BOCS.HU - Sustainable Civilisation       Send this in an email! 
English [20060312] [meditation, reflection, release] Time to read: half an hour Statement on the Death of Tom Fox (CPT, Iraq) (Peace Education, Peace, Nonviolence, Christianity, Movement)
Why are We Here? The following reflection was written by Tom Fox on 26th nov. 2005., the day before he was abducted.
Tom Fox, a Keresztény Békemunkás Csapat tagja, meghalt Irakban / Statement on the Death of Tom Fox (CPT, Iraq)

IFOR (in which BOCS is a member group since 1995) mourns the death of Tom Fox, celebrates all who commit themselves to non-violence, prays for the other three still held hostage and holds a vision of a world in which people renounce violence and killing as ways of relating to each other and settling disputes.

11/03/06 - Statement on the Death of Tom Fox

The Fellowship of Reconciliation (FoR) is heartbroken that Tom Fox’s name has been added to the thousands of others who have lost their lives in this awful, illegal war. Work for peace and reconciliation is a hard and dangerous task in our violent world and demands faith, courage and commitment. Tom had all these qualities. He travelled to Iraq as did Norman Kember, James Loney and Harmeet Singh Sooden, to do what they could to build bridges and work for peace. We pray that Tom’s sacrifice will not be in vain.
Our condolences go to Tom Fox’s family, friends and community.
The situation in Iraq after almost three years of war and occupation is extremely grave. We are extremely worried for the safety of our friends and colleagues. We ask all those who are working and praying for Norman, Harmeet and James’ release to re-double their efforts at this time. We would again remind those who are holding our friends that they are in Iraq to work for peace and justice.
Chris Cole
Director
01865748979 / 07960 811437

---

CPT Release: CPT Release: We Mourn the Loss of Tom Fox
10 March 2006

In grief we tremble before God who wraps us with compassion. The death of our beloved colleague and friend pierces us with pain. Tom Fox’s body was found in Baghdad yesterday.
Christian Peacemaker Teams extends our deep and heartfelt condolences to the family and community of Tom Fox, with whom we have traveled so closely in these days of crisis.
We mourn the loss of Tom Fox who combined a lightness of spirit, a firm opposition to all oppression, and the recognition of God in everyone.
We renew our plea for the safe release of Harmeet Sooden, Jim Loney and Norman Kember. Each of our teammates has responded to Jesus’ prophetic call to live out a nonviolent alternative to the cycle of violence and revenge.
In response to Tom’s passing, we ask that everyone set aside inclinations to vilify or demonize others, no matter what they have done. In Tom’s own words: "We reject violence to punish anyone. We ask that there be no retaliation on relatives or property. We forgive those who consider us their enemies. We hope that in loving both friends and enemies and by intervening nonviolently to aid those who are systematically oppressed, we can contribute in some small way to transforming this volatile situation.”
Even as we grieve the loss of our beloved colleague, we stand in the light of his strong witness to the power of love and the courage of nonviolence. That light reveals the way out of fear and grief and war.
Through these days of crisis, Christian Peacemaker Teams has been surrounded and upheld by a great outpouring of compassion: messages of support, acts of mercy, prayers, and public actions offered by the most senior religious councils and by school children, by political leaders and by those organizing for justice and human rights, by friends in distant nations and by strangers near at hand. These words and actions sustain us. While one of our teammates is lost to us, the strength of this outpouring is not lost to God’s movement for just peace among all peoples.
At the forefront of that support are strong and courageous actions from Muslim brothers and sisters throughout the world for which we are profoundly grateful. Their graciousness inspires us to continue working for the day when Christians speak up as boldly for the human rights of thousands Iraqis still detained illegally by the United States and United Kingdom.
Such an outpouring of action for justice and peace would be a fitting memorial for Tom. Let us all join our voices on behalf of those who continue to suffer under occupation, whose loved ones have been killed or are missing. In so doing, we may hasten the day when both those who are wrongly detained and those who bear arms will return safely to their homes. In such a peace we will find solace for our grief.
Despite the tragedy of this day, we remain committed to put into practice these words of Jim Loney: “With the waging of war, we will not comply. With the help of God’s grace, we will struggle for justice. With God’s abiding kindness, we will love even our enemies.” We continue in hope for Jim, Harmeet and Norman’s safe return home safe.

Contact: Dr. Doug Pritchard, CPT Co-Director 416-423-5525 (Canada) and Rev. Carol Rose, CPT Co-Director, Kryss Chupp, 773-277-0253 (USA)

---

The following reflection was written by Tom Fox on 26th nov. 2005., the day before he was abducted.

Why are We Here?
By Tom Fox

The Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) Iraq team went through a discernment process, seeking to identify aspects of our work here in Iraq that are compelling enough to continue the project and comparing them with the costs (financial, psychological, physical) that are also aspects of the project. It was a healthy exercise, but it led me to a somewhat larger question: Why are we here?

If I understand the message of God, his response to that question is that we are to take part in the creation of the Peaceable Realm of God. Again, if I understand the message of God, how we take part in the creation of this realm is to love God with all our heart, our mind and our strength and to love our neighbors and enemies as we love God and ourselves. In its essential form, different aspects of love bring about the creation of the realm.

I have read that the word in the Greek Bible that is translated as "love" in the word "agape". Again, I have read that this word is best expressed as a profound respect for all human beings simply for the fact that they are all God's children. I would state that idea in a somewhat different way, as "never thinking or doing anything that would dehumanize one of my fellow human beings."

As I survey the landscape here in Iraq, dehumanization seems to be the operative means of relating to each other. U.S. forces in their quest to hunt down and kill "terrorists" are as a result of this dehumanizing word, not only killing "terrorist", but also killing innocent Iraqis: men, women and children in the various towns and villages.

It seems as if the first step down the road to violence is taken when I dehumanize a person. That violence might stay within my thoughts or find its way into the outer world and become expressed verbally, psychologically, structurally or physically. As soon as I rob a fellow human being of his or her humanity by sticking a dehumanizing label on them, I begin the process that can have, as an end result, torture, injury and death.

"Why are we here?" We are here to root out all aspects of dehumanization that exists within us. We are here to stand with those being dehumanized by oppressors and stand firm against that dehumanization. We are here to stop people, including ourselves, from dehumanizing any of God's children, no matter how much they dehumanize their own souls.

---

Christian Peacemaker Teams is an ecumenical violence-reduction program with roots in the historic peace churches. Teams of trained peace workers live in areas of lethal conflict around the world. CPT has been present in Iraq since October, 2002.

To learn more about CPT, please visit http://www.cpt.org.

Contents: A CPT (Christian Peacemaker Team, keresztény munkacsoport a békéért) 2002 október óta dolgozik Irakban.
(A balkáni háború idején az ex-yu országokban is dolgoztak, a BOCS együttműködött velük.)
Az evangéliumi erőszakmentesség alapján állnak, ellenzik Irak megszállását, nem kémek, sem nem misszionáriusok, nem dolgoznak kormányoknak.
Rengeteg interjút készítettek szenvedő irakiakkal, számos esetben elsőként értesítették a médiát az USA működtette börtönökben és táborokban történt kínzásokról, a polgári lakosság elleni fegyveres bűnökről.
Védelem nélkül iraki barátaiknál éltek. Tom Fox-ot és három társát 2005. nov. 26-án rabolták el.

Geographical place: Iraq

Group, movement, tendency (wherefrom it comes from): IFOR