“The closest thing to democracy (in the
Arab world) is Syria” thus spoke the Maronite Patriarch Al Rai. Such nonsense, had it been spouted by a
lesser individual would have been grounds to have the speaker examined. There
is nothing that can be defended in the above statement and unfortunately the
Patriarch goes on his merry way of not realizing how vacuous he sounds. To make
things worse the above was said just as he was embarking on a trip to visit the
Jordanian Monarch and the Qatari Prince. Both were too well mannered to show their
disgust with the inanity of these childish utterances that demonstrate a total
lack of understanding of what is democracy and even what is the basis of
Christian dogma. As if the above senseless views were not enough the Patriarch
dared defend these faulty views upon his return to Lebanon by issuing a
statement berating some Lebanese for not reading the whole text, as if the
qualification “in the Arab world” was to be his savior from having committed ,
and not for the first time this unforgivable faux pas.
I guess his eminence has been too busy
making silly statements left and right about areas and topics that are outside
his area of expertise that he must have forgotten that the early Christians
were thrown to the lions in the Coliseum of Rome rather than waver from the
teachings of their master who urged them to “know the truth, and the truth will
set you free.” The truth your eminence is that Bashar, whom you have called a
reformer, is a butcher who murders men women and children for no reason except
to stay on the “thrown”. Isn’t it blasphemy for a cleric to oppose the down
trodden and to side with power, arrogance and tyranny. I always thought that
Christians worshiped humility and worked to liberate the poor and the exploited
since He taught them that “it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a
needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God."
What is even more frustrating than all
of these shameful statements is the insistence of Patriarch Al Rai that he does
not delve into politics. What in the name of God does one call statements justifying
a state within a state, offering moral support to a corrupt and bankrupt
dictatorship that is opposed by practically the whole world for its cruelty and
its opposition to the right to dissent, to freedom and to the right to congregate,
what is a judgment about whether systems are democratic or not and missives
asking the world community to be blackmailed by terror but political statements.
Maybe, just maybe, there is a silver lining
to all of this. Maybe Lebanese of all religious affiliations will come to
recognize that these men of the cloth spend a lifetime reading their holy books
and interpreting dogma and they should stick to their own knitting. It is clear
that it is difficult for one to pray to two Gods, a civil secular mundane and
political one and a highly spiritual and mystical existence. These two do not
mix and it is high time that we ask the clergy to stay out of politics totally
for the same reasons that they would not welcome a commoner interpreting their
scriptures.
This last call is not directed only at
Patriarch Al Rai but also at all other religious leaders. We need to implement
the present constitution by eliminating sectarianism from the political sphere.
The best and the most meaningful starting point for that would be for
government to stop classifying citizen by the religion that they practice or
chose not to practice. It is no one’s business whether I pray or to whom I
pray. What is important is for government to treat all its citizens equally and
to provide them with equal opportunity based on nothing else but merit. This
would go a long way in diminishing and hopefully eliminating any civil role for
religious leaders in the public square. Maybe then they would see the wisdom of
being silent and of standing up to power at any cost. Then the religious leaders
will get the respect that they deserve from those that chose to seek their spiritual
guidance. There is no room for the religious in the public square as both
Patriarch Al Rai and Mufti Kabbani have demonstrated recently.
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