On the bookshelf

These past few days I’ve been transitioning back into working on my
“Violence and its Legacies” project, a.k.a. my book about Africa, and my
reading’s been starting to reflect that. (Okay, apart from my near-mandatory
lunch-time read of the WaPo “Style” section.)

First up here on my bookshelf, actually, something that has very little to
do with Africa. It’s
Loving Without Giving In; Christian Responses to Terrorism & Tyranny

by Ron Mock. Ron is a really nice person, a sharp thinker and a clear
writer, who is also an Evangelical Quaker. That’s a slightly “different”
bunch of Quakers from my lot… Let’s just say “his” lot defines themselves
as specifically Christian Evangelicals. Ron was a member of our International
Quaker Working Party on Israel and Palestine, and I really came to like him,
and admire his drafting skills while we were working together there.

So his book attempts to give a “Christian pacifist” take on how Americans
should respond to the challenge of terrorism, in particular. It’s really
great that he’s published the book– especially because he writes it, as
far as I can see, from entirely within an Evangelical Christian viewpoint.
He takes Christian scripture very seriously; tries to reconcile the
differences between the writings of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament;
and lays out very clearly the different ways that different kinds of Christians
look at war-and-peace issues before plumping firmly for a Christian pacifist
worldview.

But mainly what I like about the book is the clarity and simplicity of his
exposition, and the deep psychological truth that I see in most of what he
writes. He writes, for example, about the corrosive effect that a deep-seated
sense of grievance has on the person who holds it, as well as on society
in general. He writes about how hatred can lead people to dehumanize
their enemies. And he pleads, throughout, for people experiencing a
sense to vulnerability to continue to try to see “that of God” (as Quakers
say) even in the people whom they fear the most.

Second up, a tome from the U.N. University called
The UN Role in Promoting Democracy; Between ideals and Reality

, edited by Edward Newman and Roland Rich. This one looks really interesting.
It has some weighty theoretical chapters, which I’m still getting through.
But then, it has case studies: Namibia, Cambodia, Kosovo, East Timor,
and Afghanistan. Shameless empiricist that I am, I can’t wait to get
to the case studies. Maybe I’ll skip one or two of the theoretical
chapters…

And finally, for now, a book that I’m quite enthralled by,
My Neighbor, My Enemy; Justice and Community in the Aftermath of Atrocity

, edited by Eric Stover and Harvey M. Weinstein. (That’s not Harvey
Weinstein, half-owner of Miramax.)

This book is the fruit of a broad, multi-year project run out of UC Berkeley’s
Human Rights Center in which researchers looked at the effects on community
mental health and attitudes of various steps taken to deal with the aftermath
of atrocities in rwanda and former Yugoslavia. Well, my project is
looking (in a slightly different way) at exactly that same issue in Rwanda–
but comparing it not with former Yugoslavia but with two other cases in southern
Africa: South Africa and Mozambique…


But we’re all looking at a large number of the same issues. And instead
of having one dogged researcher perennially short of funds (me), their project
apparently had whole teams of people doing various different kinds of social-science,
human-rights, and community mental-health research in the two societies they
studied.

The book is an impressive and fascinating production. I met Weinstein
at a conference last year and really liked both him and his determinedly
community-based (and quasi epidemiological) approach to issues of
mental-wellbeing. Though the book does not deal explicitly with the
kind of global policy issues I am looking at, the evidence it presents goes
quite far toward challenging much of the “received wisdom” in the international
community these days, i.e. that what people really “need” in the aftermath
of widespread atrocity is some broad application of western ethno-justice.
Indeed, it gives a lot of evidence that directly challenges the ideas
that participating in a western-style court proceeding is necessarily therapeutic
for individual survivors of atrocities, or that the work of such courts necessarily
ever helps broader societiesthat are caught up in such violence to heal.

