Volume > Issue > Saying “No” to Death in All Its Manifestations

Saying “No” to Death in All Its Manifestations

A SPIRITUALITY OF PEACEMAKING — PART II

By Henri J.M. Nouwen | October 1985
The Rev. Henri J.M. Nouwen, a Contributing Editor of the NOR, is currently working for l’Arche communities (Catholic/ecumenical communities serving disabled persons) in France. This article is the second installment in a three-part series. His latest book is Love in a Fearful Land: Our Guatemalan Story.

When the Second World War came to an end, I was only 13 years old. Although my parents had skillfully protected me and my brother from the horror of the Nazis in my native Holland, they couldn’t prevent me from seeing how our Jewish neighbors were led away, and from hearing about concentration camps to which they were deported and from which they never returned. Only in the years after the war did I become aware of the de­monic dimensions of the Jewish persecution and learn the word “holocaust.” And now, 40 years later, I often ask myself: “Why was there not a massive popular uprising? Why weren’t there marches of thousands of people protesting the genocide that was taking place? Why did the mil­lions of religious people not invade the camps and tear down the gas chambers and ovens that were being built to annihilate the Jewish people? Why did those who pray, sing hymns, and go to church not resist the powers of evil so visible in their own land?”

It is important to find answers for these ques­tions. But today I am no longer a 13-year-old boy who does not fully understand what is going on. Today I am an adult living only a few miles from the place where the Trident submarine is being built, a weapon able to destroy in one second more people than were gassed in Nazi Germany during the long years of the Hitler regime. Today I am a well-informed person fully aware of the genocide in Guatemala and the murderous terror in El Salva­dor. Today I am a well-educated teacher who is able to show clearly and convincingly that the cost­ly arms race between the superpowers means star­vation for millions of people all over the globe. To­day I am a Christian who has heard the words of Christ many times and knows that the God of Israel and of Jesus Christ is the God of the living in whom there is no shadow of death.

Today I am asking myself the question: “Does my prayer, my communion with the God of life become visible in acts of resistance against the power of death surrounding me?” Or will those who are 13 years old today raise the same question about me 40 years from now that I am raising about the adult Christians of my youth? I have to realize that my silence or apathy may make it im­possible for anyone to raise any questions 40 years from today. Because what is being prepared is not a holocaust to extinguish a whole people, but a holocaust that puts an end to humanity itself — that will not only make giving answers but also raising questions a total impossibility.

These thoughts are constantly on my mind. These concerns keep me wondering about how to be a peacemaker today and every day of my life. I will never be able to say: “I didn’t know what was going on.” I do know with frightening accuracy what will happen when nothing is done. Being a peacemaker today requires that my prayer become visible in concrete actions.

Enjoyed reading this?

READ MORE! REGISTER TODAY

SUBSCRIBE

You May Also Enjoy

Surveillance of the Unborn: A Human Rights Issue

While the March of Dimes may do valuable work toward helping conquer birth defects, other unborn handicapped children are denied life because of its support of prenatal testing.

The Mansour & Kosnik Cases

Under John Cardinal Dearden, the Archdio­cese of Detroit was one of the most famously “lib­eral”…

The Woeful Plight of Iraqi Christians

Christians in Iraq are perceived as being allied with the foreign occupiers, but the Americans provide no special protection for them.