Wednesday 30 November 2022

RITES - CULTURE - POWER - POLITICS and CASTE


Syro Malabar Church - Identity Crisis or Identity Politics? 

A healthy culture, ... is open and welcoming by its very nature; indeed, “a culture without universal values is not truly a culture”. (FT 146)

Being proud of one's culture - is a much-stressed aspect of social life.  It is cultivated and traded for rights in today's identity politics.  Retaining or grabbing power is often its dynamics. To many, the cultural-tradition rhetoric of Syro Malabar - Indo-Chaldean - Thomas Christians of Keralam (and beyond), appears to be coloured and contaminated with power politics, legalism and parochialism. 

I feel it is desirable to know one's culture - I would say, one should know one's culture, or what is given or accepted as one's culture. But it is very composite a phenomenon, an experience, though not often perceived thus.  As rightly pointed out by Amartya Sen, and perhaps, by several others, we are the sum and more of our multiple identities, and our culture, at a given point of time, is also a combination of various influences, various cultures. 

I am a Malayalee Indian Christian from Kerala state (born, brought up and living there), of Syro Malabar Rite of the Roman Catholic Church, ordained in the religious order of CMI.  Today, I have to specifically mention my affiliation to the arch diocese of Ernakulam as well as. Besides, I am also a trained social worker, a social work educator, an academic administrator, a nature enthusiast by passion, and hence concerned about diversity and conservation. 

Now, there is a kind of 'schism' (division) in the Syro-Malabar Church supposed to be a homogenous community in Keralam. However, this almost 'caste-like' homogeneity (it was indeed very casteist in nature) is no longer thus, as Syro Malabar Church was given opportunities of 'evangelising cultures' beyond Keralam from 1960s.  Even before that, by 19th century, under certain constraints, apparently more out of expediency, the church had begun to step out of its casteist cast and reach out to dalit communities, though the caste-based segregation continued well into the second half of 20th century.  Though practically (or technically) it is not there now, still, the vestiges are very clear in the mentality of the majority of Syro Malabar Christians of Kerala origin.  Positive steps in this direction often smack of condescendence and paternalism, rather than egalitarian and liberating Christian outlook or empowerment. 

Peace and Reconciliation in Syro Malabar Eucharistic Liturgy

Back to 'schism' - it is about Holy Eucharist which is considered central to the Christian life of Catholics, chiefly about its ritualistic details. 

It is funny, rather ironic, to realise that a fight, a division, an acrimonious and vituperative blame game, is happening in the name of a 'means of unity and peace'.  The rite of the Holy Eucharist under reference has reference to peace, reconciliation, forgiveness etc. several times, spread through the one-hour long ritual. 

The ritual begins with a wish for peace and good will to all, followed by remembering God's holiness in heaven, naturally to permeate the realms of God's earth and God's people, with specific reminder of the need for reconciliation and forgiveness. 

There are 3 specific occasions of peace salutations  

(i) Before the 'gospel proclamation', where Gospel is conceived as Jesus himself proclaiming the good news in the midst of the congregation, and the celebrant greets the congregation 'peace be with you', implying Jesus be with you, with the response 'with you and with your spirit'.  

(ii) As the rite progresses to the 'gehanta' (roughly translatable as eucharistic prayers), there is an explicit act of greeting in peace (Kiss of Peace?), where the congregation greets each other with the symbol of peace implying forgiveness and reconciliation before progressing further with the commemoration of the 'salvific mysteries'.  

(iii) Then towards the end, as the congregation prepares for 'communion' with a prolonged 'reconciliation service', it is assumed that it has done all that is required for reconciliation and peace, and with that 'confidence' it calls upon God as the father (of all) in the words Jesus taught. And it is followed by greetings of peace, which indicates total reconciliation with God, with fellow beings (human and others, including the planet as well, I presume).  

The offertory ritual itself contains segments of reconciliation symbolised by washing of hands (cleansing minds of sin), where the celebrant prays for the grace to enter into the mysteries 'with hearts washed and purified, and conscience that has been made clean' (of sinfulness). Then the liturgy prays for peace on earth, through the intercession of those who have already gone before in 'the way' Through the koosappa (a prayer offered in low voice) before the second gehanta, the priest prays: Lord, liberate me from all unholiness, wickedness, jealousy, malevolence, hatred...in order to celebrate. Generate in us mutual love and unity...

While the congregation bursts out in praise of the trinitarian Creator for creative and salvific act, the celebrant fervently recalls God's holiness and one's own and human wickedness and ends a koosappa thus: Praised be your mercy that has reconciled the heaven with earth (heavenly dweller with earthly dwellers). It is about a unity beyond the planet, but it would be a hollow unity, if there was deliberate fight and animosity among the earthly dwellers - and more so, if the strife is on the means of this unity and its modality - a real contradiction!

The long chain of the gehantas ends with Epiclesis, which is immediately followed by an elaborate rite(s) of reconciliation.  And the first beautiful prayer (again, a koosappa) is about the very natural possibility of strife among the humans and the deliberate resolution to overcome it.  It is a prayer to Jesus our peace (Eph. 2:14), who is to reconcile heaven and earth! It prays specifically for putting an end to divisive tendencies, followed by act of contrition and resolution to establish reconciliation among the various realms of human relationships, culminating in reconciliation and the confidence to call upon God, Our Parent!

Then we have the rite of communion - where God who appeared in Jesus becomes united with the believer, physically entering each of the believers in the symbol of the consecrated host, sacramentally uniting God and human, heaven and earth! 

This offer of communion with God, is given with a sort of a challenge, when the priest proclaims: 'The Holy bread is for the Holy' and the congregation (the Church) responds - praised be God, who alone is holy, but ventures to receive God, accepting one's lack of holiness and also taking up the challenge that every believer is called to be holy, and also trusting that with God within, s/he is one step closer to the ideal of holiness (goodness), one measure deeper in goodness. 

The Hypocrisy of Diversity Mantra

I feel it ironical and a real big hypocrisy, that it is on the structure, especially regarding a symbolic posture of the direction in which the celebrant should posit oneself, that such a stupendous sacrament is reduced to a scandalous sacrilege. And in all the opposing (I wouldn't say contradictory) positions, conveniently setting aside the primary purpose of the celebration - of 'communion' with all in Christ, or union with Christ as means for communion with the creation. 

