LEBANON
- CONFLICT BRINGS BACK CIVIL WAR MEMORIES
For
Australian Douglas Anderson, the recent outbreak of
violence brings back memories he might rather forget.
“It’s tragic...” says the Victorian
missionary who spent 30 years living in Lebanon. “We
were in and out of Lebanon during the Civil War - we
were there during the ‘82 invasion and the destruction
was terrible. There’s been the rebuilding (since)
- the economy was shot to pieces and it’s been
slowly getting better - but they’ve done a marvellous
job of reconstruction and so on but now it’s just
been shattered again.”
Mr Anderson, who retired from the position
of international director of the Middle East Christian
Outreach in 1992, says the while the Lebanese are a
remarkably resilient people, “how much they can
take is hard to say”.
“For the ordinary Lebanese it’s unfortunately
bring back all the memories of the past that they thought
they were climbing out of,” he says. “And
not only is there the fear, there’s the discouragement
- ‘Why is all this happening to us again?’.”
Recalling travelling down to Sidon in southern
Lebanon after the 1982 invasion and seeing refugee camps
which had been “absolutely obliterated”.
“The dead were under the ruins and now it’s
happening again...” he says. “It’s
the humanitarian scale of the thing that is so horrendous.
Many, many parents in Lebanon are struggling even to
pay for their kid’s education these days - this
will make it far worse.”
He says that while it can be hard to see
both sides of the conflict when you’re living
among a particular group of people, he has in the past
met some Israeli Christians who have helped him to gain
a broader understanding.
“You get down to it, the basic solution is in
Christ,” he says. “There’s a philosophy
of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth on both
sides but as somebody said to us, the eye for an eye
and tooth for a tooth on one side is much heavier than
the other. How do you stop this cycle of violence? This
is the problem.”
Anderson says that Christians need to be
praying for all the people affected by the conflict,
where-ever they are.
“One of our friends said ‘I don’t
know which side to back’ and then later on he
said ‘I’ve decided - I’m praying for
the people from both sides, the ordinary people’
and I think that what it’s (about).”
He says that as well as praying for the
people, “we have to pray that the world will sit
up and take notice and do something”.
Anderson says that because many in the
Middle East equate Christian with the West, “it’s
going to be even more difficult for the Christian churches
and for Christian work when the West sits back and seems
to be inactive in things like this or biased which is
worse”.
“That’s a matter to pray about...”
he says.
~ www.aboutmeco.org
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DAVID ADAMS |