By Mark Tooley on 4.16.07 @ 12:07AM
A holy Sunday dedicated to anti-nuclearisim outside a Nevada test site.
What better way to spend Palm Sunday than getting arrested with
Martin Sheen in a Nevada desert to protest against U.S. nuclear
weapons, the U.S. presence in Iraq, and countless other purported
outrages?
Activist Franciscan friars, with their appreciation of ancient
ritual, apparently began the tradition of protesting outside the
Nevada Nuclear Test Site in the early 1980s. The "Nevada Desert
Experience," whose supporters include Moveon.org, has since become
interfaith and quite colorful. This year, protesters stuck around
until Monday morning to offer donuts and free massages on rainbow
towels to the U.S. Energy Department workers as they commuted to
work. Some of the civil servants appear to have accepted the
massage hospitality, though none seem to have been persuaded to
abandon their work.
"In the shadow of the nuclear devastation at the Test Site and
the bombings of the Nellis Air Force range an awesome interfaith
group came together for a nonviolent experience in enjoying the
desert, sharing our traditions, and working for peace," gushed one
activist in a news release. The day had begun with a sunrise
ceremony led by a spiritual elder of the Shoshone tribe, with a
Franciscan friar providing a further blessing later in the day.
Also participating in the festivities, which included a week
long "Sacred Peace Walk" to the site, were a Zen priest of the
Buddhist Peace Fellowship, a "priestess" of the Temple of Goddess
Spirituality Dedicated to Sekhmet, a representative of the Thich
Nhat Hanh Order of Interbeing, a Benedictine priest, and a United
Methodist Church official. A Muslim leader led a "countering
oppressions workshop," and a Muslim cleric taught Muslim Prayers
toward Mecca. Martin Sheen, carrying his own gravitas as the actor
who portrayed President Josiah Bartlett on the The West
Wing, said his own Catholic prayer.
A news release made clear that the Sacred Peace Walk
commemorated not only Palm Sunday but also the birthdays of
Mohammad and Buddha, the early celebration of Passover, April Fools
Day, and the full moon. It was truly inclusive. And the activists
from various religious traditions were unified in their distress
over the U.S. Department of Energy's "Complex 2030" plan to
overhaul the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
"As President Bush twists the arms of Iran and North Korea to
halt developing their own nuclear weapons against an undefined
future threat, it is the height of hypocrisy for the U.S. to go
forward with so-called reliable replacement warheads and
unacceptable as a policy to go forward with the construction of the
Consolidated Plutonium Center," declared the Rev. Neal Christie of
the Washington-based United Methodist Board of Church and
Society.
That the U.S. nuclear arsenal is the main threat to world peace
was reiterated on the "Nevada Desert Experience" website, which
asserted: "At this time when the threat of nuclearism is resurgent,
we recognize that we are all ONE in our oppression under such
tyranny. Through our action of faithful witness, let us dispel the
myth that nuclearism brings sustainable peace to our world."
The protesters' website also made clear that "[w]e desire to
curb the threat of any future war with Iran, and to raise awareness
of U.S. nuclear hypocrisy as represented by the existence of the
Nevada Test Site and other nuclear facilities in this country."
According to United Methodist News Service, Christie reported
that a coalition of 74 national Jewish, Orthodox, Protestant and
Catholic organizations have recently filed a formal "Religious
Statement Opposing Complex 2030."
"Vast sums have already been wasted on a war of deception in
Iraq, leading to the slaughter of tens, and perhaps hundreds of
thousands of Iraqis," Christie complained. "We cannot afford to let
Congress turn its attention away from the reduction of existing
stockpiles which can still unleash 50,000 times the devastation of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined."
The Nevada Desert Experience traces its roots to the activism of
Sister Rosemary Lynch, who belongs to a Franciscan community in Las
Vegas. She began solitary vigils at the Nevada Test Site as far
back as 1977. She "would sit, for hours, contemplating the reality
around her, pray, and engage curious stoppers-by," eventually being
joined in later years by other Franciscans, Quakers, Japanese
visitors, and local tribal people. Lynch, still adamant about the
anti-nuclear cause, invited fellow protesters to celebrate her 90th
birthday at the protest site on Palm Sunday.
There is certainly something admirable about a 90-year-old nun
still pilgrimaging to the desert on behalf of her cause. Of course,
most Christians identify Palm Sunday as commemorating their Lord's
triumphant entrance into Israel's capital, which would culminate in
His crucifixion. But the Nevada Desert Experience, although largely
guided by Franciscans, seems to prioritize the struggle against
U.S. nuclear weapons over any specific remembrance of events in
Jerusalem 2,000 years ago.
Mark Tooley directs the United Methodist committee at
the Institute on
Religion and Democracy in Washington, D.C.
topics:
Religion, Iraq, Iran, Israel, North Korea, Nuclear Weapons, Energy