Other than the bare minimum Theology required for qualifying for priestly orders, I have not explored that realm - so, the understanding of the eucharistic liturgy presented above, is a personalised one. This may be erroneous from a Liturgiological or Theological view. For more than quarter of a century, I have celebrated liturgy with this sort of understanding, it has helped me to offer liturgy rather meaningfully, and several people had responded to me saying that the celebration made sense.  

Now the Church and its hierarchical priesthood is able to devise a theology for anything and everything, as it would fit their purpose, usually of consolidating power and making any questions raised against such power-mongering silenced. The theology thus conceived is not necessarily elevating, but it is the tradition; and a theology, a God-perspective, if found or seen in any other angle, is not acceptable. Aren't we getting back to the Judaic Pharisaism which Jesus had condemned out and out? 

The church keeps on muttering the mantra of 'diversity' to establish the great heritage of the 21 odd rites. These are supposedly directly handed down from the apostles. Whether they communicate today with the people of God is appears to be secondary.  The purpose appears more of maintaining the tradition, than creating opportunity for the people of God to gain Christ experience. There is either an obsession or a compulsion that God experience in Christ through the Eucharistic celebration for those who have happened to be born into a particular tradition should happen precisely by adherence to that tradition. 

And the argument of maintenance of tradition may fit only as those who guide the destinies of the Church find it fit - whether it is the Pope or Roman Curias or individual Church Synods...  Thus, mass ad orientem was the tradition in the Latin rite till the middle of last century; and even the present prescription intends that, except that it instructs the celebrating priest to turn to the people at 6 points of the eucharistic liturgy, while making the provision for the priest to be on the side of the people facing the altar or facing the altar and the people simultaneously. 

Now, I am not sure if the Syro-Malabar or Syro-Chaldean liturgiology insists on a tradition of a eucharistic celebration ad orientem (which is very often impossible, unless the church building are rebuilt in many cases), or is advocating only a celebration ad apsem (in which case, the freedom of Latin rite to make it possible to face both the altar and the people becomes possible), or if it insists on a tradition ad sanctum (facing the sanctuary, attributed the symbolism of heaven, God's dwelling). 

By synodal majoritarian decision, several changes have been introduced into the existing liturgical text in use since the 80s. It has revised, corrected, cut short on traditional prayers, endorsed existing prayers borrowed from other traditions, inserted new items (e.g., St. Joseph being remembered - I used to do that since my ordination), even decided that the traditional mode of turning always towards the sanctuary/altar/east can be changed.  Then we understand that it is only a matter of administrative system, and its acceptance, rather than that of any particular unchangeable theology or liturgiology or tradition.  It is more a matter of democracy, interpreted as majoritarian decision making.  If that be the case, it is always possible for the synod to be flexible and Christian in this matter, and approve a variant, accommodating the sentiments of a sizeable section of the Church. And perhaps, continuing the effort in a conciliatory fashion for a uniform celebration. 

The Church father, St. Augustine's famous dictum aptly fits to guide our thinking in this regard: 'in necessariis unitas, in dubiis libertas, et in omnibus caritas' - as pointed out by several learned men and women in this regard, we already have great deal of unity (uniformity) regarding the mass and the text; the matter is only regarding turning towards the people which can have its own rich and vibrant symbolism, while the traditional semitic-judaic ritualistic symbolism is substituted.  In this debate, we conveniently forget that the whole debate is about the commemoration of the sacrifice of Jesus, who had to undergo the same on account of his teachings and stance, which also included doing away with adherence to ritualistic practices in preference to human needs and lives. 

He was consistently challenging any ritualism that would not immediately converse with everyday life of people.  Thus, he dared to break Sabbath rules to heal, to justify the innocent action of plucking ripened corns to eat by the disciples on the Sabbath day, and promoting the freedom of worshipping beyond prescribed locations - Gerizim or Jerusalem - in spirit and truth.  He drove out from the Temple those who traded in rituals for power and money.  But he chose not to forsake the assemblies of the faithful by being there at the synagogues of Sabbaths 'as was his practice'. 

All the same, he insisted on not forsaking 'the law' of the Lord - basically of love and service. The Synod could very well, in a truly Christian fashion approve and accommodate a few cultural adaptations to make the celebration more effective in communicating Christ and his good news to the participants. The Latin Church has taken such freedom, e.g., special liturgy for the children. 

Apparently, the sole purpose seems to be museological, rather than theological - to keep the tradition intact.  This I consider a museum theology.  There is nothing wrong in preserving the ancient tradition intact, but insisting that this is the only way to be followed for the greater goal of God experience in Christ appears antithetical for Christianity, if not anti-Christ. 

Personally, I would prefer a theology that speaks of the celebration of Christian fellowship in the spirit of the Lord's supper, permeated with his word, raising the hearts of those gathered 'around' the table of the word and the Lord's supper, and experiencing the promise of the Lord to be in the midst of two or more gathered in his name (Mtt 18:20).  However, I would rather submit to the majoritarian (not necessarily democratic) decision in this regard, for it is not really impossible to raise our hearts to God together with the author and perfector of our in faith (Heb 12:2) who endured cross despising its shame! But, what a contradiction - behold,  we have our shepherd coming with police protection to his flock and his Church to impose a tradition. If he was convinced of the Christian rightness in this regard, ideally, he should have come and dared to die at the hands of those Christians, who would again be rendering themselves unchristian, anti-christ, and anti-eucharist if they had thus reacted. 

Rather than stick on to my desired pattern of Eucharistic celebration, I would rather accept the imposed rubrics, that we all turn to the altar or the sanctuary or the East, and not face each other (primarily, celebrating priest facing the congregation of the faithful); but still continue to use the platforms in the Church to argue and demand for, to experiment with other modes of celebration.  And persuade fellow Christians to follow the path of giving up one's (self) righteous stance, one's logical theology, one's feel-good-experiences, and thus be closer to Christ's sacrifice in spirit, rather than be in the track of channel debaters or political haranguers.  

I hope I don't become a heretic or Lutheran, because I endorse what Martin Luther said to the Lutherans in this regard: "Here [in Wittenberg] we retain the vestments, altar, and candles until they are used up or we are pleased to make a change. But we do not oppose anyone who would do otherwise. In the true mass, however, of real Christians, the altar should not remain where it is, and the priest should always face the people as Christ doubtlessly did in the Last Supper."    [Lund, Eric (2002). Documents from the Historia of Lutheranism, 1517-1750. Fortress Press. p. 130.]

