Tuesday, October 29, 2019

THE SUBVERSIVE AGENCY OF WATER-BODIES IN THE HEALING MISSION OF GOD



2 Kings 5:1-3 and 7-15
(the episode of the healing of Naaman)

Introduction: In 2014 I went to Jerusalem for two months, not as a pilgrim but as a student of the Swedish Theological Institute in Jerusalem to learn to understand the long time struggle/conflict between Israel and Palestine. When my relatives and friends heard about my planned travel to the “holy land” they started calling me up to request for a gift on my return. I thought I should be taking a huge bag for carrying the gifts. But then, after listening to their requests, I realized that a small cabin-bag would be sufficient enough to carry the requested gifts. All that my friends and relatives wanted from me was a handful of soil from Jerusalem and a small bottle of water from the river of Jordan! This request really compelled me to ponder upon the questions related to our faith. I started wondering why do we, at least in India, believe that the soil of Jerusalem is holier than the soil of our own lands? Is the water of Jordan superior than the water-bodies of Tunga river of my village back in India or river Rewa that flows here in Suva?

Of course, for my Indian Christian friends, this request was associated with their belief in Jesus who walked in Jerusalem, especially Via Dolorosa - the way of the cross - and his baptism in river Jordan. This belief can be contested. However, let us not get into that discussion now. But today’s passage, at its face value, looks like upholding the notion that the water-bodies of Jordan are more powerful and miraculous than the water-bodies of Abana and Pharpar of Syria. Does this text really propose a hierarchy of water-bodies and subscribe to the territorial supremacy of one nation over the other? Should we hold this text responsible for the contemporary water politics in the Jordan river basin? Or does it send an entirely different message altogether? To answer these questions, we need to re-locate the episode of the healing of Naaman in the larger context of political struggle between Aram and Israel, most probably during the reigns of Ben Haddad II or III of Aram and Joram of Israel. When read within such a political context, the text can offer us several meanings and lessons. Let us concentrate on the three lessons that I would like to draw from this reading:

1. Healing is a Subversive Act of God
The setting of 2 Kings 5 is at the time when Aram, Israel’s northern neighbor, enjoyed a certain level of military supremacy over Israel. The history tells us that Aram was victorious over Israel during many raids and they would loot wealth and capture people to make slaves for them. And they wouldn’t spare even young ones. As the verse 2 says, “the Arameans on one of their raids had taken a young girl captive from the land of Israel and she served Naaman’s wife.” Hence it is clear that the relationship between Israel and Aram was of an unequal relationship. To certain extent, it was a master-slave relationship.

Naaman, in this text, stands as a representational figure of the military supremacy of the Aram as counter to the young slave girl of Israel who was captive by Aram. The text calls Naaman as a “great man”, “commander of the army” and “mighty warrior” indicating his superior position. However, the text also indicates that this “great man” was in need of healing because he had leprosy. Interestingly, this great man now is made to look at Israel (Aram’s hierarchically inferior state) for healing. That’s the beauty and uniqueness of this text. It indicates that God’s healing is a subversive act. It subverts the power structures. The healing is found when one’s so called greatness is critically shaken. Healing is met when one’s superiority over the other is vehemently subverted. In this process of subversive healing the water-bodies of the river play a major role.  

2. Water-bodies: the Subversive Agents of the Healing Act of God
If we once again go back to the questions that we raised in the beginning: Why Jordan, and why not Abana and Pharpar? I believe, the Biblical text here does not uphold in any way the superiority of the water-bodies of river Jordan to the rivers of Damascus, rather it just invites an epistemological shift in our understanding of the agency of the water-bodies. Just like any other water-bodies, river Jordan stands here as an agency of God’s healing. But an exceptional focus here is that Jordan is not just an agency, rather it is a subversive agency of the healing act of God. When the prophet Elisha through his messenger commands Naaman to go and wash in the river Jordan, Naaman reacts to the prophet quite arrogantly, because his ego was severely hurt. After all Elisha is just a prophet of Israel. How can he ignore the commander of Aram’s army? And how can he possibly command the commander to wash in a river, particularly the river that flows in the territory of Israel? 

