Can Conversation Combat Terror? | by Abby Stamelman Hocky
Philadelphia cartoonist Signe Wilkenson rarely adds words to accompany
her poignant artistry. But on March 17,
2019, when the above image was published in The
Inquirer, she added her voice:
“After the
Pittsburgh synagogue shooting last fall, I drew the initial version of this
cartoon but for timing reasons it never ran. I’m sorry but not shocked for the
opportunity to redraw it now after the unGodly carnage at the mosque in
Christchurch, New Zealand. There aren’t enough armed guards to protect every
church, synagogue, mosque, ashram and temple around the world. It might be time
for God’s children to figure out a way to get along.”
And then tragically, on Easter Sunday, another unthinkable atrocity
occurred, targeting innocent people in churches and hotels in Sri Lanka. I felt the tremors of this attack – 9000 miles away, in the safety of my home – on the
second day of Passover. Each year since
I was a child, the recounting of the Passover story has been a source of hope –
when we re-dedicate ourselves to eradicating enslavement, oppression, and
inhumanity so that the forces of justice and freedom will prevail. It is this mandate, embedded in my genetic
makeup, that opens my heart to the dignity and humanity of each soul – it compels
me to believe that we can indeed build the beloved communities that Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King dreamed of.
This past year, Interfaith Philadelphia has engaged in A Year of Civil Conversations, offering
witness to thousands of people in this region seeking ways to cross thresholds,
build bridges of understanding, link arms, and learn to converse authentically
and respectfully across differences. And yet the inevitable question comes back to
haunt us: is this work enough and can we work quickly
enough?
A recent story offers wisdom from the five-year-old son of Rev. Nicole
Diroff, our Associate Director. Nicole and her family have a vibrant church home at Tabernacle United
Church, and their son Elliott attends a Jewish pre-school in their Philadelphia
neighborhood. On the Monday after the
Pittsburgh shooting, Elliott wondered why there was a policeman at the door of
his synagogue school. That evening, when Nicole had the sad task of any parent
who has to “explain” why someone would shoot people in their house of worship,
she cushioned the blow by explaining that that is the work that she does with
Interfaith Philadlephia to prevent this sort of hatred from growing. Elliott thought for a moment and said, “I
guess you just weren’t able to work fast enough.”
Yes, “It’s time for God’s children to figure out a way
to get along..." And we do know how to do this. The question is, do we have the courage to harness our greatest resources, overcome the forces of despair, invest in what is possible, and link arms to protect one another? Please join us to create a different future.
Your life is a perfect example of what we all must do to link arms to protect one another.
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