Almost a century ago, when a group of Syrian Christians who had split away from the communion of Catholic Church, showed the willingness to come back, the Church showed great flexibility to accommodate the altogether different rite they had been practising for almost 3 centuries under the influence of Antiochean Orthodox Church, retain the very same liturgy and if necessary, permit married clergy as well.  A painful division was bridged by painstaking efforts and great readiness to accommodate a variant.  Here, no such variance is in discussion, but a mere decision regarding where teh celebrant would face - and the liturgy fundmentalists feel that insistence on the ritual as more important than the accommodativeness demanded by unity! 

In the middle east, now accommodation of a very fundamental (?) or traditional practice of observing Sabbath (better, the Lord's day - the third commandment) is easily accomplished by both SMC and Latin Church.  The 'Lord's day obligation (!) can be fulfilled on any of the four days, viz., Thursday/Saturday (vigil mass) or Friday/Sunday!! That is indeed right and fitting - for 'Sabbath was made for (hu)mans, and not the other way about'.  So such variance or accommodations are possible - but the issue of a celebrant facing the people is not possible - a non-negotiatble, making it apparently the most important feature of Eucharistic celebration!

Interestingly, I observe that a very important theological statement on the sacrifice has been deliberately or conveniently 'sacrificed' in the renewed liturgical text - in the third gehanta, the section on the kenotic sacrifice Jesus made: അങ്ങയോടുള്ള സമാനത നിലനിർത്തേണ്ട (I read it as: മുറുകെ പിടിക്കേണ്ട) കാര്യമായി പരിഗണിക്കാതെ, അവിടന്ന് സ്വയം ശൂന്യനാക്കി - that he did not consider equality with God to be a matter that should be held on to, and emptied himself.  It is the sacrifice of even the most significant moral good of being 'equal to God'  that is being celebrated. And here we are stuck to our small egos and traditions as to the direction the celebrant should face!! 

I marvel, when I am told that our modern day radical liberal Pope is insisting on this uniformity - a holy father who advocates embracing the abortionists and the people who miss out on Church laws on the sanctity and inviolability of marriage, who advocates open arms to welcome all sorts of diversities, who appears not averse to thinking about women in Christian priesthood,  thus making the Church really a Church after the mind of Christ 'who had not come to seek the righteous', finds a slight variant of the Syro-Malabar Eucharistic liturgy intolerable, and using authoritarian language to express the same.  I am appalled! - so, it is the church (human) conventions and laws that are of greater significance than 'faith and morals'.  In this matter, the shepherds (the major ones) are exempted from the counsel to be 'those with scent of the sheep'

A post script in this regard: 

Rites as 'sanctified' casteism in the Church

In India, we are generally born into a casteist society.  Gradually, Christians have accommodated that by willingly making entries in the government related documentations, when asked for caste, they willingly make entries like Syrian Christians, Latin Christians, Roman Catholic Syrian Christian, CSI etc. Now Church creates some very special provisions for a 'variant' of caste system in the Church. 

The variant-intolerant SMC is comfortably accommodating the pure caste of Knanya Catholics, giving them separate dioceses, and all other casteist privileges! This purely anti-Christian casteist (in the sense of Gal 3:28; 5:6; 6:15) variant is tolerated, but a variant now over 6 decades, to which most of the present-day generation are accustomed to, which has hardly anything with faith or morals, is not tolerated! Note: I have nothing against my Knanya brothers and sisters or their dioceses.  I have good friends and co-workers among them.  I am only struck by the contradiction in the Church position when issue of variant is discussed regarding a relatively minor matter of where the priest celebrant faces!! The height of 'ridiculosity'.

Once you are born into a particular rite, you cannot change it - and Church (as usual with its 'unchristian' expertise in creating dogmas, rules and rubrics to bind people's lives - antichristian as they tend to enslave, rather than 'proclaim liberation' to the captives) has created a complex set of rules to bind the faithful with this. So once your parents happened to be in a particular rite, you are condemned to be in that, whether you feel comfortable with it or not. Yes, you may quit the Church, you may become 'born-again Christian', but no - in the Catholic Church you have to stick on with this label.  I have come across dozens of well-meaning Syro-Malabar rite Christians in Delhi, in Mumbai, in the United States, in Qatar remaining active with their Latin parish, and not doing any 'ghar vapsi'  when a Syro Malabar parish emerges. One of them was made a Chevalier last year, and the Syro Malabar bishop was also there for the felicitation (ideal openness, if not expediency!). Fortunately, they are not being excommunicated by the Church - neither Latin nor Syro-Malabar!

In Keralam, Syro-Malabar (or this recent rechristening of Syro-Chaldean), is a privileged or high-caste position. You go to the North of India, where there are any number of dioceses with hardly any Christian community, but amidst the numerous such dioceses and bishops, you  are treated as a stranger, if not a pariah, because of your Syro-Malabar status. And in the universal Church, it is indeed a low caste position, with a Latin Rome dictating these archaic-archaeological norms, based on their Greco-Roman-White-Caucasian racist philosophy and theology.  

They dare not try to apply those profound categories evolved in the Indian sub-continent be used for announcing the good news of God's care for humans and the planet! Nor do they  let others try! With a richer and profound spiritual tradition in the sub-continent, with a very systematic language, our diversity theology, does not permit incarnation of Christ in the cultural context and categories of this vast land, with greater diversity and vaster population than the whole of Catholic Europe and America put together.  The experiments to make Christ of the Indian soil felt were all torpedoed  by this domineering Catholic casteism and racism. 

When it comes to Latin rite, these privileges are easily introduced, with the African tribal elements or North Indian tribal elements given a free entry into the liturgical celebrations, which was never a tradition in the puritanical western culture. But these variants are only peripheral, perhaps, and the core appears to be only that of turning towards the sanctuary/altar or that of the celebrant and the congregation facing each other!!!

I have really felt odd and totally out of place, in the North Indian context, where the traditional liturgical vestments and literal translation of the archaic Chaldean liturgy of Syro Malabar Church is used in the celebration with the new converts, making them an alien community in their context, and making the celebration more an exhibition of pomposity and ritualism. 

Casteist Archaeology or Vibrant Theology?

