Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Ahlan Wasahlan
Sunday, July 11, 2010
When Dying Trees Bloom
At easy answers, half-truths, and superficial relationships
So that you may live deep within your heart.
May God bless you with anger
At injustice, oppression, and exploitation of people,
So that you may work for justice, freedom, and peace.
May God bless you with tears
To shed for those who suffer pain, rejection, hunger, and war,
So that you may reach out your hand to comfort them and
To turn their pain into joy.
And may God bless you with enough foolishness
To believe that you can make a difference in the world,
So that you can do what others claim cannot be done
To bring justice and kindness to all our children and the poor.
When he was born, Issa’s family abandoned him to the solitude of a cave, a consequence due to his being born with what appears to be Down syndrome. Basma and the founder of Al-Basma, Abu Shadi, discovered him there, helpless and rejected. They taught him how to speak, to eat, to use the bathroom, to dress himself. Simply put, they helped him realize his own humanity. After some time, they realized that Issa was also talented, having the ability to weave beautiful fabrics on the loom. Through Al-Basma, Issa has been given a place in society, a way to contribute. His family left him for dead in the darkness of a cave, but Al-Basma gave him life through the light of love. Issa has now been welcomed back into the home of his family that previously abandoned him.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Resistance Through Life
Friday, June 25, 2010
Life in Palestine
Well, we've been spending a lot of days lately working at Al-Basma with our new mentally handicapped friends. I've especially been helping make the recycled paper from which they make notebooks and Christmas cards. I also helped put up some curtains in their guest house over the last week. Sharing in the joy and the smiles has been incredible. I don't know how to put into words what it is like to see music speak to them in such a powerful way, or to explain how intensely the presence and grace of Jesus is revealed here through these people and I commend Michael and Paul for creatively sharing these thoughts that I am incapable of expressing.
We have also continued to work at the Paidia climbing wall on the weekends. Many nights we go to the park and watch the World Cup game that they project onto a big screen each evening. It seems weird to think that something that is such a big deal here is hardly cared about in the US. It is a beautiful thing that this place, which was once a Jordanian military base and then an Israeli military base, is now such a nice park and a place where the community gathers to celebrate the excitement and participate in the atmosphere of the World Cup.
Last night I walked halfway down the valley that sits behind our apartment. Even after 4 weeks here, the view still takes my breath away. I haven't yet gotten used to it or begun taking it for granted. The night before that, Paul and I walked down into the valley. We saw a shepherd leading his sheep in front of us. I told Paul I wondered how different this place looked in the time of Jesus. It is easy to imagine that it looked then quite similar to how it looks now. Perhaps the shepherds were here in this valley when they heard the announcement that Jesus had been born. It seems likely that 1000 years before that David may have brought his flock here, right outside of his hometown of Bethlehem. Maybe he sat on this very rock and wrote a psalm here, long before he ever became king.
I walk back there today. I enjoy the stillness and the quiet. Everything seems so peaceful. I look around and I can see so much of this great world. I see the houses up on the hilltops, the fields down in the valley. There are some children at the bottom, playing under some olive trees. I see a shepherd with his flock over on the side of the mountain. I close my eyes. And I simply listen.
What strikes me first is what I do not hear. I hear no cars, no traffic. Back home, when I try this exercise, even out in the midst of cornfields, it seems I can almost always here traffic in the distance. But here, it is different. I hear children laughing. I can't even see them, but their voices carry from the hilltop on the other side. I hear a soccer ball being kicked. I listen to the sound of sheep and a dog is barking somewhere in the distance. Now I hear a bee buzzing around my head and music, coming from somewhere far off, reaches my ears. The sun sets. The moon is almost full. I see the Big Dipper and the North Star. The same moon and the same stars and constellations that I look at back home. I look toward Bethlehem and I see a particularly bright planet or star that seems to be resting right above it.
A few minutes later I stop at the store to buy some water. Right as I leave a shepherd brings his flock across the street and steps into the store to buy some things. As I make the short walk back to my apartment from the store, the shepherd's dog walks beside me and about 60 sheep and goats follow us. The shepherd catches up in a few minutes, but apparently the sheep dog knows where to guide the animals entrusted to his care. I walk down the dusty road, carrying my groceries, I hear the evening call to prayer in the distance, the fifth and final call of the day, I exchange glances with the dog walking at my side, and look back at our unusual entourage. And we walk on together, under the bright moonlight, down the streets of Palestine.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Where the Smile Never Dies
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
On the Piano Lesson
Blackman carves the memory
Of his black wife
Sold for Pharaoh’s wife to have the piano he carvin’.
But if she goin’ to play music
She goin’ to play the song that tell the story
Of his black wife’s plight.
Playin’ that story of Egyptland
Where power and fear whip the cotton picker
Who builds pyramids for Pharaoh’s empire.
Playin’ that story of Africaland
Where the AIDS filled penis is the black wife’s plight
And poverty buys guns for children to learn to use.
While Pharaoh slip a diamond on his wife’s finger
And African oil smogs up the Beijing sky.
Playin' that story of a Holy Land
Where walls block the Light
And parched tongues search for Jordan
Still Pharaoh slumps at the piano
His wife banging silent keys
Writing this cacophonous ballad
But Pharaoh's not listening
Playin’ that story of the Southland
Where children live in trash heaps
And U.S. bullets murder bishops.
But don’t you say a word to Pharoah’s wife
She don’t know the piano she plays
Is only made of banana peels.
Playin’ that story here in Freedomland
Blackman carvin’ a new picture here.
His Iraqi son’s face.
Pharaoh sold him for a bomb
So Pharaoh’s wife could play a song she don’t know.