Some clergy have come out to publicly condemn our “celebration”
of Osama bin Laden’s death.
Father Edward Beck, a Catholic priest in New York City, has
stated, “I am uncomfortable with the killing of Osama bin Laden
being celebrated like a Superbowl win.” Last night, he went on
The O’Reilly Factor to discuss his views. When O’Reilly
asked him how the response to the death of bin Laden was any
different than the response to the end of WWII on VE Day or VJ Day,
Beck replied, “But when you watch these people celebrating how does
it make us any better than those in the Mideast who celebrate when
America falls?”
Beck’s views of moral equivalence are echoed by George Pitcher,
an Anglican priest in London. Writing in The Telegraph,
Pitcher
argues:
We have to be very careful about our response to the killing of
Osama bin Laden. The West was appalled and deeply offended by the
street celebrations in Tehran and elsewhere after 9/11, but how do
rednecks in Washington DC chanting “USA! USA!” after the shooting
of Osama and other members of his household compare with that?
Absolute rubbish.
Osama bin Laden declared war on the United States by telling
Muslims it was their solemn duty to kill Americans be the military
or civilian. Members of bin Laden’s organization carried out his
fatwa on September 11, 2001. The response to the death of
bin Laden was in part to praise the bravery of our soldiers and in
part to remind evildoers that they reap what they sow. Those in the
Middle East who danced in the streets following the attacks of
September 11, 2001 chanting “Death to America!”did so out of hatred
of people they deemed to be infidels. They delighted in the deaths
of men, women and children.
I cannot help but think of
the celebrations which broke out in the streets of
Rafah following the murder of the Fogel family in the West
Bank settlement of Itamar back in March. If neither Beck nor
Pitcher can discern between the death of Osama bin Laden and the
death of a three month old baby who had her throat slit and was
decapitated because she was Jewish then I am left with no choice
but to declare that both men are unworthy of the
cloth.