While preserving ancient tradition intact, and not losing the linguistic and cultural traditions, are important in themselves, for celebrating Christian faith for reinforcing Christ's teaching and Christ's personal presence amidst the believing community, freedom to go beyond the traditions and find newer modes of experiencing the same, experimenting newer ways is a must. For that, there needs to be a liberation of the Church from the stranglehold of power-mongering and power-mongers in the Church, who require civil police to celebrate the ritual; It calls for much beyond 'turning to the sanctuary/east/altar or turning to the people', it requires turning to Christ crucified, Christ who challenged us to serve, Christ who forgave, Christ who taught the greatness of the smallness.  It has to be our Catechism, and not our discoveries and inventions of the properties of God (how dare we!!) and of the innumerable laws governing the power structure of the Church. 

Attachment: It would be worth the while to have a look at how some of the Syro-Malabar Christians responded to the efforts at establishing ritualistic hegemony on them on the pretext of right to evangelise and right to minister to the faithful in the tradition of a particular sui juris church. 




A Car for Free - Freedom 0.2 - November 2022

The new car has come

A gift of benevolence

A tool for efficiency

A step closer to sufficiency?


Oh boy, I am free!

Freedom for mobility

Freedom from dependence 

For a bus, for a ride, for a driver

Freedom from waiting 

For a bus, for a ride, for a driver


Oh, for long 5 decades 

And past several places

From this one want I kept me free

Never making it appear a need

Nor feeling the lack of it in-deed


Alas! Now  I too can proudly share 

The global pain  of carbon snare

Not by  saving, but by  adding

As my  own footprint* will planet bear! 


Now that I have this cover

I move about in  power

But realise that I am now dependent

on periodic maintenance

on regualr refuelling 

on parking lots in the busy streets

and on thousands of fellow riders 

whom I should care for not to harm

and whom I should fear for harming me!\

*True - on a regular wokring day, with the car in custody, 40 kms of run (pick up, drop off) saved!

Sunday 27 November 2022

Football Festival - Now is All - Qatar 2022

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Football Festival - Japan vs Costa Rica - Ahmed Bin Ali stadium. November 27, 2022

One week of football fiesta - festivities and tempo are sustaining. Fans and followers vie to add their bit to the overall festive atmosphere. Malayalees are everywhere.  My estimates, today Japan vs Costa Rica, at least one third were Malayalees. I could see and hear them in the crowded metro (nothing comparable  to Mumbai suburban trains), in the snake like winding queues, (each of the 4 or 5 of them on the 2 entry points folded 7 times at 25 m length - a crowding control measure) and all around us in the stadium. They are predictable,  when Brazil or Argentina is not there, they are for Japan or France or Germany, as the case may be. Underdogs have hardly any Malayalee support, unless there is a rare rebel. 

In spite of it being November, one third of the open roofed Ahmed Bin Ali stadium had to bear the searing heat of the afternoon sun. All were provided with comfortable white caps. Otherwise, the 44000 capacity stadium was comfortably cool. 

The opening is as ceremonious as any solemn liturgy. About 100 bearers (including 4 to 8 women – appeared more like a measure to ensure that they were also there) solemnly bring the rolled up flags of FIFA and the two contesting nations, they take positions in a predetermined order, and the banners are spread out on the floor in a very impressive & precise manner. Then there is the solemn entry of the huge replica of the FIFA cup, which by now has become almost an idol of grave adoration. (It is taken around the world as if a religious relic is being taken around for veneration, all across. People line up hours to have a darshan of it, in the preannounced venues – for a view of it, a picture with it!  It has become almost a cult). A set of men in black bring this huge cup on wheels, to the centre of the FIFA banner. Then the national anthems of the contesting nations are sung, with the teams having lined up. The items of veneration are now withdrawn solemnly, the game starts off precisely on the scheduled time. I follow the huge golden replica, and then find that, once brought back, the ‘shiny golden piece’ is deflated to keep it safe, revealing its metal! 

 

Initially you could observe only the Japanese white & blue, with some islands of the Costarican red. But once the only goal of the match netted towards last quarter of the game, the red became all on a sudden  visible everywhere! Perhaps success does have many fathers! Through the 2 afternoon hours, though my eyes became heavy, giving me some additional rest, I was fortunate to grasp the glimpse of that sole goal of the game.

 

But the Japanese held the sway all through the game, except for netting the vital goal!  They also stole the hearts of the audience by stopping by all the four sides of the ground, and bowing to the audience in the typical Japanese style, whereas the winners were not to be seen anywhere. 

 

Come interval - the turf is thoroughly examined after a liberal dose of sprinkling of water - someone tells it is all as per the standards prescribed by FIFA - the natural grass, its thickness, the mode of maintaining it etc...Foot by foot the ground is examined and maintenance done before the game resumes.

 

Green messages appear during the break. There are volunteers deputed to remind the fans regarding trash disposal.  Some of the spectators make an attempt to clear the rubbish around their seats - Malayalees and Japanese including... But still it is littered, and requires purposeful waste clearance (which is in place) before the next game on the venue, which takes a place after giving sufficient time for all such details. The game management gas consciously made an effort to paint it green (though it is almost green washing, the effort is laudable.  Even the alleged giant polluter Coco Coal is towing the line)! 

 

In the stadium clean toilets are in adequate number and access is free.  But a more vital stuff, drinking water can be obtained only if you pay ten times that of the market rate; and you are not permitted to bring water or food of any sort. I feel a provision of free drinking water at the venues would have been a more meaningful addition to Qatar's efforts on the green and human rights fronts. 

 

The presence of trained security men (and some women as well) is visible all around.  Every gate of entry, of every level is further subdivided into sections, each of which is monitored by at least 2 security men - dressed in black with their shirts having shoulder badges - one blue and the other red; and invariably having the reflective yellow jacket.  Certain areas are formed into a human wall by the volunteers, to guide the participants in the right track! The amount of human resources involved is indeed mind boggling. 

 

Out of the stadium there are bands playing and dancing - Middle eastern, Latin American, Black, Japanese... There is a band dancing on huge stilts to some tune.  At one stadium, it was Malayalee parakottu, at another, it was a Srilankan traditional art form, with full make-up and costumes! Everyone is trying to make it a big perunnal or utsavam. 

