The Middle East Peace
Initiative [MEPI] is an ongoing effort by the Interreligious and
International Federation for World Peace [IIFWP] to support the peace
process in the Middle East. During 2003, MEPI sponsored more than 20
projects and programs in Israel, Palestine, and around the world.
A critical
dimension of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is each side’s dehumanization
of the other. This has fostered an escalating cycle of violence and
revenge. To stem this dehumanization, the MEPI brings together Christians,
Muslims, Jews, and other faith leaders in person-to-person (“heart to
heart”) encounters, where the humanity of “the other” can be recognized and
experienced.
Any
negotiated, political settlement between conflicting parties requires an
atmosphere of good will and trust. The current culture of conflict must be
supplanted by a culture of reconciliation and cooperation. The MEPI
recognizes that fundamental to any peace accord is a change of heart, and
that the most appropriate people to lead this transformation of heart are
religious leaders.
The MEPI
facilitates “heart to heart” encounters in three ways.
High
level, interfaith conferences are held for top leaders of
society. In an atmosphere of mutual respect and trust, these leaders
engage in substantive dialogue. In 2003, major conferences were held in
Jerusalem, Gaza, and the West Bank as well as Washington, DC, and Seoul,
Korea. Conference participants included religious leaders, legislators,
former heads of state, university professors and youth leaders. At the
conclusion of each conference, participants pledged to reach beyond
their race, their religious background, and their nationality in order
to cooperate and establish a world of peace.
The MEPI
sponsors pilgrimages to the Holy Lands, as well as “Heart to
Heart” peace rallies and peace processions in Jerusalem. These
activities engage people of diverse backgrounds, allowing them to
experience the liberating force of reconciliation. In May, September
and October of 2003, nearly 400 American pastors, imams and rabbis
participated in interfaith pilgrimages to Israel. On December 22, 2003,
in the heart of Jerusalem, tens of thousands of Christians, Muslims and
Jews were joined by nearly 3,000 pilgrims from around the world. They
gathered for an historic “Heart to Heart” Rally for Peace, and expressed
their commitment to reconciliation and peace.
The MEPI
promotes service projects that demonstrate active caring for
others. Not only do these projects help people in need, but also,
through serving others and working side by side with people from
different backgrounds, those involved in the service activities develop
their own character and broaden their capacity to love.
In December
2003 over 1,000 volunteers participated in more than a dozen service
projects in Bethlehem, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and other cities, illustrating
the wisdom and efficacy of a strategy of faith-based service as the
beginning point for reconciliation. These MEPI-sponsored projects employ a
“service learning” approach so that service opportunities become the
training experiences for peacemakers.
Continuing
projects and activities on these three tracks are planned throughout 2004 to
further advance the reconciliation process.
Principles of Peacemaking
The unique approach of the IIFWP ambassadors
for peace who participate in the MEPI is based upon the IIFWP principles of
peacemaking. These principles, as taught by the Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon,
address conflict at the fundamental level of human relationships. Even more
importantly, they are rooted in spiritual laws that are woven into the very
fabric of creation, and by extension reconciliation, and restoration.
Peacemakers are parents. Just as
the one God relates to all human beings as a parent, investing
sacrificially in each and every child for the sake of their welfare and
full realization, the role of an ambassador for peace is likewise a
parental role. As a mother naturally cherishes each of her children, God
cares for every single human being regardless of religion, race,
nationality or belief. In this model, a true peace worker takes the
parent perspective, and loves and cherishes in equal measure and without
partisanship people and families on both sides of any conflict, be they
Israeli, Palestinian, or any other clashing groups. Just as a parent
rejoices and feels at peace when the children live and play in harmony,
it is the will of God that enemies be reconciled and live in cooperation
and mutual prosperity.
Parents investing in their children’s well
being show unconditional love and overlook faults. IIFWP peace workers live
by this very ethic—investing and sacrificing for the sake of peace. They
remain tolerant of the people’s ingrained prejudices and harsh feelings, and
work patiently in spite of those difficulties to educate and elevate
everyone towards the goal of reconciliation.
Living
for the sake of others is the fundamental ethic of a peaceful society,
nation and world. Children
are trained to obey their parents for the overall welfare of their
family; citizens are expected to serve their country—these are instances
of the universal principle of living for the sake of others. The
messianic concept in Christianity, that Jesus died on the cross for all
humankind, is another instance of this principle. Is this something we
can rightly limit? If not, then Christians should live for the sake of
Jews, Jews should live for the sake of Muslims and so on. Palestinians
and Israelis should live for each other’s benefit and welfare. Peace
lies in this wider circle of love.
The
path to peace requires loving one’s enemy. The
scriptures of all the world’s religions teach that the highest ethic is
to love one’s enemy, returning good for evil. Thus the Qur’an teaches,
“Repel the evil deed with one which is better, then lo!, he between whom
and you there was enmity shall become as though he were a bosom friend.”
(41.34) And the Torah, “If you meet your enemy's ox or his ass going
astray, you shall bring it back to him.” (Ex. 23.4) Jacob, the ancestor
of the chosen people, received God’s blessing in part because he won
over his brother Esau and through giving his treasure cooled the hatred
in his heart. There is nothing utopian about the practice of loving
one’s enemy. It is a realistic and practical way to take the sting out
of conflict and create a new atmosphere conducive to reconciliation and
peace.
Peace
efforts begin with strengthening families, the cornerstone of society
and the first school of peace. The love
and affection a child receives in the family is the foundation for the
ability to love others. Nearly everyone receives their first lessons in
peaceful living from their mothers and learns how to resolve conflicts
in the process of harmonizing with their siblings. As such, IIFWP
regards strengthening and protecting the godly family as the first and
most basic peace activity. Women in particular, as conservators of
family values, have a special role in peacemaking. Every son who goes
off to war has a loving mother who wants no harm to come to him. If
mothers unite for peace, their power can be formidable.
