|
|
This Is the Way...
Brick By Brick
It is built up over a period of time, "brick by brick," with the same caring sensitivity that the Israeli Rescue Team exhibited.
by Robin Webber
Terror Strikes Again
It has often been said that the most appropriate definition of a terrorist is "simply an individual that is
willing to give your all for his cause." Once again this became painfully true in two African cities thought to be
far and away from the focus of international politics and the accompanying parasite of urban terrorism.
The August 17 issue of Time magazine depicts the
latest episode in its article "Terror in Africa." "When terror
strikes, it always tears through the comforting screen
of normality. One moment, mid-morning shoppers and
workers bustle along Nairobi's Haile Selassie Avenue at
the downtown corner where a bronze eagle and a fluttering
flag mark the five-story U.S. embassy. The next, the earth trembles as a thunderclap unleashes a mighty shock
wave. Seconds later, black smoke plumes into the sky as
the tarmac ignites, flashing fire to parked cars and passing
buses. The blast shatters every window in a quartermile
radius into lethal slivers, blows the bombproof doors
off the embassy, sucks out ceilings and furniture and people,
pancakes a seven-story building next door into a
mountain of rubble.
Thousands of innocent people are injured, and more than a hundred die, including 11 Americans. Nearly 450 miles away in Tanzania, at almost
exactly the same time, a vehicle drives into the sunny grounds of the U.S. embassy in a residential quarter of Dar es Salaam and explodes, wrecking the entrance,
blowing off parts of the building's right side and setting cars ablaze. Seven Tanzanians are killed, and 72 hurt.
Two bombs with a single message: don't forget the world's superpower still has enemies, secret, violent and
and determined. America is ever a target, it's embassies and installations abroad inviting symbols of its power.
"See,' say the bombers, "despite your enormous wealth and strength, we can still inflict a great hurt.'"
Author Johanna McGeary concludes her report with the sober assessment, "That is the nightmare message the
terrorists intended to stamp upon the minds of Americans.
However hard you come looking for us, we will always be out there, planning and plotting to hit you again,
sometime, someplace!"
Israeli Specialists Join Rescue Effort
But the good news out of a sad story is that once again, surrounded by adversity, some people made a
specific choice to make a positive difference. In the midst of this carnage there are acts of compassion
that give hope. One of the great dramas taking place has been the miraculous precision-like rescue effort
of the Israeli Rescue Squad that has saved a number of victims from a suffocating death. As Marjorie
Miller, Los Angeles Times staff writer stated in her August 10 entry: "Israeli troops began arriving
about 4 p.m., Saturday, having obtained a rabbi's sanction to work on the Jewish Sabbath in an effort
to save lives. They came with years of experience, truckloads of high-tech equipment and eight working
dogs, each with a Star of David emblazoned on its leather harness."
What truly makes this remarkable is the timing! Currently, Israel is suffering major diplomatic setbacks
around the world—including Africa—because of it's perceived slow initiation of the Oslo Accords
pertaining to its relationship with the Palestinians.
No "welcome mat" is laid out on the African continent for the Israelis. Even more significant is the
fact that both of the victimized countries have a large Muslim presence.
Some skeptics say the reasons for the Israeli entrance is merely political, while other kinder
observers sense that it is a form of "payback time" to Kenya for long ago allowing Israel to use it as a
base for the daring raid on Entebbe Airport to rescue Jewish highjack victims back in 1976. But as
Marjorie Miller brings out in her article:
To the average Kenyans, the "why' of the Israeli effort is beside the point. To them, the important fact is that
about 200 Israeli soldiers arrived to help before anyone else did."
Unselfish Israeli Action Touches Kenyans
"ISRAELIS STEP IN," the Nairobi Times heralded in a huge front-page headline. "We are grateful
for these guys," said Elizabeth Njoroge, a Red Cross volunteer who had been wringing her hands over the
poor rescue attempt the day before. She goes on to say, "We could not have done anything single-handedly.
In our culture, when you lose someone in the family, people come to stay with you. The Israelis have
come to stay with us."
The Israelis' ability to serve others did not come all at once. The Los Angeles Times article goes on to share how they honed their skills after earthquakes in Mexico and Armenia, bombs in Argentina and scud missile attacks at
home in Israel. Now, world experts at rescuing the living from rubble and recovering the dead, Israeli "know-how"
has rescued three lives. "Know-how" cannot be overstated.
As some front line rescuers shared: "Our first mission was to get them out. The situation was delicate. If you
touch one beam, you can kill someone 5 meters away."
Nothing came easily. There were no floor plans of the Ufundi building,
but they studied a hand-drawn map of the top floor that someone had made, then
brought in the dogs and heavy equipment. They raised lights that would allow
them to work through the night and turned on listening devices so
sensitive they could detect a buried finger tapping or the whispered cry of a dying man.
