Observer column for MON 16 NOV 2015 by Jean Lowrie-Chin
Aung San Suu Kyi - from BBC.com website |
This horrifying attack by the
so-called “IS” against France, is a powerful reminder to leaders everywhere of
the danger of hatred. Psychologists are
still trying to unravel how a state became so convinced that Jews were their
enemies, that six million children, women and men were systematically murdered
by the Hitler-led administration less than a century ago.
Aung San Suu Kyi, leader of Myanmar’s
(formerly Burma) National League for Democracy, told the media, after her
party’s recent landslide victory that the deep-seated divisions in her country
will take time to heal. Suu Kyi had been kept under house arrest for ten years
by the country’s military, after campaigning for democracy. In 1991, she was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize for her principled activism, described by the Nobel Chairman as “an
outstanding example of the power of the powerless.” Suu Kyi’s victory proved what
she had written years before: “love and truth can move
people more strongly than any form of coercion.”
This leads
me to appeal to our Jamaican leaders, to remove the vitriol from their
campaigns. If you have enough accomplishments
and solid plans for Jamaica, why use your campaign platform for these personal
attacks against each other? PSOJ
President William Mahfood remarked recently that he had hoped to see greater
political maturity from our leaders as they gear for the upcoming General
Elections. With the world in such a
state of fear and disarray, how wonderful it would be if we could say of
Jamaica, “We speak peace in every corner of our country” and mean it! Then communities would not be so divided that
people cannot cross certain roads, just a few metres from their homes.
We are
still proud that we have come a far way through the establishment of our
Electoral Commission of Jamaica (ECJ), preceded by the Electoral Advisory
Committee (EAC). Both political parties
are represented on the Commission and they should work to make this political
maturity a reality. Who knew that as
members of the ECJ, Senator Tom Tavares-Finson and Minister Peter Bunting have
travelled together to regional electoral conferences to share Jamaica’s
electoral best practices?
The next
great step would be full adherence of all political representatives to the
Political Code of Conduct that bans any association with corrupt and violent
practices. Hatred feeds on negative behaviour, and endangers the lives of the
innocent. Let every pastor who preaches
the love of God, rebuke any anti-social behaviour they see from our leaders and
their party faithfuls. Let them engage
our politicians in church services and prayer meetings, to cool their tempers.
Similarly
let all religions of peace lead the world away from those that are purveyors of
intolerance and violence. In France, and in too many other states, we see the
danger of hatred. Thank goodness, we also see in the hundreds who lined up in
Paris on Saturday to donate blood for the victims, and those who gathered at
the sites of the bombings, their undying fidelity to their motto, “Liberté,
égalité, fraternité” – liberty, equality, fraternity. Out of our shared grief, let us find the
courage to make this a safer, better world.
No comments:
Post a Comment