“Eternal God…You know that these men have testified falsely
against me. Would you let me die, though
I am not guilty of all their malicious charges?”
This week the daily mass readings begin with the cry of
Susannah, unjustly accused by corrupt officials, sentenced to death in the
presence of the people. We read that God
hears her. But Susannah is not saved by
a bolt of lightning striking down her foes, or by being mysteriously transported
to safety. God arouses the Holy Spirit
stirring a “young lad,” Daniel, a witness in a crowd of impassive witnesses,
and this small person shouts, “I will have no part in the death of this woman!”
People in the crowd are startled. Many had been grieved by the proceedings, but
this was out of their hands, the elders, the leaders had decided. Yet here is this stirring, “What did you say?”
they ask.
And Daniel says to the people, “Have you become fools, you
Israelites, to condemn a daughter of Israel without due process and in the
absence of clear evidence?”
In this story, the people respond, turning the tables by
turning the accusers over for questioning.
It is now they who must prove their case, which they fail to do. So Susannah is delivered, back to her family,
and the accusers take her place in receiving the full penalty of the law.
I am struck by how clearly this story illustrates that God
moves by moving people. Would this providential delivery have been possible had
Daniel not responded to the spirit stirring him to speak? What if the people had not listened? What does all of this mean for us in our time?
Hearing this story for the first time, my thoughts
immediately went to an outcry that is currently falling on deaf ears. There are 166 men being held at Guantanamo
Bay detention center in Cuba. They are
held there without due process, accused in the absence of clear evidence. Their detention is indefinite, a torturous
reality. Adding insult to injury, the
sacred texts of these men of faith are being tampered with and desecrated, letters from their wives and children are censored or withheld. At Guantanamo, more men have died (9) than
have been convicted of a crime (6). The men are experiencing a living death,
confined to their tomb until the day that their corpse can be released to their
family without fear that it will speak of what it has suffered.
Yet the men there are finding ways to cry out, to God, to
their captors, to this crowd of people in the United States, to us. They are using the only tool they have left,
their own body, hunger striking. They
are not demanding release, only humane treatment, just procedures.
As a woman of faith, I sense the Holy Spirit seeking to
arouse a voice in the crowd. We are
given the example of Daniel for a reason.
God desires compassion and justice and these divine gifts come through
people who respond. But what can we do,
when the prisoners are not standing directly before us, when the crowd is not
crushing about us?
We can still adopt and adapt Daniel’s words, “I will have no
part in the death of these men,” “Have we become fools, to condemn men without due process and in the absence of clear
evidence?” And we can find the crowds to
speak it to, and draw a crowd to speak it with us.
Witness Against Torture (WAT), a group of men and women from
across the United States, has been seeking an end to indefinite detention, due
process and resettlement for those detained, and the closure of Guantanamo Bay
detention center since 2005. Together we
are responding to the hunger strikes with tangible actions. Beginning March 24th (Holy Week,
for those in the Catholic tradition) we will hold a seven day solidarity fast. Throughout that week we encourage people to
call the White House; send letters to the prisoners acknowledging that they
have been heard by the public, even if officials have yet to respond; join us
for vigils (see witnesstorture.org to find out if there are any happening in
your city, or start your own); participate in the fast for a day or more; spread the news in any way you can.
Adnan Latif, a Muslim man who, after eleven years of
detention, died at Guantanamo wrote a poignant poem in which he asks, “Who will
save the hunger striker?” He died, without ever having been proved guilty of “all
their malicious charges.” How many
deaths before the cry is heard?