Right now, I’m in the middle of reading a great chapter titled, “Memory,
identity, and community in Rwanda”. Using survey data, focus groups,
and other tools of social science it tries to critically assess the
current Rwandan government’s attempt to promulgate its own, highly structured
and monolithic view of the histrocial antecedents of the 1994 genocide. The
chapter includes this:

while most respondents were able to present an account of the
government’s narrative of Rwandan history, many also expressed skepticism
about how history is interpreted and used by those in power. For example,
a 50-year-old man in a Kibuya focus group said, after a long discussion of
rwanda’s history: “The reason for our preoccupation [with history] is that
whoever achieves power wants to refashion the history of rwanda. There
is no consensus and no national vision.” In our survey, 49.2 percent
of respondents agreed or strongly agreed with the statement “Whoever is in
power rewrites rwandan history to serve their own interests,” while only
21.7 percent disagreed or strongly disagreed.” (pp.169-70)

Interesting stuff… Anyway, these last two books are great ways for me to
get into my Africa project. I need to write the back third of my Africa
book by about the end of March. Yikes!

4 thoughts on “On the bookshelf”

  1. Thanks for drawing this Mock book to our attention. Could you clarify what you mean by “evangelical Quakers”? I notice your link is to a Mennonite web site. Any connection? Or any relation to the Quakers who founded Malone College in Ohio?
    By the way, I also much appreciated your description of your C’ville Quaker Christmas meeting…. I’m so weary of either visiting or hearing about the “Holy War” sermons from so many other C’ville “evangelical” churches – though I noticed a hopeful change in one even before it held a recent tragic funeral for a local native who was killed in Iraq. Re. your more peaceful meeting of “the friends,” any tips on where this gathering meets and when? Thanks.

  2. Could you clarify what you mean by “evangelical Quakers”?
    I’m not sure what an evangelical Quaker is. It reminds me of an old joke. What do you get when you cross a Jehovah’s Witness with as Zen Buddhist? Someone who knocks on your door and doesn’t say anything.

  3. Ok, about evangelical Quakers… As I understand it, the picture is more less this… George Fox, a fairly visionary Englishman, gathered a following there during the years around the middle of the 17th century of the “common era”, and in 1652 they set the new movement– the Religious Society of Friends– on a firmer institutional footing. (Details in GF’s journals and those of others involved, including some very spunky early Quaker women). Those were turbulent years of civil war in England and the friends (a.k.a. Quakers) were often subject to terrible persecutions. Many came over to the “New World”, and GF himself also visited the Quakers here.
    Quakerism in England and along the east coast of the US has evolved in largely similar directions in the 350 years since then. Today, most Friends both sides of the Atlantic hold “unprogramed” meetings for worship, as I described earlier; we do without paid ministers; we believe in the centrality of continuing revelation; some of us are deeply Christ-centered in our belief, and some not so, but since we have no established liturgy at all, we all remain open to each other’s insights and leadings. (That’s the theory.)
    …But as the US Quakers traveled west, they became more and more like other American churches. Many traveled west precisely to avoid being caught up in the slaveholding economies and customs of e.g., North Carolina and Virginia. There are large numbers of Friends “churches” that have paid Quaker “pastors” in Indiana and Ohio, for example.
    As they went even further west, US Quakers even became determinedly “evangelical” in belief and practice. Richard Nixon was brought up in just such a Quaker family, in southern California. (But I don’t think that most evangelical Friends would say he conducted his presidency according to good Quaker principles… )
    The evangelical Quakers from the west coast have done (guess what!) a lot of “evangelizing” around the world, especially in Africa. Nowadays the largest numbers of Quakers globally are black Africans, in East and central Africa, etc. Those Quakers are just about all evangelicals and they do wonderful, wonderful work in pursuing the peace testimony and other Quaker testimonies in their often troubled societies.
    “Our” kind of Quakers, i.e. “unprogramed” friends, generally have a complex, perhaps even paranoid, attitude toward the idea of evangelizing– so intent are most of us on NOT forcing our ideas or our beliefs on others.
    If one wanted to go back to the Quaker Founding Father, one would have to note that George Fox was both an outspoken advocate of unprogramed worship and an outspoken evangelizer. Go figure.

  4. Many thanks for your splendid insights on this subject. Helena, may you be re-energized regularly to keep up this generous and even inspiration JWN blog effort. WSH

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