 

The circuitous routing of the spectators lead them along the numerous food stalls of Mall of Qatar and a good number of them are induced to stop over and grab something, after almost 5 hours of imposed fast and tremendous work out of almost 10000 steps in all. The Qatar 2022 fans are almost forced into a fitness programme!  The organisers indeed host a programme in that connection, named 'Walk the Talk' with WHO, to inspire people to walk (at least 3 kilometers).  The novel idea to convert some of the very busy streets into a totally pedestrian zone, I consider a bold one, and a right one.

 

The public transport is  for the first time fully functional in Doha - otherwise, it was nobody's concern - generally people have their own conveyance, or the hired employees are generally given transportation to work site.  But, with the world cup, and the public transport - buses, trams and metro rail made (almost) free - the insistence on Hayya card appears to have waned out - and record numbers have been using them; making access to all the venues faster, easier and free from traffic jams (In Qatar, traffic jams have not yet become a major traffic nuisance).  They all radiate energy and are throbbing with enthusiasm.  Sometimes, the otherwise quiet metro zones boom with sloganeering - I get an odd feeling of being in the college, with the SFI/KSU slogans in the air - here it is for Canada or for Iran or for Saudi Arabia; but thankfully sans any animosity or acrimony that accompanies the college sloganeering I have experienced. 

 

I meet 3 of the Rajagiri teachers who have enlisted to be the volunteers for the world cup, all dressed up in the Qatar 2022 uniform (There are several cadres, sporting different types of uniform).  After the tiring day's work of directing or guiding people, their face radiate happiness and satisfaction - doing something different, meaningful, being part of the mega event, and perhaps even getting compensated in more than one way! They say, it was the best vacation ever!



 

When compared to the huge Lusail stadium, here you are much closer to the ground, with a rather clear vision of the players. Heartian Alan has taken the trouble to use his skill to reserve tickets for many in his circle thus providing quite a number of Malayalees (including me) an opportunity to be part of the world up at the most affordable rate of QR 40.  According to him, this world cup has several unique features - one being the world cup watched by most number of Malayalees,😁 and most number of people from our Perumanoor parish😆(We both belong there, and in addition, watching the world cup are Alan's wife and his parents!!!! 


Friday 25 November 2022

FIFA - Football - Fun - Fellowship


Amaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaazing Qatar 2022 

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Rajagiri parents appear very sportive - In the first year after COVID lock-down, and in the first year of the school becoming a 'full school' from KG to XII grade, we have a parents' council in place, and in spite of the odds related to post-COVID scenario and the world cup Qatar 2022 flux, they have proved themselves to be a dynamic group. 

It was their prompting that was responded to by a vigour four fold by the School team - the Principal, the Vice Principal, the Physical Education team under Mr. Shihab and the Arts Department led by Saraswati. 

The school bore a festive look from the 2nd week of November, with flags of participating nations fluttering all around, the corridors sporting paper-crafts in the national colours, the glass panes bearing the world cup mascot La'eeb (in Arabic, a super-skilled player  - a free spirit of expertise and dexterity). The arts department, with the support of admin team, did not spare any effort to give the school a festive ambience.

It was for the first since COVID times that teachers and parents were appearing in the school ground, in the cool of November evening.  And they were all very enthusiastic. While gender stereotypes ruled football for men, and throwball for women, there was no lack of enthusiasm on either sides.  The women wing of both parents and teachers were seen bubbling with enthusiasm, as if eagerly grabbing opportunity to rediscover their youth. 

The Wonder Moms and Thunder Moms tested their wits to finally have the Wondermums emerge winners to match their stuff with the Teacher team. The teacher team registered an emphatic win thereby declaring themselves to be thunder stuff! But the moms did wonder by a miraculous come back, to get the next two games and the cup, while the teacher team blundered and floundered! It was duly compensated on the football ground, with the teacher team emerging a clear winner, Principal Mr Sanjeevkumar himself leading the team from front, and assisting the field goal admirably. He left no doubt as to who the best player was! There emerged another top scorer unawares, Mr. Praveenkumar, of Hindi department, regaling alike those who could follow Hindi and those who couldn't, by his witty, spontaneous running commentary of the games, also give all present, the experience of the grace of Hindi tinged with Urdu.

Amazing festivities, positive exchange, healthy competition, testing fitness, good time for parents, teachers, kids and management to come together as one Rajagiri Family. 

The parent council involvement and leadership were amazing, with Mr. Shibu and Ms Roma behind the teams, and the President, Mr. Akbar rendering all support! Look forward to the trend to gain strength. 










For the kids, the closing day, the entire school was in Qatar2022 fever - with Qatar National spirit being celebrated on the stage, and over fifty kids - all dressed up in national colours, stepping in tune with "Hayya - hayya", gracefully and vigorously, while the senior and junior 'Brazil and Argentina' teams matched their 'la'eeb-ness' with foot ball.  A day for football, fitness, fun and fellowship.  

PRIESTHOOD IN TIMES OF CLIMATE CHANGE

1.    Introductions


I feel very happy and encouraged to have this opportunity – even grateful, to engage with our deacons in preparation for ordination and their pastoral year.  I would have been happier to have a person to person interaction.  I think it is the first time that the topic of Environment has found a place in the pastoral orientation menu, and that, I would say, is a major step, though a small one, in the right direction. Feel grateful to my good friend and confrere Fr. Paulachan for considering me to engage this topic in discussion, and I recall our younger days in Bijnor and areas of common interest.

Our congregation had taken up this issue as a priority area in our XXXVIII general synaxis, and regarding the various domains of our life and apostolate, we arrived at more than ten resolutions in this regard.  In the light of these, an environment policy for the CMIs has been brought out and promulgated. The very same content was almost literally adopted by the Salesian province of Dimapur, Nagaland with necessary adaptations indicating the acceptance of the content.  I hope the deacons in their retreat would consider browsing through it, or at least Chapter 4 (A green CMI identity) and Annexure 1 (a check list for a green audit of CMI institutions).

Seeing the global trends, the news content of various international news channels and based on the thrust GS XXXVIII tried to provide, I feel, it would ideal that our secretariate for social apostolate be renamed as Social and Environmental Dept/Apostolate; and according to the globally promoted 30 by 30 principle, 30% of all our efforts be in the direction of planet for people - greening, farming, recycling etc.