Lower
religious boundaries. In this
age of globalization and regional integration, persistent religious and
cultural boundaries in the Middle East stand out as anachronistic. Yet
no economic plan of integration can succeed until we remove the internal
boundaries, those prejudices in the human mind and heart which are
rooted and perpetrated through religious intolerance. For this reason a
central activity of the MEPI is to lower boundaries between religions
through interfaith dialogue, worship, and service activities. Jews,
Christians, and Muslims are called upon to honor each other’s founders,
traditions, and holy sites. Leaders of each faith should regard
educating their people in the good teachings and traditions of other
faiths as an act of the highest devotion to God. By affirming the
parental heart of God for every person, people of faith can develop
genuine respect for the faith traditions of others.
Confidence in this position is strengthened by the spiritual reality
that barriers between religions falling in America and Europe, and even
in heaven where Jesus, Muhammad, Moses and Buddha (PBUT) are dwelling
intimately as friends and fellow servants of God.
Promote a new vision of the People of God and the Holy Land.
The MEPI promotes the divine wisdom that the Jewish ideal of the Chosen
People and the Muslim ideal of darr al-Islam be understood to
include tolerance and inclusion of the other. When God blessed Abraham,
he said, “I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you… and
all the peoples of the earth will be blessed by you.” (Gen. 12:1-3)
These words describe a blessing that is two-fold: to become a holy
nation, and to promote justice for other nations. If the three faith
lines from Abraham were to live by that creed, they would regard the
commandment to show justice for neighbors of other faiths as being of
equal importance to those commandments pertaining to holiness in one’s
own faith. We have historical examples of tolerance in Muslim Spain
(Andalusia) and in Isaiah’s inclusive vision of Zion (Isa. 56.6-7). As
neighbors in the same Holy Land, Jews, Christians and Muslims together
can learn to administer the land cooperatively for the benefit of all
its residents, and as a mecca for pilgrims of all faiths.
Recognize the roots of the conflict in history as spiritual, and commit
to restore peace accordingly.
People typically analyze the Middle East conflict in terms of history,
and further primarily in terms of political history. Israelis cite the
Balfour Declaration and the UN’s role in establishing a Jewish homeland,
while Palestinians decry their expulsion in the Nakba of 1948 and
demand the return of their ancestral homes. IIFWP, however, recognizes
deeper historical roots, which are spiritual. These roots date back to
events around the crucifixion of Jesus and even further back to the
split between Abraham’s children Ishmael and Isaac. Mistakes were made,
but instead of accusation the role proper to a peace worker is
restoration. Restoration is not about demanding something from the
other side; rather it is what “I” can do to correct my part in the
conflict. Hence, to address the root conflict between Isaac and Ishmael,
the work of restoring it requires the Jew to welcome the Muslim back
into his home, and for the Muslim to lay down his gun and seek peace
with the Jew.
Instill ownership in the peace process by promoting local peace
initiatives.
Peace does not begin in the halls of
government. Peace begins in the hearts and actions of individuals.
Peaceful individuals can create peaceful families and communities;
peaceful communities can extend their peace to the nation. No politician
could resist peace for long if the people were to desire peace and truly
live in peace. Based on this principle, the MEPI encourages local
initiatives and individual efforts to break down the walls of hatred,
fear, prejudice and resentment that divide Israelis from Palestinians.
These include local interfaith activities, youth service projects,
cross-cultural education in schools, and good neighbor initiatives
between Israeli and Arab towns. Jewish and Arab families can make
sisterhood relationships and even experience the ultimate unity should
their children marry.
Religious leaders who embody and demonstrate the ideals of
interreligious peace should guide secular leaders.
IIFWP’s model of good governance envisions cooperation between political
leaders and religious leaders, such that a body of spiritual
elders advises and guides a nation’s legislative body.
Enlightened religious leaders can speak as a national conscience,
promoting compassion and inclusiveness as counterweights to the
partisanship that characterizes most democracies today. In ancient
times, prophets like Isaiah and Jeremiah cautioned Israel’s kings
against the errors of nationalism and warmongering because they
understood God’s more comprehensive will. Today’s religious leaders who
devote themselves to the universal God likewise can rise above a
narrow-minded advocacy for their particular religion and become voices
for the higher vision of peace and reconciliation. These leaders have
the spiritual resources of Scriptures which teach repentance,
forgiveness, and living for the sake of others—key virtues for the
pursuit of lasting peace. Their wise advice can help the politicians on
both sides—Israeli and Palestinian—rise above the self-serving pursuit
of national self-interest and break the political logjam.
Peace
education is an urgent task.
These IIFWP principles of peacemaking are not foreign to the peoples of
Abraham; they are rooted in the Torah, the New Testament and the Qur’an.
Yet today people on all sides have lost their way. Instead of reflecting
on their own responsibility, they engage in finger-pointing and placing
blame on the other party. Instead of standing against hatred and fear,
they retreat inside the narrow bastions of tribe and ancestral faith.
Instead of
taking ownership of the peace process, they leave it to the politicians
and then despair when nothing is done.
In the
midst of this darkness and escalating violence, IIFWP
ambassadors for peace
have the
urgent task of educating the people in these principles. When the people
are enlightened, they will have the confidence and the will to take
action. When the people rise up for peace, there will be peace.
[1]The
Interreligious and International Federation for World Peace (IIFWP)
was founded in 1999 by Rev. and Mrs. Sun Myung Moon to build a
global network of world leaders dedicated to working together for
world peace through educational programs, international initiatives,
humanitarian projects, and publications.