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June 4, 2014 Chris McDonnell, UK The division of walls (Comments welcome here) |
chris@mcdonnell83.freeserve.co.uk
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The
building of a wall is a skill that has served mankind well over many thousands
of years. Without walls, we wouldn’t have the magnificent buildings that are
now scattered over the face of our planet, many of them hundreds of years old,
built in stone that must have taken unimaginable skill and technical ingenuity
to construct.
All
well and good.
But
in our time the word Wall has taken on another significant new meaning. When in
August 1961, the construction began of the wall that was to divide the city of
The
photograph that heads this posting may become the iconic image of the recent
visit by Francis to the
The
politics of people power brought that to fruition two years later when the
Soviet bloc crumbled and the Wall was breached and eventually destroyed.
Now
the invitation has gone out to the President of Israel and the President of
Palestine to join with Pope Francis in
"In
this, the birthplace of the Prince of Peace, I wish to invite you, President
Mahmoud Abbas, together with Israeli President Shimon Peres, to join me in
heartfelt prayer to God for the gift of peace,” he said. "I offer my home
in the
The
telling word for me is that Francis offers his “home” as the gathering
ground.
There
is something intimate, friendly and welcoming in that phrase, echoing the Gospel
of Matthew, "Come
to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest”.
Put
another way, “Come round to my place and let us pray together”.
In
the complexities of modern political relationships, the pain of conflict is a
shared experience, for both sides get hurt when
confidence in each other fails. So
later in
One
of the many murals painted on the Wall that still stretches across parts of