I feel happy that we are having this discussion in 2022, 50 years after the landmark 1972 Stockholm summit and 30 years after the Rio Summit.  The latter was instrumental in shaping the earth consciousness of people of our generation, at least mine! We were perhaps the first faculty of Theology to have organised a faculty seminar on ‘Eco Theology’ in 1992, and I had the privilege of choosing the topic, and coordinating it as a student of Theology.

I had given seven questions* for self and/or collective reflection, and would have been happy to learn the answers to the question on occurrences around which the deacons considered significant. I would list out a few which occurred to me as significant:

(i)            Human population crossing the 8 billion mark on November 15th and the issue of increasing population and limited resources.  In this regard, Pope Francis in Laudato Si points to the more serious aspects of private property, limits to the right to accumulate wealth and the duty of sharing resources, and the rights of people on the resources of the planet.  Even Indira Gandhi, a strong advocate of population control, had indicated the importance of resource sharing and distribution as a responsibility of the world nations.

(ii)     COP27 – was concluded at Sharm-el-Sheikh, Egypt, with over 100 nations deliberating on issues of development and almost arriving at a consensus (still vague) on common, but differentiated responsibilities, including the responsibilities of the developed nations to support the 'deserving nations’ to meet the standards set to attain the global sustainable development goals.

(iii)        The devastating war on Ukraine – laying waste the land, polluting the air and water, and depriving people of the needs of power and water, pointing to the importance of peace as a necessary condition for sustainability.

(iv)       Pakistan claims compensation for loss and damage from World Nations -  which in principle, became accepted in the COP27.

(v)          COVID in China – crossing the limits 33000, again threatening the world and reminding us that we are one, connected world, our national borders notwithstanding, and sustainability of life is a collective responsibility of all.

(vi)     Rhine River Running Dry in August, 2022. When we travelled Europe or Americas (USA), we felt that God was partisan and let these regions/people enjoy the privilege of perennial rivers, always flowing with water, and no devastating extremities of weather, especially like the summers of Northern India – which apparently affected all, whereas winter was more harsh towards the poor.  But with River Rhine running dry (at a 42 cm low from the minimally required 150 cms) preventing navigation and transportation, eventually affecting Commerce, it pointed out to the global reality of warming. Similar occurrence of dry spell was experienced all through Europe this year.

(vii)     Wild Fires <https://disasterphilanthropy.org/disasters/2022-international-wildfires/> raging across the globe killing, threatening and displacing people and biodiversity.

“The fires that happen around the world now are unlike the fires of 1992, 1972 or 1952. Fires are burning faster and hotter than ever before, and complex socio-economic factors result in more people being affected by smoke, debris flows and other wildfire effects. It is becoming more common for areas to suffer a subsequent catastrophic wildfire before recovering from an earlier wildfire.

USA, Canada, Mexico, Australia, Russia, Spain, France, UK, Georgia, Algeria, Turkey, Greece…India…all of them experienced devastating forest fires this year.

(viii)     15000 killed by hot weather in Europe, indicating the adverse impacts of global warming and climate change. 

(ix)         CIA Director, William Burns in an interview noted that climate change is "an important  priority for the CIA and the US Intelligence community/" (Gulf Times, 5 Oct 2020. p. 10.  Anne Marie Slaughter: No Security without Climate Security). 

(x)          Climate Refugees: International Organisation for Migration (IOM) By 2050 - 216 million people will be uprooted within their own country on account of climate change. 40 million in South Asian nations alone. Millions were going hungry, and facing hunger death in Sudan and  Somalia due to climatic changes as well as human conflicts.

(xi)         Last 50 years saw 68% drop in wildlife. 10 mn hectares of land (about the size of Germany) get deforested every year. Biodiversity loss threat in terms of money was found to be equivalent to $1.9 tn (Moody's Investor Service).  These 'Risks such as ecosystem health, biodiversity loss and natural resource management' are likely to influence investments.  There is a need for 'natural capital preservation' from this angle as well.

All these point to the reality of One World – our Common Home, and any human action can impact all of us, requiring Common, but Differentiated Responsibility

2.    Some experiences of Indian landscape.

On my retirement after 24 years of service as an educator and administrator, I had the good fortune of being permitted to travel across India on a motorbike, and the health for the same.  I accomplished that in four months, covering all Indian states except two, 21010 kilometers in all. It had a theme  Trust-Green-Peace, taking a cue from UN theme of the year of Trust and Peace.

Basically, it was just for the heck of it, I felt like doing it, and realising that I will only grow older and never younger, and it would be worth the while exploring my country before I become too old for it. More of a fun ride.  Thanks to the Indian hospitality and my privileged position as a Catholic priest, I was received all around the country, without much fuss and I could interact with teachers, students and the public.

I found our great country free, vast, diverse & beautiful country – beauty of the plains, of the oceans, of the rivers, of the dry areas, of the high and snow-clad mountains…But I also observed that it is increasingly being marred by pollution – especially, waste generated by human beings – more so, plastic waste. Mountain heaps in quite a few places; remarkably in Delhi, having formed a small mountain of plastic waste in about 3 decades.

Water abundant state like Keralam – with its poor consideration for waste management sybolised by the waste dumps of Vilappilshala, Brahmapuram, Laloor, Njeliyamparambu - has become a water scarce state, with most of its natural sources of water becoming unfit for drinking; the uniquely beautiful state becoming an increasingly dirty and unattractive place.

Solid waste generation and management a major environmental hazard which can be tackled even now through education, planning & enforcement was also seen by the exceptional management of Indore City – one of the most populous cities of the country. 14th largest city, with almost 2 million population

All these drive me to focus on a 21st century virtue of an Indian Catholic Priest as being a ‘zero waste person’ or ‘zero carbon person’. That he is able ensure that : Waste is not generated; and if unavoidable and generated, it is managed through segregation at the source. It has to have a special focus on plastic disposables – beyond being an eyesore, leading to atmospheric pollution, clogging, becoming a threat to terrestrial & aquatic fauna; and a threat of bio-accumulation and bio-magnification to all fauna through microplastics everywhere, especially in the oceans.

Pope Francis very clearly points to getting rid of the ‘Throw Away Culture’, implying ‘no’ to the indiscriminate use of disposables of all sorts, which leads to a ‘spirituality that is marked by disposability of higher values’.  It has to grow beyond the typical ‘cleanliness drive’, which is often an over-sanitisation and threat to other beings.  Cleanliness next to Godliness campaign can,  at the best, be a good beginning. 

