By Mark Tooley on 10.16.07 @ 12:07AM
A dynamic duo from the United Church of Christ gets cuffed in an unnoticed anti-Iraq War high noon showdown.
WASHINGTON -- During the Vietnam War, hundreds of thousands
marched in protest. During the 1971 May Day demonstrations, the
Nixon Administration surrounded the White House with Metro buses to
protect it from hordes of hippies attempting to shut down the
government. Thousands of demonstrators were arrested and
temporarily held at Washington's RFK stadium.
The melodrama of those days is long gone, but some of its aging
participants are still trying to re-create the glory days.
United Church of Christ (UCC) President John Thomas, after
disseminating a news release announcing his plans to be arrested
outside the White House to protest the Iraq War, achieved his goal
on October 10.
It was rather anti-climactic. The confrontation was scheduled
for the lunch hour, perhaps to encourage an audience of office
workers on their break to at least stop and watch. Not many
did.
"Our pledge is not to leave the gates of the White House until
our message has been received or until we are arrested," wrote
Thomas and his fellow UCC officer Linda Jaramillo, chief of
"Justice and Witness Ministries." They were planning to drop off a
UCC petition signed by 60,000 demanding an immediate U.S. retreat
from Iraq.
Although a UCC news release after the arrest referred to 50
UCC'ers in supportive attendance at the arrest, the crowd probably
was closer to half that size. A letter from Thomas and Jaramillo
addressed to President Bush and Congressional leaders nonetheless
referred to the "intensity" of anti-war fervor within the UCC. That
intensity seems to have been mostly confined to petition
signing.
"We believe we are at a critical moment when impasse,
resignation, and discouragement can easily allow failed policies to
continue for months," Thomas and Jaramillo had chimed the previous
Friday in a message to be shared at Sunday church services.
"Therefore, our witness will also include an urgent plea to the
leaders of our own church in every setting, and to our ecumenical
colleagues, to find their own way to offer visible and courageous
witness for justice and peace in Iraq."
The UCC is primarily made up of descendents of New England's
original Congregationalists. They were once fiery Calvinists not
averse to military conflict. But the modern UCC has more in common
with the Unitarians and pacifist Transcendentalists who
intellectually displaced New England Calvinism in the 19th century.
The UCC is one of America's fastest declining denominations, having
lost nearly half its membership over the last 40 years.
Apparently not very interested in reversing their church's
membership implosion, which would require preaching the old time
Gospel, the UCC leadership instead concentrates on protest causes
of the Left.
Thomas and Jaramillo, in their message to supporters beforehand,
pledged to be "respectful of those in our churches whose views
differ from ours," while expressing hope that God's grace will
"restore this wounded earth." Even after decades of dominance, it's
doubtful that a majority of the UCC's one million members really
support the radical Social Gospel that their officials prefer. But
the UCC's top clerics are prophetically undeterred!
"We have seen a groundswell from our churches who wanted to be a
part, who wanted to have their voices heard," enthused the Rev.
Jaramillo. "We are very concerned about the continuing escalation
of the war and violence."
BEFORE HEADING OVER to the White House to get arrested, Thomas and
Jaramillo swung by the U.S. Capitol to drop off their anti-war
petitions with the Congressional leadership. There they were
accompanied by the Unitarian Universalist Association's president
Thomas Singford, who helpfully brought along his own Unitarian
anti-war petition with 10,000 signatures. Old Congregationalist
divines once inveighed against the heterodoxy of Unitarianism and
Universalism. No longer very divided over theology, the old
adversaries can now work together amicably on more important
issues.
Forcing the United States out of Iraq ranks front and center for
the Religious Left as a matter of urgency. After their Capitol Hill
visit, Thomas and Jaramillo stood outside the north front of the
White House. Jaramillo held up boxes of petitions, having already
left a box or two with U.S. House and U.S. Senate leadership
offices. Thomas held up a red sign declaring: "Support the Troops:
End the War."
The earlier UCC news release had teasingly not described how
Thomas and Jaramillo would provoke their arrest. Would they strip
naked? Would they climb the White House fence? Would they brandish
a weapon? The answer was hardly so colorful.
While other, nearby but non-UCC related protesters bleated on
about homosexuality, Thomas and Jaramillo less flamboyantly stood
quietly at the White House fence and declined to step back when
asked by patient White House guards. No doubt to their
satisfaction, the two clerics were handcuffed and led to a police
van. But the kindly guards allowed for plenty of time for
photographers to capture the historic moment for future generations
of UCC activists.
Maybe trying to compensate for the utter lack of suspense or
drama, Thomas quoted Lutheran pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer to his
small crowd of UCC supporters. "The church has been a silent
partner in evil deeds," the anti-Nazi martyr was recalled having
said. "We are breaking that silence today," the UCC president
insisted, before he was arrested.
Standing naked in a prison courtyard, Bonhoeffer was shot by an
SS firing squad for plotting to help kill Hitler. Thomas, in a dark
suit, probably identified with the martyr as he was gingerly led
away by nonchalant White House guards who are long accustomed to
and likely bored by such staged arrests.
"This is a difficult time for people of faith who are opposed to
the war," Thomas courageously opined. Hopefully he and the Rev.
Jaramillo got a nice meal at one of Washington's finer restaurants
before heading to Reagan National Airport.
The hundreds of thousands of youthful anti-war protesters of 35
and 40 years ago shook the nation with their radical energy. The
affable and white-haired UCC clerics, looking more like
well-dressed tourist grandparents, hardly shook anybody with their
minor street theater. Their performance was quaint, silly, and
hopefully harmless.
topics:
Military, Iraq, Energy