September 22, 2006 By Mark Schoeff Jr. WASHINGTON
– United Methodist Church leaders helped launch a week of protest and civil disobedience
against the war in Iraq by signing a declaration of peace urging President Bush
to pull U.S. troops out of the country. The Declaration
of Peace, signed Sept. 21, is described as a call for nonviolent action to end
the war in Iraq. The Washington event was one of 350 that will be staged nationwide
to promote the peace initiative. The declaration calls for people to "engage in
peaceful protests" if there is not a plan for troop withdrawal established and
begun by Sept. 21, days before Congress adjourns for the fall elections. More
than 500 groups, almost half of them faith organizations, are involved in the
declaration of peace effort, which recently retired Bishop Susan Morrison said
includes "acts of moral witness to seek a new course for our country." By
signing the peace document in front of the White House, the United Methodists
and other protesters hoped not only to make a statement but also to influence
congressional races in November by forcing candidates to outline where they stand
on the war. Speakers at the Washington rally, which drew
about 100 people to Lafayette Square, castigated Bush, accusing him of lying about
Iraq possessing weapons of mass destruction and launching what they called an
illegal offensive. "Our demand as a movement is to end
the war now," said Morrison, recently retired episcopal leader of the Troy Annual
(regional) Conference. The declaration calls the situation
in Iraq "the U.S. war in Iraq" and describes it as "an endless fire consuming
lives, resources and the fragile possibilities of peace." Thirty-four
protesters, attempting to deliver the peace statement to Bush in an act of civil
disobedience, were arrested and charged with disorderly conduct. None of the United
Methodist protesters participated in that portion of the day's activity. The
Declaration of Peace initiative provides a way for the faithful to vent their
anger about Iraq, Morrison said. "There are a lot of frustrated United Methodists
out there who don't know where to channel it," she said. United
Methodist clergywomen attending the recent 2006 International Clergywomen's Consultation
in Chicago signed the declaration to "call to end this war" and made a commitment
to take action to translate the call into a concrete plan for peace. Jim
Winkler, top executive of the United Methodist Board of Church and Society, said
that protesting the war is similar to the church's work to promote other social
movements. The church took prophetic positions on civil rights, women's rights
and nuclear disarmament before Congress acted, he noted. "It
has taken time for Congress to catch up," Winkler said. "We may be seeing another
example of that." Staff members of the denomination's
social advocacy agency have been meeting with congressional staff members on a
weekly basis regarding policy toward Iraq. Political leaders on Capitol Hill have
been divided on the Bush administration's policy, with some calling for a timetable
for withdrawal and others urging a staying of the course. "You
see more and more Republicans who are uncomfortable with the position of ‘stay
the course,'" said Mark Harrison, director of the board's Peace with Justice program.
But the White House asserts that Iraq would collapse
if U.S. troops leave prematurely, potentially leading to a full-blown civil war.
United Methodist leaders argue that the long insurgency
in Iraq, which has resulted in the deaths of thousands Americans and Iraqis, is
proof that U.S. involvement is misguided. "Iraq is in
a civil war right now because we're there," Winkler said. Morrison
agreed. "We just exacerbate what's going on." She disputed critics who say that
war protesters undermine U.S. troops and sap their morale. "We
care deeply about the troops," she said. "We're proud of their commitment. We
want them safe. We want them home." Within individual
United Methodist congregations, however, members may not agree with the way the
anti-war movement is articulating its opposition. Differences
of opinion must be respected, said the Rev. Dean Snyder, senior minister of Foundry
United Methodist Church in Washington. Such divisions have come up throughout
Christian history. "It's part of our discernment process
of truth," he said. "But that does not change the fact that church leaders are
put in positions of prophetic responsibility." United
Methodist News Service Mark Schoeff, Jr., is a freelance writer in the Washington
area and a staff writer at Workforce Management magazine. |