long. The goal, they thought, must be to help them start new lives and become self-supporting again, if not in Israel then elsewhere. When it became clear to them that the refugees themselves insisted on perpetual relief since repatriation to Israel was not feasible, the Quakers terminated their operations in Gaza, handing the work over to UNRWA, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, which began to operate in 1950 and continues today, the population of “registered refugees” having burgeoned in the meantime from 735,000 in 1949 to over 5,250,000 today. (UNRWA, bowing to pressure from the Palestinians, unilaterally decided some years ago to define “Palestinian refugee” status as inheritable by patrilineal descent in perpetuity, thus guaranteeing the exponential growth of the very population that still demands a “right of return” to Israel proper.)

This book shows that key features of the Israeli-Palestinian dispute were set very early. The Quakers noticed the refugees’ pronounced tendency to blame all their troubles on anyone but themselves. It never apparently occurred to any of them that the Palestinian leaders that many of them had presumably supported (e.g. Hajj Amin al-Husseini) bore much responsibility for the disaster of 1948. The Quakers documented the Egyptian government’s refusal to allow any movement of the refugees out of the Gaza Strip (controlled by Egypt until 1967), and they recognized that the Arab governments did not want the refugee problem solved, since they wished to use the refugees as a weapon to continue the struggle against Israel.

The US government, which played by far the largest roll in funding and establishing UNRWA, encountered the same recalcitrance on the issue of resettlement. In the 1950s, the US tried to resettle the refugees in other countries, but the Arab states and the refugees themselves would accept nothing less than repatriation to Israel; barring that, they felt entitled to demand UN-funded welfare in perpetuity. The welfare continues to flow, with the US and even Israel fearing that any cutoff in aid will create instability in the areas populated by the refugees (the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon).

UNRWA answers to no one but the UN General Assembly, which is totally dominated by pro-Palestinian states. The vast majority of UNRWA employees are Palestinian “refugees” who have turned it into a rent-seeking organization that seeks above all else to keep itself in existence and maximize its income. UNRWA leaders publicly insist that Palestinian “refugees” have a “right of return” to Israel proper – a demand that has played a key role in sabotaging peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, since no Israeli government could ever agree to it.

It was the US and British founders of UNRWA who chose to make it autonomous instead of putting it under the General Secretary of the UN, thinking this would make it easier for the US and Britain to control it. Romirowsky and Joffe note wryly that UNRWA’s founders “failed to conceive that the relief organization would survive over sixty years and along the way, fall into the hands of its charges” (p. 117). UNRWA has become a major obstacle to the Israeli-Palestinian peace that successive US governments have been trying to broker now for decades.

Peace and Revolution: The Moral Crisis of American Pacifism: Lewy, Guenter: 9780802836403: Amazon.com: Books

Peace and Revolution: The Moral Crisis of American Pacifism: Lewy, Guenter: 9780802836403: Amazon.com: Books




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Peace and Revolution: The Moral Crisis of American Pacifism Hardcover – April 1, 1988
by Guenter Lewy (Author)


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Looks at how four pacifist organizations, the AFSC, the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the War Resisters League, and the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, have given up the ideals of nonviolence to support leftist dictatorships and liberation fronts

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April 1, 1988
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Charging that American pacifism since the Vietnam War has lost its conscience by abandoning the principle of nonviolence, Lewy, professor emeritus of political science at the University of Massachusetts, critiques four leading pacifist organizations: the American Friends Service Committee, the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the War Resisters League and the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. He contends that these groups are experiencing the same basic conflict between the ideal of nonviolence and that of liberating the oppressed, especially in the Third World. He accuses them of supporting Communist-dominated movements in Vietnam and Central and South America to the exclusion of such struggles as the Afghans' revolt against the Soviet Union. Lewy (America in Vietnam) further warns that the alliance of pacifists with New Left and antiwar groups gives them political and religious clout"peace at any price"that could endanger American interests.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal

Lewy is highly critical of American pacifism from 1965 to the present, arguing that it has lost the philosophical consistency and moral integrity it once possessed. Examining four prominent pacifist groupsthe Fellowship of Reconciliation, War Resister League, Women's International League of Peace and Freedom, and American Friends Service Committeehe concludes that they have abandoned their commitment to nonviolence because of hostility to American democracy and infatuation with Third World revolutions. Lewy points up serious moral and political questions about contemporary pacifism, but his prosecutorial tone and hard-line Cold War ideology make this less the sober, penetrating analysis the subject deserves and more a narrowly political polemic. Mel Piehl, Valparaiso Univ., Ind.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Product details

Publisher ‏ : ‎ William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company; 1st edition (April 1, 1988)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 296 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0802836402

Book Review

AFSC: Faith Groups Urge Congress To Cut Pentagon Spending – InsuranceNewsNet

American Friends Service Committee: Faith Groups Urge Congress To Cut Pentagon Spending – InsuranceNewsNet

American Friends Service Committee: Faith Groups Urge Congress to Cut Pentagon Spending

WASHINGTONFeb. 19 -- The American Friends Service Committee issued the following news release:

Over 30 faith-based organizations released an open letter calling on Congress to prioritize essential investments in green energy and sustainable infrastructure, affordable healthcare, and in pandemic relief--and to find the money to make these investments by cutting the bloated Pentagon budget.