3.    How Individuals Make Some Difference

                        i.         I read about Kere Kamegowda (82) - Mandya, Malavelli Tk, Dasanadoddi Panchayat, who passed away in 2022.  The arid hilly tract of his locality was converted into a green zone, with 16 ponds that slowed the water run off - worth seeing. I feel that he has lived the gospel of ‘giving life in abundance’ (Jn10:10) much better than many of our institutions put together.

                      ii.         Anand Malligavad, Engineer turned water conservationist, Bangalore, in a matter of 6 years has managed to resurrect several huge reservoirs of water in Bangalore region, making that now his full time occupation.  I learnt that Dharmaram took the initiative to invite him to the campus and to interact with him.

                    iii.         Meena Menon, who inherited a 2 acre ancestral property on the NH 17, near Paravoor, Ernakulam, could have sold it off and led a life of comfort with the money earned.  But she chose to maintain that as a mini forest for the common good, conserving floral and faunal diversity at great risk, inconvenience and harassment from the government.  She had only losses in the bargain for her daring act.

                    iv.         I am proud of our beloved Fr. George Pittappilly, the Physics professor who visualised energy self-reliance which could lessen the carbon footprint. Thus was born Mitradham, the abode of Sun, which has sustained its efforts of being a green energy self-sufficient campus, and training and inspiring several hundreds in the field of renewable energy resources.

                      v.         Experiments of Aji Baba (Rev. Aji Parecattil CMI) was also a great initiative to reinvent nature-based remedies for human ailments, accompanied by a befitting life-style.  It survived for over a decade, and then apparently, has fizzled off.

                    vi.         Experiments in Carmel Health Centre at Bhoothathankettu, under the leadership of a green warrior Rev. Mathew Manjakunnel is a great initiative at balancing ecology, health and economy.  It has the requirements for sustainability.

                   vii.         In the last five years, a few of our campuses became 100% solar energy based, which is an effort in the right direction.

These are cited to show how individuals could make a difference in this field, often fighting against several odds.

4.    Alternatives – to be searched for, found and propagated

When stubbles are burnt in October-November in Punjab-Haryana, the region becomes extremely polluted and in the process makes Delhi, the capital the most polluted capital city in the world. The mode of Diwali celebrations involving unrestrained use of fire-crackers enhance it, making living in the capital and around a health hazard, without any exaggeration.

Both these – stubble disposal and Diwali celebrations – do have alternatives, perhaps need better ones.  But the usual response to any such issue would be: TINA – There Is No other Alternative – that is what we say, often on all such occasions (say, Diwali celebrations, or decorations for a function, or greetings someone with a floral bouquet or serving food for a function using disposables or stubble of paddy crop to be removed).

TATA – The challenge is to find that ‘There Are A Thousand Alternatives’ – if not a thousand, a few, viable ones.  The human ingenuity has to refine them as to making them equally or more convenient.  The case of electric motor vehicle can be cited as an example.

This has to be looked upon as our mission of 21st century, identifying, creating, promoting sustainable alternatives, and life styles.  This demands making our educational ventures (formation of candidates, formal education, pastoral education) problem-solving/innovation oriented, which requires experimentation and research, as a thrust.

5.    Sustainability as a spiritual concern

Sustainability has become a popular term and a marketable term.  Often it remains at the level of GREEN WASHING. Usually tokenisms, accomplishing things for fulfilling requirements of approvals and accreditations, awards and accolades – not bad in themselves. However, effort should be to make it part of Personal Life and  Spirituality.

A present day Christian spirituality demands we respect and care for the planet (nature, environment) as our common home; and as a trust the Creator has entrusted to human beings to ‘till and keep’(Gen. 2:15) – to produce and to protect (LS 63)

In this regard, the seventeen secular global goals of development (SDG) can be of great significance.  A sine qua non as a spiritual trait would be our effort to translate the goal no. 12 of ‘sustainable consumption and production’ into our personal, collective and institutional lives.

All of us inevitably being  consumers, can grow in our approach towards this human act  – from the casual consumer of the planets goods - air, water, food, clothing, footwear, mobility – with our consciousness being awakened only towards the aspects of cost, utility or taste (of tongue or eyes) to a more conscious and critical approach towards the items we consume – their need (necessity for us), their impact on water, air or soil – if possible, giving a preference to the local, the least wasteful/waste generating etc.

It could go further to making our consumption itself a political act, as did Mahatma Gandhi, who inspired people to choose swadeshi instead of videshi. I recall, Aruna Roy (IAS), of the Right-to-Information-Act fame, describing her conscious choice of wearing a cotton-khadi saree, as her political act of siding with a group of people and an ideal. On another occasion, I saw Dr Vandana Shiva, of the ‘Water Wars’ fame, during her talk at IGNOU centre, Delhi, looking around for water, and refusing to take the bottled water which was on the stage, as she considered the very business and the very company that manufactured it, could not be reconciled with in the present environment scenario.

But I am more interested in looking at this as a ‘spiritual act’, where our choices of the goods of the world, are done with an attitude of ‘sacrifice’ (tyagaishaavasyamidam sarvam, … tena tyaktena bhunjitha).  This involves the ability to say ‘enough’ when we don’t need those goods, and the ability to say ‘no’ when such consumption is likely to involve avoidable harm to people and planet – involving a tyaga of self, as described by Indira Gandhi:

"This overriding concern with self and today is the basic cause of the ecological crisis. Pollution is not a technical problem. The fault lies not in science and technology as such but in the sense of values of the contemporary world which ignores the rights of others and is oblivious of the longer perspective." (Stockholm, 1972).

A list of such consumption items - individual and institutional – can be made to start with.

6.    Pastoral Year – Pastoral leadership and education

As the newly ordained enter their pastoral year after ordination, it is well to be beware of the Catholic Priesthood to be a call engrossed in ritualism – the only concern of priesthood becoming centred around the solemn or otherwise of the not against rituals – very rarely applied beyond that to the spread of good news to the world around us, except for the routine conventional charity – treatment, marriage fund, house construction…

CMI congregation has emphasized mission beyond borders as one of its thrust areas for the decade.  One of the best fields to operationalise this is the consideration for the planet as our ‘common home’ beyond the borders of human, Christian, religion, nation.  The whole world is my parish – all humans are my parishioners – the biotic and abiotic elements of the environment are also my parish.

