Monday, December 31, 2007

More bad news

After the rioting following on the assassination of Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, it is the turn of Kenya to explode into political violence. I was in Kenya in 2002 just before the elections that brought the current government to power and those were tense times but nothing like the scenes that are being reported now in the wake of the presidential elections. In 2005, when I was last there it seemed to be a country that was relatively-speaking at peace with itself.
It is strange to see such violent events breaking out in places that you recognise and which at the time you visited them seemed relatively 'normal,' albeit poverty-stricken, but I suppose violence can erupt in any situation and that the outward veneer of civilisation is pretty thin no matter where you are in the world.
The saddest thing is that the current violence in Kenya seems once again to be based on tribal allegiances, artificially papered over by the processes of colonisation in previous generations.
There is a deep human need to feel that you belong to something bigger than yourself or your immediate family, but when passions run high and one tribe feels threatened by another (whatever the context) the impulse to violence seems hard to contain.
But a sense of belonging to a group need not always be something harmful.
The sense of belonging engendered by a football club is tribal in its own way and, sadly, can sometimes generate its own brand of divisive and destructive behaviour, but as recent days at Motherwell FC have shown a sense of belonging may also provide a positive source of mutual comfort in times of tragedy.
One of the greatest tragedies of all in human behaviour is when groups/tribes/nations/religions/denominations or whatever feel that they can only establish their own sense of identity in opposition to others rather than basing it on something positive.
Let's hope and pray that the violent end to 2007 may not be continued into 2008.
I wish you all a peaceful and blessed New Year.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

When I first heard the news, I thought of you and World Without Walls. Learning what we, people with sinful nature, are capable of doing so to others is heartaching and shocking. Nonetheless, every moment of sadness leaves me no choice but to pray and cry out to the Lord for His love and mercy. I will join you and all the people who are suffering a great deal right now. May God show His healing power to bind up their wounds and give them peace only He can give.

IAIN CUNNINGHAM said...

Thanks for your concern, Kei, and for your prayers. I believe the situation is calming down slightly at the moment but it is still tense and dangerous. I am sure the violence must be being orchestrated and controlled but being so far away from it I have no real evidence for this - only what some of my friends in Kenya are saying.
Btw - a Happy new Year to you and to all at Dong Kwang Church