The letter reads, "whether Congress is prioritizing creating jobs, addressing climate change, or repairing relationships with other nations, cutting Pentagon spending is part of the solution." It goes on to note that defense spending is notoriously inefficient at job creation, that the Pentagon emits more greenhouse gasses than many countries, and that the United States' endless wars have been devastating communities abroad.

"The Biden administration has promised to 'Build Back Better,' and Congress has the opportunity to help him do this by decreasing the massive and wasteful Pentagon budget, and putting that money into addressing the global problems of our time, including climate change and global health," said Tori Bateman, policy advocacy coordinator with the American Friends Service Committee. "Pouring money into weapons, war, and the pockets of defense contractors doesn't keep us safe--it takes resources away from our communities."

* * *

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February 18, 2021

Dear Members of Congress,

As 31 faith-based organizations from across the United States, representing many different faith traditions, we call on you to prioritize a sustainable, peaceful recovery for the country while developing the government's budget for fiscal year 2022. The Administration has signaled a commitment to investing in green energy and sustainable infrastructure /1, in affordable healthcare, and in economic support for people struggling with the effects of the pandemic /2. These are essential investments- and we can find the money we need to make these investments a reality by cutting the bloated Pentagon budget.

We are called by our faith traditions to prioritize caring for people, and to turn away from violence and corruption. The Hebrew Bible calls people "stewards" of the land, urges them to feed the hungry and care for the poor, and prophesies nations forging their "swords into ploughshares."

Whether Congress is prioritizing creating jobs, addressing climate change, or repairing relationships with other nations, cutting Pentagon spending is part of the solution. Defense sector spending is notoriously inefficient at job creation- spending in education or healthcare can create double the number of jobs for the same investment /3. The Pentagon emits more greenhouse gasses than many countries /4, and has been devastating communities abroad in endless and unnecessary wars.

Instead of spending money on weapons and war, we need to be investing in things that address the urgency of climate change and build resilient communities- including clean energy and sustainable infrastructure. Ensuring that low-income and marginalized communities have the infrastructure they need for clean air, water, broadband, and public transportation is key.

Addressing climate change and sustainable infrastructure will put the country on a path to a more equitable future- and create good jobs at the same time.

We also need reductions in the Pentagon budget in order to invest in public health- an especially essential investment in this time of pandemic. Everyone must have access to affordable, quality healthcare. Congress should prioritize funding testing and treatment for COVID, and expansion of Medicaid.

By reducing Pentagon spending, we would also free up funds to invest in foreign assistance, diplomacy, and peacebuilding. Conflict can be solved in nonviolent ways when we address the root causes like global hunger and poverty, and use all of our nonviolent, sustainable foreign policy tools like diplomacy and peacebuilding. Congress must reduce the bloated Pentagon budget, and invest instead in real solutions for communities experiencing conflict.

As the United States works to recover from the economic and public health disaster of COVID-19, it is essential that we invest in clean energy and infrastructure, healthcare, and peacebuilding, instead of giving handouts to defense contractors and pouring taxpayer dollars into endless wars. This year, Congress must pass appropriations bills that cut the topline Pentagon budget, eliminates the unaccountable Overseas Contingencies Operations fund (OCO), and re-invests that money into a sustainable, healthy, and peaceful recovery for our communities.

Sincerely,

Alliance of Baptists

American Friends Service Committee

Bridges Faith Initiative

Center on Conscience & War

Christian Peacemaker Teams

Church World Service

Church of the BrethrenOffice of Peacebuilding and Policy

Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Disciples Center for Public Witness

Disciples Refugee & Immigration Ministries

Franciscan Action Network

Friends Committee on National Legislation (FCNL)

InterReligious Task Force on Central America

Islamic Society of North America

Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns

Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Council of Churches

Pax Christi USA

Pennsylvania Council of Churches

Presbyterian Church Office of Public Witness

Presbyterian Peace Fellowship

Provincial Council Clerics of St. Viator

Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association

Sisters of Mercy of the Americas - Justice Team

Sisters of Mercy of the Americas NH

The United Methodist Church - General Board of Church and Society

Union for Reform Judaism

United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

Footnotes:

1/ The Biden Plan to Build a Modern, Sustainable Infrastructure and an Equitable Clean Energy Future. 2020. Joe Biden for President: Official Campaign Website

2/ Build Back Better: Joe Biden's Jobs and Economic Recovery Plan for Working Families. 2020. Joe Biden for President: Official Campaign Website.

3/ Garrett-Peltier, H., War Spending and Lost Opportunities. Brown University

4/ Crawford, N.C., 2020. Pentagon Fuel Use, Climate Change, and the Costs of War. Brown University.

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