Verses 11 and 12 say, But Naaman became angry and went away, saying, “are not Abana and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? Could I not wash in them, and be clean?” He turned and went away in a rage. So it’s a clear indication that the victorious military superiority made Naaman to grow arrogant to such an extent that he even tends to believe and claim that the water-bodies of his territory are better and superior than the water-bodies of Israel. Now Elisha gives a terrific blow to this arrogant claim of Naaman on the natural resources like water-bodies. In such a context as this the water-bodies of Jordan play the role of a subversive agents that challenge the occupying tendency of Naaman. Naaman’s arrogance had to be challenged. It was not that the water-bodies of Abana and Pharpar couldn’t be the agents of healing. But in order to clean Naaman both within and outside, a territorial shift from Abana to Jordan was necessary. Thus de-territorializing Naaman leads to a holistic healing of his Self. His immersion into Jordan has to be seen as his rebirth as a redeemed human being.

3. Water-bodies: the agents of Healing a Hostile Relationship
Jordan or Israel, for Naaman, was his external other with which he hierarchically disassociated. And moreover, Israel and Aram were in a hostile relationship for many years. As it is obvious with any Empire, Naaman saw Israel as an object of enslavement. That made him blind to the pains and pathos of the enslaved people of Israel. His immersion into river Jordan was an invitation for him to immerse in the life of his Other. Now being immersed into the Jordan, Naaman’s flesh was restored like the flesh of a young boy. 

The image of young boy is quite profound here. It is an image that stands as an opposite of Empire, the empire that often strives to conquer and occupy other. The image of young boy is an epitome of purity and love and of a just relationship. The young boy knows no conquer, no territorial superiority, no political supremacy over others, no war, but only the pure love that embraces everyone. Verse 15 is quite noteworthy in this whole process of healing. The healed Naaman with all his company returns to the prophet and gives him the present. Giving presents is a gesture of profound friendship. The commander who was hostile to his other now embraces the other as his friends. What a radical healing it was! Indeed the water-bodies of the river Jordan act as the enigmatic agents of healing a hostile relationship.

Conclusion: Today we must feel blessed for God has located us in an Island surrounded by the water-bodies. These water-bodies constantly remind us our sickness of being arrogant of our supremacy over others. The water-bodies around us challenge us by subverting the human power structure where one strives to occupy and enslave the other. Let us be reminded that the water-bodies invite us to immerse into the life of the others so that we may understand the pain and pathos of others. At this point I am reminded of a small story told by my high school teacher: There was a boy who constantly used to scratch his head. His father found it disgusting. And one day while the boy was scratching his head in public, his father scolded him saying, “Son, it is so disgusting. Why do you always scratch your head?” Then the son politely replied, “well, you see dad, I am the only one who knows it itches.” The world we are living in is full of itches. To understand other’s itches and their pain, we need to immerse into the life of our other. The water-bodies around us remind us that very truth of life just as they reminded Naaman several years ago.    

It has now become a routine for me and Sherly, ever since we entered into this campus, to take an evening walk along the beaches and sit quietly in front of the huge water-bodies. They tell us every day that we are all connected to each other. Our roots in the Arabean sea are connected to the Pacific Ocean. We are no more in the conquering or occupying relationship, rather we are healed for a friendly relationship, an egalitarian bond. At the same time the water-bodies invite us dare to immerse in the life of the Pacific so that we may learn and respond to the joy and pains of the people in the Pacific. Just as Naaman was challenged to move from Aban and Pharpar to Jordan, we are also challenged to move out of our comfort zones and get healed by our known and unknown other. Let the water-bodies around us continue to challenge and invite us to embrace our other just as a young boy embraces his other without any prejudice and misconceptions. 

Sunday, October 13, 2019

Our Way towards Oceania: Yet Another Journey towards Aniketana...



ಓ ನನ್ನ ಚೇತನ
ಆಗು ನೀ ಅನಿಕೇತನ!

Be unhoused 
O my Soul!

After months of preparation, planning and patient perseverance with the process of immigration, Sherly and I have finally reached our yet another temporary destination, the Fiji Islands! Indeed a distant geographical location from the place of our 'origin'. Yet, surprisingly, we don't feel unbound to our origin. Perhaps, we were never so exclusively bound to our place of physical birth. That is why, I think, 'moving out' had never haunted us as a nightmare until today. In fact, to 'settle down' somewhere permanently is still an unimaginable thought. We have always been prepared and ready to move out. There is something divine aesthetic in such a readiness to move out. Is it what the great poet Rashtrakavi Kuvempu meant when he sang that divine saga of Aniketana, the Unhoused Consciousness?  