Making a difference does not come easily. One rescuer observed that many of the victims died from the sheer force
of the blast. "It tears you up inside" was the lament of another rescuer. It also takes time and sensitivity. "Most of
the digging you do by hand," Lt. Alon Seren said. "You have to dig by hand so you won't drill into someone underneath.
I was digging by that ladder over there. I saw some blood, dug some more and saw some more blood. That's
how you find people."
Not Heroes—Just Doing Their Job
Last Sunday one of the Red Cross volunteers shouted
at the Israelis, "You are heroes." One of the officers,
Major Ofer Pomeranz answered with a modest shrug, "We
are not heroes. We are only working."
As Christians each of us have a work to do. Our good
example always speaks louder than our good arguments.
The apostle Peter put it this way in 1 Peter 2:15, "For this
is the will of God, that by doing good you may put to
silence the ignorance of foolish men." Sometimes that doesn't happen over night. Sometimes it is built up over a
period of time, "brick by brick," with the same caring
sensitivity that the Israeli Rescue Team exhibited in dealing
with the broken lives of those hurt in the terrorist
blast.
Good relations don't happen overnight. The
Israeli aid to Nairobi
did not just happen.
It developed over a period of time in Buenos Aires, Tel Aviv
and Armenia. Their "knowhow" was essential. They were ready, and more
importantly they made themselves available.
Zechariah 8:23 states: "Thus says the
LORD of hosts: "In those days ten men
from every language of the nations shall
grasp the sleeve of a Jewish man, saying,"Let us go with you, for we have
heard that God is with you."'" Why will
they grab his sleeve? Will it be because
of what he knows because of his training
in the future Jerusalem, or will it be
because of his practical ability to relate with the immediate needs of others? Let's notice that in the future it will
not simply be individual Jewish men, but Israel as a
nation will be in a goodwill alliance with nations that
have been its historical enemies.
Isaiah 19:24-25 describes a different world order—
the real New World Order—in which God is fully
involved, "In that day there will be a highway from Egypt
to Assyria and the Assyrian will come into Egypt and the
Egyptian into Assyria, and the Egyptians will serve with
the Assyrians. In that day Israel will be one of three with Egypt and Assyria—a blessing in the midst of the land,
whom the Lord of hosts shall bless, saying, "Blessed is
Egypt My people, and Assyria the work of My Hand, and Israel My inheritance.'"
What a wonderful time to look forward to when such
acts of cooperation are not isolated, but will become the
"norm" among nations. We see that what the Israelis and the
Africans experienced is a type—a small type—of the reality
of the world under the guidance of Jesus Christ. WNP
Here in the second issue of World News and Prophecy,
a new column emerges to engage the audience in some serious
considerations as to how we are conducting ourselves in
today's dynamic and ever-changing society. In Luke 21:36,
Jesus told His disciples to "watch and pray." This publication
has in part been designed to assist you in the "watching."
There are momentous historical, sociological, economical,
and natural occurrences of major proportions happening all
around us. In a world with problems caused by humanity's
rejection of God's way it can seem like one bad thing after
another.
Even as Christians, we tend to lose hope and the
positive edge that God's Spirit can develop in us for service
toward God, our families, our brethren and our communities.
How often have we read Isaiah 30:21 that says, "This is
the way, walk you in it"? Have you ever noticed what proceeds
it? Let's read Isaiah 30:20Ð21 in full. "And though the
Lord gives you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction,
yet your teachers will not be moved into a corner anymore,
but your eyes shall see your teachers. Your ears shall
hear a word behind you, saying, "This is the way, walk in it,'
whenever you turn to the right hand or whenever you turn to
the left." Is this only for the future or can we apply it today?
It is interesting to note how often Jesus alluded to examples
of people who were "making a difference" and asked
His disciples to learn or take note of their examples. One
example is that of the Good Samaritan. Was the Samaritan remembered because he was a church member or for what he
did? Jesus purposefully took an example far out of the common
scope of accepted thinking of that time and simply said,
"Learn!" It wasn't so much what the good Samaritan knew,
like the priest or the Levite, but what he did. Jesus asks us to
learn now to become teachers of a way of life. A way that is
outgoing, away from self.
Today our world can look foreboding. The storm is
coming and things will seem to be out of control. But God
asks us to deal with our immediate sphere of influence and
do what we can. This column's goal is to focus on various
"teachers" in today's world—be they people, communities or
nations—that are making a difference, examples that run
contrary to the general course of a world that has turned it's
back on God. It will then be our goal to make it personal, to
encourage you to good works in your life. It is easy to point
out the wrong or bad but there is also a time to point out the
good. |