Serving two masters

Or rather, one. When Christians embrace Marx it is Christ who seems to come out on the short end of the stick.

Take the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC): Founded in 1917, the group tries to uphold the teachings of George Fox, one of Quakerism’s founders, who urged his followers almost 350 years ago, to “live all in the peaceable life, doing good to all men, and seeking the good and welfare of all men.”

Initially the AFSC held true to such principles. During World War II, the group helped refugees and provided medical care and, in 1947, won the Nobel Peace Prize. But with the Vietnam War, the AFSC sought not only to alleviate suffering but also, in the words of Henry Bowden, a professor of religion at Rutgers University, “to find politics in it.”

Politicization trumped pacifism. During the 1970s, the AFSC defended Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge, even as word emerged that the group had killed one million citizens. In his Peace and Revolution: The Moral Crisis of American Pacifism, Guenter Lewy described how John McAuliff, head of the AFSC’s Indo-China division, called reports of massacres a U.S. attempt to discredit “the example of an alternative model of development.” During the 1980s, as civil wars erupted across Latin America, the AFSC supported the groups that opposed U.S. policy, and ignored groups allied to Washington. The Sandinistas were honorable; the contras not. That the Sandinistas were as violent as the contras did not trouble the AFSC.

AFSC hypocrisy has been as evident in Iraq. Prior to the 2003 war, it amplified Saddam Hussein’s rhetoric arguing, for example, that U.S.-supported sanctions killed 500,000 children. While they attributed such numbers to UNICEF, they did not mention that the Iraqi government coauthored the report and supplied the figures. Not surprisingly, after Saddam’s fall, this claim proved false - though nearly that number ended up in mass graves, victims of Saddam’s helicopters and poison gas.

As Barham Salih, then a leading Iraqi Kurdish opponent of Saddam and current Iraqi minister of planning, told a January 2003 meeting of the Socialist International in Rome, “To those who say ‘No War,’ I say, of course, ‘Yes,’ but we can only have ‘No War’ if there is ‘No Dictatorship’ and ‘No Genocide.’ ”

It is a lesson the AFSC has yet to learn. Until the crisis in Darfur, the group remained largely silent on Sudan, where more than two million perished after that country’s government imposed Islamic law on the Christian and animist south. Even as genocide continues, the AFSC prefers to protest Israel’s separation fence, which has, nonviolently, saved lives rather than taken them.

It is with regard to Israel and the Palestinians that the AFSC hemorrhages credibility. When the AFSC published its “principles for a just and lasting peace between Palestinians and Israelis,” it did not once mention the eradication of terrorism. If the AFSC still valued Quaker principles, no political cause would legitimate violence.

Such inconsistencies are the rule rather than the exception. While the AFSC urges Congress to stop allocating money to Iraq, it has called for the continuation of assistance to the Hamas-led government in the West Bank and Gaza, even as that group’s charter calls for the murder of Jews.

The Middle East Forum

2 Responses to “Serving two masters”

  1. The second paragraph of the article quoted above contains personal reflections of it’s two authors: “Together, we spent 25 years in Quaker schools. We were taught from an early age to look for spiritual guidance within ourselves and accept that God existed in everyone. We learned to better the world through peaceful means and the value of diversity, not only in ethnicity and religion, but also in thought. ….”

    The AFSC leadership needs to stick to such principles, or, put more bluntly, get it’s head out of its ass.

  2. The marriage of Marx and Christianity has been one of the most abusive in history.

    Marx, in an era when scientific materialism was at its peak, attempted to “save” the basic ethical notions and teleology of Christianity from their “superstitious” foundation by creating the “science of history”.

    Has there ever been a more disastrous attempted rescue?

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