06004
Jan. 4, 2006
Peacemaking team planning
White House prayer and fast
Group will mark Epiphany
by calling for end of Iraq occupation
by Alexa Smith
LOUISVILLE — About a half-dozen
members of Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPTs) will pray and fast
outside the White House for three days to celebrate Epiphany
(Jan. 6) and urge
churches to demand an end to the U.S. occupation of Iraq.
The team has requested a meeting with President George W. Bush.
CPT,
a pacifist human-rights organization, has documented prisoner
abuse in Iraq and communicated its concerns to the media when
the Abu Ghraib scandal broke. The group attracted
more attention six weeks ago when four of its members were taken
captive in Baghdad by a
previously unknown group that calls itself the Swords of Righteousness
Brigade.
The
kidnappers threatened to execute their hostages, but let their
deadline pass without incident. So far there has been no further
information about the whereabouts or condition of the hostages.
“Up to this point, we’ve considered no news to be good news,” Cliff
Kindy, one of the organizers of the Epiphany event, told the Presbyterian News Service by telephone from his home in northern Indiana. “It is a very difficult time, but it is no more difficult than what Iraqis are living through.”
Kindy said the fast will launch what CPT calls its “Shine the Light” campaign
to expose torture, hostage- taking and abuse of detainees in
Iraq and elsewhere.
The
campaign will begin officially on Jan. 15, Martin Luther King
Day, and run through Jan. 29, when CPT and its supporters will
lead candle-lit processions in front of the Pentagon, the State
Department, the U.S. Capitol, CIA headquarters and other government
or private institutions that support the war.
The Epiphany fast will run from 8 a.m. on Jan. 6 through noon on Jan. 8.
Anita David, a Chicago Presbyterian and a member of CPT’s
Baghdad team, said in a Dec. 30 letter that the wait for word
about the four kidnapped men has been terrible. The CPT members
have been focusing on how to secure the release of their colleagues.
David
said the kidnapping raises difficult issues and forces team members
to ponder whether we have the right to advocate peace if we are
not prepared to pay the cost of non-violent peacemaking?
She said she wonders why others — including radio pundit Rush Limbaugh — accept
the consequences of war. She said Limbaugh has been critical
of CPT’s
work in Iraq and apparently is pleased that the kidnappings are
testing a group of what he calls “leftist feel-good hand-wringers.”
“We thank our Iraqi friends continuously for standing by us and continuing to work with us,” David said. “Their presence with us puts them in real danger. We continue
to shop in the market, and when we walk down our streets, our neighbors
ask about our teammates — Have we heard? Has anyone called? What are we doing?”
Kindy said CPT members hope to be able to convey to the President the concerns of ordinary Iraqis.
Asked
whether he thinks the group will get to speak to Bush, he recalled
a visit a CPT group made to Fallujah in the company of Muslim
peacemakers. The group was told that entry was impossible, but
several carloads went ahead, and got into the city.
“We’ll make ourselves available,” Kindy said. “God will work the miracle.” |