On the border between France and Spain in the Pyrenees

On the border between France and Spain in the Pyrenees
According to legend, the Brèche was cut by Roland, supposedly a nephew of Charlemagne, with his sword Durendal, while attempting to escape the Saracens during the Battle of Roncevaux Pass. This geological gap, if you will, seems like an appropriate metaphor for my personal attempts at Sense-Making.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Humiliation and the Ultimate Altar Call

In his book, The World is Flat, Thomas Friedman contrasts the terrorist attacks of 9/11/2001 with the tearing down of the Berlin Wall on 11/9/1989 One action was motivated by the fear of change and the other was motivated by the pursuit of change. Friedman makes the point that those responsible for 9/11 and the ongoing acts of terror around the world tap into a prevailing sense of humiliation in young Muslim men that is so strong that these young men are willing to become suicide bombers. This humiliation is fueled by the feelings of frustration and powerlessness that comes with the reality that 26% of unemployed men around the world between the ages of fifteen to twenty-four are in the Middle East and North Africa. There is little hope for improvement when the geo-political climate in this region is not conducive to the investment necessary to create new industry and jobs.

Friedman writes, "When you take the economic and political backwardness of much of the Arab-Muslim world today, add its past grandeur and self-image of religious superiority, and combine it with the discrimination and alienation these Arab-Muslim males face when they leave home and move to Europe, or when they grow up in Europe, you have one powerful cocktail of rage" (p. 400).

This connection with religious affiliation and humiliation struck a chord with me. Being an educated white male in America has spared me from the levels of humiliation that many people experience every day. However, I have very strong memories of humiliating experiences during the worship services of my youth. Memories of being held hostage by preachers who gave fire and brimstone sermons, then made the congregation stand through multiple verses of "Just As I Am" until one or more persons became so burdened with guilt and fear that they would step out of the pew and kneel at the altar in a catharsis of body sobs and tears in front of the whole congregation. It was access to education that empowered me to visualize and create a different reality for myself.

It seems to me that the final journey of the suicide bomber is the ultimate trip to the altar and the ultimate humiliation of an individual who is not able to visualize and create a different reality. It also seems to me that one factor that resists or prevents the visualization of a different reality is the self-image of religious superiority that Friedman mentions. The humiliated person takes comfort in the humiliation, interprets it as a trial through which they have successfully passed and now will reap the rewards of having submitted themselves to the humiliating experience. I well remember the smug feeling of knowing that I had been "born again" and being truly saved when so many other so-called Christians were only fooling themselves because theirs was an easy faith that did not require such public humiliation.

I am struck by the difference in the words "humbleness", defined as "
marked by meekness or modesty; not arrogant or prideful" and "humiliation", defined as "an instance in which you are caused to lose your prestige or self-respect". It seems to me that true religion should be about the former rather than the latter. Humbleness is motivated by the power of 11/9 and humiliation is used by those motivated by the power of 9/11.

Fear leads us to build up walls to divide us. Humbleness enables us to tear down the walls so that fear no longer has a place to hide.

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