Bonhoeffer and the Palestinian-Israel conflict: South African reflections.
de Gruchy, John W.
I have been reflecting for virtually a lifetime on
Bonhoeffer's legacy and find that he continues to speak to us
today. Bonhoeffer was a serious challenge to those of us who are white
in South Africa because though he, too, was privileged by background, he
took the side of the victims of racism and injustice. Reflecting on how
Bonhoeffer might have responded to the present-day Palestinian-Israeli
conflict, and especially the plight of the Palestinians, is certainly a
thought-provoking question because in his lifetime, Bonhoeffer was one
of a handful of Protestant theologians in Nazi Germany who spoke out on
behalf of the Jews. In his context, they were the victims, so it was the
"Jewish question", as it was called, not the Palestinian
question, that demanded his attention.
Although murdered by the regime because of his involvement in the
20 July 1944 plot to assassinate Hitler, Bonhoeffer was initially
arrested because he was suspected of helping Jews escape the clutches of
the Gestapo. Whatever his somewhat traditional views about Judaism in
relation to Christianity, there can be no doubt about his concern for
the plight of the Jews. Unsurprisingly, Bonhoeffer's legacy played
a significant role after the Second World War in the reshaping of
Christian theology in the light of the Holocaust, or Shoah. His critique
of the idolatries of Christendom and his affirmation of the suffering of
God in solidarity with humanity, especially the victims of injustice,
challenged Christians to radically rethink their faith and role in the
world. As a young theologian I was nurtured in those discussions. Only
much later, after a visit to Israel in 1970, did I also become aware of
the "Palestinian question" and began to ponder how Bonhoeffer
might have responded given the way in which he responded to the
victimization of the Jews in his own day. And, of course, I could not
avoid relating it all to what was happening in apartheid South Africa at
the same time.
Having visited the concentration camps of Auschwitz, Buchenwald and
Flossenburg (where Bonhoeffer died); having spent many hours in several
Holocaust museums from Jerusalem to Washington, from Berlin and Prague
to Cape Town; and having been involved in lengthy discussions with
Jewish scholars about the Holocaust, I am only too aware of the horrors
unleashed by Christian anti-Semitism in the course of history. And I am
disturbed by the rabid anti-Semitic rhetoric of militant Muslims,
whether on the air waves, broadcast from Scandinavia, or from the
current president of Iran, as I am horrified by suicide bombers. I am
also aware that there is sometimes a thin dividing line between
anti-Semitism, anti-Judaism and antiZionism, and that given the legacy
of Christendom from Constantine to the Holocaust, Christians, especially
those in the West, need to be cautious in casting stones or pointing
fingers.
In view of this history, it was with a heavy heart that Desmond
Tutu likened the treatment of Palestinians to the way in which blacks
were treated in apartheid South Africa. He is not alone in holding this
view; it is one shared by Nelson Mandela and others who have, at the
same time, shown deep respect for the Jewish community in South Africa.
This view is also shared, to my knowledge, by many Jews whose sense of
justice and commitment to human rights has also been violated by the way
Palestinians have been and are being treated, and who see their
compatriots becoming psychologically damaged, it not brutalized and
killed, by the ongoing strife. I have listened to the testimonies of
Palestinian Christians who, with great sadness mixed with anger, have
told of the ways they have suffered as a result of Israeli policies and
actions, and I have seen young Israelis treat aged Palestinians with a
disdain and contempt that reminds me of my own South African past.
Towards the end of his life, I raised the "Palestinian
question" with Eberhard Bethge, Bonhoeffer's close confidant
and biographer who, during the 1970s and 1980s, took a leading role in
redefining Christian thinking and action in the light of the Shoah.
Bethge remained committed to his views on Christian-Jewish relations,
which called for a decisive rethink on the part of Christians. But as
his life drew to a close in the 1990s, he was becoming increasingly
concerned about the situation in the Middle East. I believe that he,
along with Bonhoeffer, would be even more deeply disturbed by the recent
developments resulting from the continued Israeli occupation of the West
Bank and the recent war on Gaza. This concern would not have meant any
lessening of their commitment to the victims of the Holocaust and their
descendants, but it posed a very serious question: Who is now the
victim?
It is not too difficult to surmise what Bonhoeffer's answer
would be if we take his legacy seriously. Bonhoeffer's solidarity
with the victims of injustice, whoever they might be, and his
preparedness to speak out and act where possible on their behalf, is
unequivocal. Listen to what he wrote shortly before his arrest:
"... we have for once learned to see the great events of world
history from below, from the perspective of the outcasts, the suspects,
the maltreated, the powerless, the oppressed and reviled, in short from
the perspective of the suffering."
In his day, these words described the plight of the Jews; in our
day, within the Middle East, it chiefly, if not only, describes the
plight of the Palestinians.
No one can deny the complexity of the situation in the Middle East,
which has defied political resolution for so long. There are many sides
to the story, and even if we are inclined to do so, it is unhelpful to
place the blame on any one side to the exclusion of others, as if this
will resolve the problem. But does this mean that we, especially if we
claim to be inspired by Bonhoeffer, should remain silent about the
current suffering of the Palestinian people, and the injustices and
indignities that they face daily? This would surely not have been
condoned by the ancient Hebrew prophets, for whom justice and mercy, not
least for the "stranger", were essential to the wellbeing of
Israel itself. I think that like his favourite prophet, Jeremiah,
Bonhoeffer would have wept, as many others do, over the tragedy that
keeps unfolding in the Holy Land.
There were many reasons why apartheid was defeated. But two are
particularly worth recalling by way of conclusion. In the end, apartheid
collapsed when it became dear to those whites in power that it was not
in their own self-interests to perpetuate by force what was clearly an
unjust system of oppression, and when black leaders were extending the
hand of reconciliation to their former oppressors, recognizing that
without this reconcilation there could be no lasting peace but only
increasing hostility and violence. The pathway from those heady days of
transition, which began with the release of Mandela from prison, has not
always been easy, and there is no guarantee in this life of eternal
peace. But the alternative was, as one South African president declared,
"too ghastly to contemplate." Whatever the faults of the
Palestinians, or the justified fears of the Israelis, it should surely
be obvious to all but the most stubborn and blind that, as the Hebrew
prophet Hosea told ancient Israel, if "you sow the wind, you will
reap the whirlwind."
DOI: 10.1111/j.1758-6623.2010.00100.x
John W. de Gruchy is Emeritus Professor, University of Cape Town,
South Africa