Saturday, July 9, 2011

Dar al Amal boys


 Dar al Amal is a juvenile home in Ramallah for boys.  Some are there because they have dropped out of school and gotten into trouble.  Others are there because of severe family problems.  but for whatever reason, Dar al Amal is a place they can begin to get their life back together.  for the last three years we have been connecting with these boys,  enjoying barbecues, and discussions with them.  

This month we did something more ambitious. In order to give the boys a break in the hot summer months we brought them out to Living Stones from Ramallah.  We had a discussion with them, enjoyed a good meal, then took all the gang swimming in a pool in Bir Zeit.   After the meal we walked with the boys down some back roads behind the village to the pool.  I asked one of their supervisors if there was any chance they would try to run away.  He said there was no chance.  The boys are taught to look out for each other and encourage each other in the right direction.  Indeed we had no problem at all.





Outside the pool there were some very hot little kids who looked like they really wanted a swim, but they had to be satisfied with playing around on their donkeys!

What made this day special is that it was funded in large part by retirees from a retirement center in Pennsylvania who had heard about the boys and wanted to help.  when I shared this with the boys it really made them happy that someone cares for them.


Monday, July 4, 2011

The Presence of God Is not Political

Praying at the Western Wall
Walking up the ramp onto the Temple Mount, as it is known to Jews, or the Aqsa as it is known to Muslims, there are numerous signs in English, Arabic and Hebrew reminding visitors that they are entering a sacred space and so should conduct themselves appropriately.  No short pants, no food,  no pets. 

There is a glaring omission in this list - No Hate!

Jews pray at the the Western Wall, the wall which supports the large open area above it where the Dome of the Rock is now located, and the Jewish Temple formerly stood. 

Muslim prays on the Temple Mount area and specifically in the Al Aqsa mosque. 

Muslims believe that Muhammad ascended to heaven on his mystical journey from this area.  Jews believe that Abraham offered up Issac on the Temple Mount. 

Reading the Qur'an at the Al Aqsa mosque

What separates these two places of worship is more than armed guards and a few meters.  Hatred between these fervently religious communities is the invisible wall that divides.

In the past clashes have broken out between the two praying peoples  with Palestinians throwing stones and Israeli helicopter gunships opening fire on Muslim crowds on the Temple Mount.

In the true presence of God hate cannot survive.