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Amid War, Following Yonder Star Towards Peace
Beneath our flat, here in Kabul, wedding guests crowded into a restaurant and celebrated throughout the night. Guests sounded joyful and the music, mostly disco, thumped loudly. When the regular call to prayer sounded out at 5:20 a.m., the sounds seemed to collide in an odd cacophony, making all music indistinguishable. I smiled, remembering the prayer call’s durable exhortation to live in peace, heard worldwide for centuries, and went back to sleep.
Through most of my life, I’ve found it easy to resonate with the ringing and beautiful Christmas narrative found in the Gospel of Luke, but less so with that jangling discord with which westerners are so familiar—the annual collision between (on the one hand) the orgy of gift-purchasing and gift-consumption surrounding the holiday and the the sweeter, simpler proclamations of peace on earth heralded by the newborn’s arrival. I've found myself quite surprisingly happy to spend many Christmases either in U.S. jails or among Muslims living in places like Bosnia, Iraq, Jordan and now Afghanistan. My hosts and friends in these places have been people who are enduring wars or fleeing wars, including, as in the case of U.S. jails, a war against the poor in the United States.
The Christmas narrative that imagines living beings coming together across divides, the houseless family with no room at the inn, the shepherds and the foreign royals arriving, all awakening to unimagined possibilities of peace, comes alive quite beautifully in the community with which I'm graced to find myself here in Kabul.
Five of the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers are spending winter months in the apartment here which accommodates their group as well as visiting guests such as our small Voices delegation. In recent months, the place has evolved into a resource center for learning languages and exchanging ideas about nonviolent movements for social change. I am filled with fond and deep admiration for these young people as I watch them studying each other’s languages and preparing their own delegation to visit other provinces of this land on the brink of civil war, meeting with other young people wherever they can.
I’ve often described Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers as having bridged considerable ethnic gaps in their steadfast aspiration to someday live without wars. It’s quite impressive, during this trip, to learn from them about how close several of them came to becoming armed fighters.
One young friend recalls having spent three weeks, at age 12, as part of a Taliban group. He had no choice but to go with the Taliban as a conscript. He was given a rifle, as well as adequate food, and assigned to be a sentry. "I loaded the weapon and I fired warning shots," said our young friend, who is now 21 years of age, "but I didn’t feel good about it.” A village elder intervened, saying the new recruits were too young, and the Taliban released my friend and the other young teens.
We watched a film together in which another youngster, about seven years previously, had acted the role of the leader of a group of children imitating Talib fighters. Carrying sticks, the young actors had harassed a little girl over her determination that she would learn to read. Now we asked the young man, himself a Hazara, how he felt about playing a Taliban child. He acknowledged having grown up believing that anyone who was part of an ethnic group that had persecuted his people could never be trusted.
The father of another youngster had been killed by the Taliban. Still another describes how he watched in horror as Hazara fighters killed his brother.
Last week, the AYPVs welcomed a new friend who lives in a neighboring province and speaks a different language to join them and help them learn his language. Asked about NATO/ISAF night raids and other attacks that have occurred in his area, the new friend said that families who have suffered attacks feel intense anger, but even more so people say they want peace. "However, international forces have made people feel less secure," he added. "It’s unfortunate that internationals hear stories about Afghans being wild people and think that more civilized outsiders are trying to build the country. People here are suffering because of destruction caused by outsiders."
The air, the ground, the mountainsides, the water, and even the essential bonds of familial living have been ravaged by three decades of warfare here in Afghanistan. People living here have suffered the loss of an estimated two million people killed in the wars. 850 children die every day because of disease and hunger.
Amid excruciating sorrow and pain, it’s good to see people still find ways to gather for celebrations, even when the sounds seem curious and the dances seem, to some, forbiddingly exotic. Differences between insiders and outsiders become less relevant as people meet one another to celebrate.
Peace can surprise us when it comes, and that alone is abundantly sufficient cause for celebration in this season, wherever we are. Dr. King wrote that "the arc of history is long but it bends toward justice," and we should not be surprised as new and growing movements around us reveal an unquenchable and ineradicable longing for simple justice. The killing fields that scar our earth and sear the memories of survivors beckon us to look and listen for new ways of living together. Massacres of innocents call to us to reject the easy and familiar and go home by an other way.
The desires to live more simply, to share resources more radically, and to prefer service to dominance are not unique to any place, season, or religion. Such desires may yet herald unions previously unimagined and a better world for every newborn, each one bringing an astonishing potential - as we do if we strive to fulfill it - for peace.


9 Comments so far
Show AllExcept for the date, the movie Kathy mentions sounds very much like "The Buddha Collapsed out of Shame" by Iranian director Hana Makhmalbaf (2007) which is definitely worth seeing.
I really like the graphic that accompanies the article but weren't the wise men traveling west so they would already be on the other side of the wall, on the West Bank? Picky, I know.
If we delete our internal memories in our consciousness and install a new browser with [KK] operating system, we’d be closer to the dream you describe. But for that to happen, we would have to imitate and that is one of man/woman (‘s) biggest weakness. After all, how much bread a man can eat is related to the image reflected in one’s mirror that capitalism so eagerly amplifies. I think we have reached the point where the packaging of words even when delivered with just the right inflection in tone hits its target dead on, will not affect change. You are a reminder of what has to be done....human nature's other side personified. We can’t thank you enough. Thank You Kathy!!
---"I think we have reached the point where the packaging of words even when delivered with just the right inflection in tone hits its target dead on, will not affect change."---
I have been reading and listening to Kathy Kelly's plan-spoken messages of peace - messges that are austere and "just so" like the rocks and sand in a zen garden, for 20 years. They go out into the void without as much as an echo. There is something about a such cries for justice - utterly futile so far, but one is compelled to do them; there is no other choice, it is Buddha-nature. Something about this always brings tears to my eyes.
The words are heard by you and I and others. WE are not in a void, we hear, we nod we agree, we cry, we are affirmed in our convictions, we try to be examples, to live what we believe. Perhaps becasue of the quiet heroism of these peace activists we hear them more clearly is spite of the noise and clatter around us. Their work does not go un noticed. The universe is watching and listening.
I took your advice, pjd412 and i see you have tears here................
I will share with you that i have spoken with kathy and written her. She is very good when speaking her experience as well. She has something of a stage actress within her and i shared that with her a few years ago. She said it is something she would love to do and did i have any inside info. ;-)
Peace and Creativity to you...........
Thanks Kathy,
It is great to know good thinks are happening and the struggle for peace goes on around the world.
"The desires to live more simply, to share resources more radically, and to prefer service to dominance are not unique to any place, season, or religion."
This is what makes us human.
Thanks, Kathy
Those of us who hunger for truth reach out to CD and read Kathy Kelly's honest sincere accounts of reality in places where our tax dollars are used to destroy under the guise of national security. We are all slaves to the deception of corrupt leaders. People like Kathy Kelly set us free. I just wish others would let us share our witnessed information with them instead of relying on Fox News .
Thank You Kathy Kelly
In the story about Jesus, he had 12 friends, one sold him out, another denied knowing him.......it's hard to be a pacifist and stand up justice........it usually ends up getting one nailed to a dead tree and left to die.