For those Christians
who make pilgrimage to Jerusalem, walking and praying along the
Via Dolorosa or “Way of the Cross” has become a standard.
Starting at the location from which it is believed that Pontius
Pilate condemned Jesus Christ to the cross, Christians walk all
fourteen “stations” of Christ’s suffering until they reach the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher. It is here, at the sight of his
crucifixion and burial, that the Son of God’s martyrdom is
commemorated.
In his book,
Witnessing for Peace, Bishop Munib Younan dedicates an
entire chapter to “A Theology of Martyria”. While the concept of
martyria or witnessing has long been forgotten by western
Christians who no longer fear religious persecution, the
presence of ‘shahadat’ or martyrs is ever present in the life of
this Palestinian clergyman & his nation.
Living in a region
of the world where occupation, oppression, apartheid, and
suicide bombings have become the unfortunate norm, Bishop
Younan’s claim that the “theology of martyria” is a “concept
misunderstood” is not only refreshing, but long overdue.
For years, religious
fundamentalism – whether Jewish, Muslim, or Christian – has
played a significant role in the erroneous interpretation of the
scriptures in which the concept of martyria is found. According
to Younan, while fundamentalist Jews have exploited a believed
promise between God and Abraham to justify brutal policies aimed
at marginalizing the Palestinian people and simultaneously
fulfilling their hunger for territorial expansion, Muslim
fundamentalists have mistakenly “tied” the concept of “martyrdom
to death”. Christian fundamentalists, meanwhile, have focused
too much of their attention upon spreading the word of God
through “evangelism”, not deed – “a far cry from the witness
described in the Acts of the Apostles”. In fact, Younan claims
that much of the contemporary world has ignored the connection
between word and deed – an unfortunate phenomenon that
Palestinian society has long claimed as being true.
Contrary to popular
belief, Younan claims that martyria is about life – not death.
However, “It is about living fully in such a way that death is
the outcome”. Elaborating upon this, Bishop Younan states that
there are three necessary and equal components to martyria:
word, deed, and suffering. To speak about an issue, but
hypocritically not act upon it – to act upon a matter without
educating others about it – or to simply inflict suffering upon
one’s self or others without proper justification and
explanation are all incompatible with the concept of martyria.
Indeed, to become a true martyr, one must contribute equally to
“witnessing in word, witnessing in deed, and exposing oneself to
danger, whatever the cost”. If this “cost” so happens to be
death, then one will have become a martyr. However, to simply
kill one’s self in a desperate act of hopelessness does not
constitute martyria, but murder – a sin against God in all three
Abrahamic faiths.
It is astounding to
observe the irony plaguing the area of Palestine-Israel,
otherwise known as “The Holy Land”. In a region where religions
were introduced in order to end the perverse exploitation of man
and his world, such abuses not only exist, but are falsely
justified by those very religions.
Perhaps the
most disappointing has been Christianity’s response. While
Judaism and Islam are, in fact, theologically grounded in the
virtues of peace and justice, neither faith boasts adherence to
a Holy Trinity, in which the Son of God himself provided an
exemplary
lifestyle for followers to emulate. In the
case of Jesus Christ, he indeed was a martyr – as he bore
witness to the word of God, acted in accordance with those
words, and suffered along the Via Dolorosa for man’s sins. He
did not kill himself, nor did he want to die, but because he
refused to deviate from a righteous path, he was killed. For
this, his reward was resurrection.
But if Christians
are indeed required to follow Christ’s example by bearing
witness to the virtues of peace, truth, love, and justice –
“whatever the cost” – then why have millions of Christians
either remained silent or avoided turning their words into deeds
on the issue of Palestinian suffering?
Bishop Younan
faithfully claims that “Martyria is the Via Dolorosa with
resurrection”. If this interpretation of “a theology of martyria”
is correct, then it’s about time more Christians step forward
and offer themselves up as martyrs for a true and just
resolution to the Palestinian Issue.
* Nadeem
Muaddi is a graduate student at Temple University in
Philadelphia, PA. He can be reached at
Nadeem_Muaddi@yahoo.com.