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America's One-Sided Prayers - Faithism at i...
amatullah
04/13/03 at 18:43:07
Published on Wednesday, April 9, 2003 by the Boston Globe

by Derrick Z. Jackson

GOD HAS ROLLED into Baghdad. Our jihad is almost complete. Back home, from the
halls of Centcom to the fields of Camp Lejeune, President Bush has invoked the
name of the Maker to help us disassemble and remake Iraq in our image of
freedom. God bless America. God bless our troops.

In one press availability, Bush said : ''I pray for God's comfort and God's
healing powers to anybody, coalition force, American, Brit, anybody who loses a
life in this -- in our efforts to make the world more peaceful and more free.''
At his speech at Central Command, he said : ''People across this country are
praying. . . . We pray that God will bless and receive each of the fallen, and
we thank God that liberty found such brave defenders.'' Some soldiers believe
this so much that someone at Centcom shouted, ''God bless you, sir !''

There is an ugliness about this. Although it is so easy and appropriate to note
the cynical use of God by Saddam Hussein, it is striking that not a single time
during this first-strike war has Bush ever asked God to bless however few or
many Iraqi civilians our attack has killed and maimed.

On the night he announced the war, Bush said : ''The families of our military
are praying that all those who serve will return safely and soon. Millions of
Americans are praying with you for the safety of your loved ones and for the
protection of the innocent.''

That is as close as he has gotten. He has not cited Iraqi citizens by their
country's name. Bush claims that the freedom we are giving to the Iraqi people
is ''God's gift to humanity.'' But the Iraqi people are not quite human enough
for him to say ''God bless the fallen civilians of Iraq,'' or ''God bless the
innocent of Iraq,'' or even ''God bless the children of Iraq.'' It is always,
God bless our troops. God bless our country. God bless our fallen. We pray that
our families will receive God's comfort and grace.''

This sends a strong message to the world that in God's eyes we are better than
you, so much better that you do not even deserve our prayers. We are still stuck
in a locker room, behaving no more maturely than two football teams trying to
outpray each other.

We can kid ourselves that our prayers are less fanatical than Iraq's information
minister, Mohammed Saeed Al-Sahaf, warning American soldiers that ''God will
grill their bellies in hell.'' That is small comfort to the families of Iraqi
civilians whose bodies were set aflame and grilled beyond recognition by our
bombs and bullets. For them, the brave defenders of liberty denied freedom
forever.

The arrogance of American power by the bomb and the bullet allows us to forget
that history offers no evidence that those who pray the hardest to their God are
right. The Europeans who baptized Africans into slavery, the Christians who
prayed as they exterminated North American Indians, the Klansmen with their
crosses were indisputably on the wrong side of history.

As much as many of us believe God was with us in World Wars I and II, God was
more neutral in Korea and was a POW in Vietnam. So many people are still tearing
each other up in the name of God, from the poorest nations in Africa to once
again, America, that only the most blind can see that religion does not
necessarily equate with reason, resolve, or resolution.

As evil as Saddam Hussein is, it is interesting to note that the same
politicians who ask God's blessing for the troops have nothing to say about God
when reports come in of scared US soldiers -- many of whom look like babies
under their pot-sized helmets -- gunning down entire Iraqi families. This week,
a US soldier in Iraq said, ''It really gets to me to see children being killed
like this, but we had no choice.'' Perhaps it gets to him because despite all
the prayers and proclamations, soldiers know far better than the politicians
that the charred bodies of the innocent cannot possibly be God's work. If we are
to pray, perhaps it would be better to wish that soldiers like him are not
mentally disabled by the deadly choices of our leaders.

America will never truly be a beacon of global freedom as long as it prays only
for itself. In the New Testament, Jesus said, ''Love your enemies and pray for
those who persecute you.'' God is rolling into Baghdad promising to make the
world more peaceful and free. A nation that has chosen to kill innocent Iraqis
in a ''preventive'' war has a lot of talking to do with God.

It is hard to love Saddam Hussein, but in our hate of him, we failed to deliver
God's love to the innocents. All that many Iraqis have felt from the God-blessed
troops of the United States is preventive vengeance.

© Copyright 2003 Globe Newspaper Company.


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