| I don't like violence. It dehumanises the aggessor and causes untold
suffering to the victim. In its wake the family, friends and the society are left to deal
with their own pain and fear and sadness. Yet we often cheer violence, support it and make
heroes of those who foster it and commit it. The contradictions in our position on this
issue are astounding. Some years ago I came upon a press photograph of a grieving mother
and father who had lost their daughter in a terrible tragedy. There have been many such
photos that we have grown accustomed to seeing...That particular photograph did not come
from a major international centre of crime or from a war zone. Rather it was from a
massacre of innocent people in Australia, in Melbourne--a peaceful city under the Southern
Cross.
What do we do with the law abiding bigotry; the law abiding intolerance; the law
abiding promotion of gratuitous violence in the media; the law abiding
institutionalisation of poverty and homelessness; the law abiding environmental
destruction; the Christian affront of a just war? I am afraid for my children that the
violence, anti-semitism, racism and sexism put forward under the guise of patriotism,
honour, religion and power might grow rather than diminish.
Events of human violence raise questions of who we are in relation to one
another...Social systems require trust and faith in others. To not trust is to not love.
To not love is unthinkable. To not be loved is intolerable.
Events like these remind us how vulnerable and fragile we are, when one person propped
up by all the systems and individuals who exploit weakness and bias can wound so many of
us so thoroughly.
...We must understand that the politics of violence is a weakness and the economics of
violence is always a loss. If we wish our children well then we must also wish them
peace... |