A concern that could be experimented with by the newly ordained, without making it obvious or imposing, could be that of promoting ‘carbon neutral parishes/localities’ (Ref. CMission March 2022).

It would involve Christian living which focuses on sustainable responsible consumption:

·      Educating people and the masses

·      Control on human consumption – patterns, items.

·      Gospel reflections to include our relationships with the planet as well - not to be confined to the interpersonal human interaction. 

    •     Action for bio-diversity, water, soil protection

·    Action for sustainable and responsible production befitting the biblical call to ‘till and keep’ (Ref. Laudato Si)

·      Action for plastic-waste-pollution free spaces – clean water, air, soil

·      Action considering ONE HEALTH, involving the health of soil, water and air, as well as that of plants, animals and humans.

However, prior to that I would suggest

·      Laudato Si as a spiritual read for the retreat

·      CMI Environment Policy – chapter four and annexure two for further reading during the retreat.

Climate change is to be addressed from a spiritual angle as well – a pastoral, spiritual issue – in pastoral care, in gospel proclamation with insights for life on planet, in and from the Word of God – not romanticizing, but with insights for praxis

The global agenda of 30 by 30 - promise to protect 30% of world's land and sea by 2030 – be applied at the individual and parish level, with necessary adaptations.

Action and education for peace, conflict resolution and reconciliation.

Hope that becomes a vitutal  (a liberation) from ritualism to celebration of the redeemed and redeeming life on God’s world.

Hope that the new priest’s life will not be just confined to the sanctity of the sanctuary, but rather would be concerned with elevating the whole planet to be a sanctuary, where life thrives.

Exploring Common but differentiated responsibilities (usually applied to the world nations) – but also as applied to individuals – to Priests, with differentiated responsibility to lead thinking, guide the parish beyond borders and set models for them.

I would like to conclude these reflections with the quote from Indira Gandhi’s speech of 1972:

"The environmental problems of developing countries are not the side effects of excessive industrialization but reflect the inadequacy of development." This demands a re-look at our own definition or understanding of ‘development’ itself.

“Modern man must re-establish an unbroken link with nature and with life. He must again learn to invoke the energy of growing things and to recognize, as did the ancients in India centuries ago, that one can take from the Earth and the atmosphere only so much as one puts back into them.

As sung in the hymn to Earth of Atharva Veda by the sages, “What of thee I dig out, let that quickly grow over, Let me not hit thy vitals, or thy heart”. So can man himself be vital and of good heart and conscious of his responsibility."

 द्यौः शान्तिरन्तरिक्षं शान्तिः
पृथिवी शान्तिरापः शान्तिरोषधयः शान्तिः 
वनस्पतयः शान्तिर्विश्वेदेवाः शान्तिर्ब्रह्म शान्तिः
सर्वं शान्तिः शान्तिरेव शान्तिः सा मा शान्तिरेधि 
 शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः 

Om Dyauh Shaantir-Antarikssam Shaantih
Prthivii Shaantir-Aapah Shaantir-Ossadhayah Shaantih |
Vanaspatayah Shaantir-Vishve-Devaah Shaantir-Brahma Shaantih
Sarvam Shaantih Shaantireva Shaantih Saa Maa Shaantir-Edhi |
Om Shaantih Shaantih Shaantih || (Atharva Veda)

1.OmPeace is in SkyPeace is in Space (between Earth and Sky);
2: Peace is in EarthPeace is in WaterPeace is in Plants;
3: Peace is in TreesPeace is in Gods (presiding over the various elements of Nature); Peace is in Brahman (Absolute Consciousness);
4: Peace is pervading everywherePeace alone (which is outside) is in Peace (which is inside); May you be (established in) that Peace (and make your life fulfilled);

Praised be you, my Lord, with all your creatures, especially Sir Brother Sun, Sister Moon, stars, wind, air, cloud, waters…. All brothers and sisters…. (Canticle of Creation, Francis of Assisi, cited by Pope Francis, in Laudato Si)


 

*QUESTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL/COLLECTIVE REFLECTION

Nearing 30, and with almost 15 years in religious-priestly formation, and having lived in different parts of India:

1. Can you list out some occurrences around (preferably in the past 30 days) which you considered as significant. 

2. Could you list out the problems people you came across face? 

3. Could you prepare a summary list of problems related to the environment? 

4. How do you consider these problems as catholic priests (to be)? Does any of them hold a priority or concern for you? If yes, what are they? 

5. What are you doing about it? 

6. What can we as priests in various roles do about it? 

7. What, if any,  are the philosophical or biblical/theological or missiological  inspirations for our involvement?  

 

 

References

Indira Gandhi's address at Stockholm Summit 1972 June 16 <https://lasulawsenvironmental.blogspot.com/2012/07/indira-gandhis-speech-at-stockholm.html> November 22, 2022

ESG - <https://www.gulf-times.com/story/728470/Crackdown-on-greenwashing-weighs-on-ESG-funds-grow>  Nov. 9, 20222

Pesticides - <https://www.gulf-times.com/story/728469/The-pesticide-double-standard> Nov. 9, 20222

Pakistan Flood – Global Responsibility <https://www.gobalbankingandfinance.com/flood-hit-pakistan-seeks-loss-and-damage-compensation-at-cop27/ >  Nov. 8, 20222

Europe’s Second-Largest River – Runs Dry – European Space Agency Aug. 19, 2022 <https://scitechdaily.com/rhine-river-europes-second-largest-river-runs-dry/> (Nov. 25, 2022)

Wild Fires <https://disasterphilanthropy.org/disasters/2022-international-wildfires/> (Nov. 25, 2022) Centre for Disaster and Philanthropy;

15000 killed by hot weather in Europe - <https://theprint.in/world/15000-killed-by-hot-weather-in-europe-in-2022-who/1203445/> Nov. 22, 2022

Anand Malligavad, Engineer turned water conservationist, Bangalore. https://www.indiatimes.com/news/india/anand-malligavad-engineer-rejuvenating-bengaluru-lakes-556698.html

Readiness to go beyond GREEN WASHING – <https://bit.ly/keraleeyam-I55>   Nov. 8, 2022

Biodiversity focus climbing up global investor agenda <https://www.gulf-times.com/story/725411/Biodiversity-focus-climbing-up-global-investor-age> Nov. 22, 2022