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September 11, 2007

Has Anything Changed?

Six years ago our world changed... or did it?

John Engle was up from Haiti and staying with us here at our home in DC on September 11, 2001. (John is a co-founder of Beyond Borders.) We could see the smoke rising from the burning Pentagon out my office window. My wife got calls from worried friends who were waiting to hear from loved ones.

Broken_things_4Together we watched the local news and saw the burning towers in New York fall. By that afternoon our horror had turned to fear--not fear of what the terrorists might do to us but what our nation, the world's most lethal military giant, might do in response to them.

We feared that we would return violence for violence and that it would mostly be innocent people who would suffer. We worried that our response would only intensify the hatred many feel for us around the world and that this would only make the world more divided and more dangerous.

In the days that followed I wrote an essay called Loving the Terrorists. It was my own little prayer that our nation would have the courage to hear and follow the hard words of Jesus, who told us to love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us (Matthew 5:43-45).

Following Jesus isn't easy. I certainly don't do a very good job most days. And it was too much to hope that a nation that had invested so heavily in military might could resist the urge to strike back.

Strike back we did in ways I could never have anticipated. Half a trillion dollars later we are bogged down in Afghanistan and Iraq in a global war with no end in sight. Over half a million Iraqis have died unnecessarily; and the numbers of those who hate us and are willing to die to kill us has multiplied many times over. The good will that even some of our traditional enemies had for us in the days following 9-11 is long gone.

The world did not change on 9-11. It remains the same eye-for-an-eye world where we become more and more blinded by each act of violence. Jesus is merciful, though. He restored sight to the blind.

May He restore our sight so that we can see ourselves reflected in the eyes of our enemies. May He give us the courage to put down our swords and love our enemies even as He loved us (and died for us) while we were still enemies (Colossians 1:20-22).

David Diggs

*The poem above was composed on 9-11 by our dear friend from Northern Ireland, Patrick McManus. We collaborated with Patrick when he worked in Haiti in the '90s.

September 07, 2007

Why a blog for Beyond Borders?

When we decided to update the Beyond Borders Web site, we asked the designer to integrate a blog into the new site. This is it.

We're not sure yet how well this will work, but our hope is that a blog will stimulate more interaction and deeper reflection about why we do what we do and what we're learning along the way.

When I say "we," I'm not just thinking of the Beyond Borders staff. I'm thinking of you and everyone who makes Beyond Borders what it is--staff, board, supporters, people we serve directly and indirectly, and people who just stumble onto our site and are curious about us.

You can share in creating this blog by posting comments and by e-mailing us topics you would like to discuss or thoughts you would like to share.

Beyond Borders, as our name suggests, is about overcoming what divides us, going deeper to find (and nurture) what connects us across economic, political, and cultural lines or anything that isolates people into pockets of fear, loneliness, arrogance, humiliation, ignorance, greed, or misery. We want to be a channel for love, trust, humility, understanding, unity and peace.

Our day-to-day work is focused on bridging the stark economic and educational disparity that separates most North Americas from most Haitians. We'll talk about our efforts in this blog. But we hope our words will resonate with anyone struggling to heal the divisions that disfigure God's image in humanity and extend God's reign of justice, mercy, and love on Earth.

David Diggs