Kuvempu wrote his poem Aniketana (the Unhoused Consciousness) in 1974 and presented his thoughts on the idea of 'universal humanism' during the convocation ceremony of Bangalore University, which has been published in the book, Vichaarakranthige Aahwaana (An Invitation to the Revolution of Thoughts) in 1976. This poem was of so much importance to the poet that he even noted, "you can destroy all my works even Sri Ramayana Darsanam (that fetched him "jnanapith award"), but just make sure you retain the message of universal man [sic]"[1] The message of ‘universal humanism’ can be summarized in the following words of poet himself: “Every child, at birth, is a universal man [sic]. But, as it grows, we turn it into “a petty man”. It should be the function of the education to turn it again into the original “universal man [sic]”.”[2] It is Kuvempu’s contention that the child which by birth was the universal human is fettered by us with such constraints as country, language, religion, caste, race and color. To free it from all these limitations and to transform it into “the enlightened soul”, the universal human, our education, culture and civilization should strive hard. All children of the world should become “unhoused” beings, if the world should continue to live.[3] It is this vision of universal humanism that makes Aniketana (The Unhoused Consciousness) so compelling philosophy and practice of life, especially when our identities are so narrowly constrained and fiercely controlled.

"Be unhoused, O my Soul!" is a call to return to our original being, that is universal humanity. As Kuvempu asserts every child is a universal human at its birth, it is our original identity to be universal. But we are made 'petty humans' driven by the geographical, cultural, religious, linguistic and many such dividing forces. When our being is transformed into an unhoused consciousness, we will be able to find our Self in the One that we tend to construct as our Other. Being in the Fiji Islands, I am reminded again and again how universal our beings are. The distant geographical entity does not hinder me from getting connected to this new place of arrival with that of the place of my origin which is far beyond my immediate reach. The unhoused consciousness deep within me invites me to find my origin within the Pacific, a cluster of islands. I have spent a good amount of my lifetime in a context where our lives were closely connected to the Sea, her waves and tides, the breeze from the beach, the monsoon, and many such factors surrounded by water. I recognize my encounters with the Divine through the waters in the Sea, the fishes in the waters, the shades and fruits of the coconut trees in the field, the breeze from the beaches of the Arabian Sea, and the distinctively multi-religious and multi-ethnic people of the coastal region. Sea, thus, epitomizes my relationship with the divine. Pacific is a place which certainly compels me to nourish these divine memories. I think, living close to the sea is highly rewarding as it demands us to imagine and invoke our own Self and the Divine through the everyday experiences of the people whose lives are defined and designed by the waters, yet are unhoused for a borderless living. What an aesthetic feeling it is! 

With that sense of divine aesthesis, seated right in front of the Pacific Ocean, I am just re-chanting those poignant lines of Kuvempu and exclaiming, what a clarion call it was for the humanity to return to the humanity! My heart is overwhelmed with gratitue towards my beloved poet for constantly reminding me to dare to be an unhoused consciousness. If only the humans take this call seriously the universe will be transformed into an abode of love and beauty where every individual will celebrate his/her differences transcending all boundaries and barriers. 

Be unhoused, O my soul!
Only the Infinite be your goal.
Leave these myriad forms behind,
Leave the million names that bind,
A flash piercing your heart and mind,
Be unhoused,O my soul!
Only the Infinite be your goal.

Winnow the chaff of a hundred creeds
Beyond these systems hollow as reeds,
Turn unhorizoned to the Truth that leads;
Be unhoused, O my soul! 
Only the Infinite be your goal.

Stop not on the unending way.
Never build a house of clay.
Endless the quest both night and day:
No end, no end to your play!
Be unhoused, O my soul!
Only the Infinite be your goal.

The Infinite cancels its end,
Endless the quest you apprehend
And so, Infinite, you ascend
Be unhoused, O my soul!
Only the Infinite be your goal.
[4]






[1] Kuvempu, Manuja Matha Vishwa Patha (Human Religion, Universal Path) (Mysore: Udayaravi, 1971), 13. 
[2] Kuvempu, Vichaarakranthige Aahwaana (An invitation to the Revolution of Thoughts) (Mysore: Kuvempu Vidyavardhaka Trust, 1976), 7. 
[3] Kuvempu, Vichaarakranthige Aahwaana, 9-12. 
[4] Kuvempu, Aniketana, trans. by, V.K. Gokak.