Monday, March 30, 2020

Infinite Debt & We Factor





The Lord's prayer in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 6:9-13, contains the line: "Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors," broadens the picture of the creditor-debtor system. As New Testament scholars have pointed out, Jesus here picks up on Hebrew tradition of "Jubilee (Levi 25)," which periodically would have erased long-standing debts that produced massive inequalities and sometimes reduced people to peonage. In Jesus' time, this was a serious issue, because, urban-based landowners during the 20's of Common Era, accumulated surplus wealth from occasional bumper crops and sought ways to invest. They did this by making loans to peasants, who lived hand to mouth. Upon contracting of loan obligations, a cycle of indebtedness ensued which often lead to default. In addition to the personal and family crises generated by these conditions, there was a more pervasive and enduring form of debt that also preserved and exacerbated unequal conditions among Jesus ‘hearers. As John Dominic Crossan, a New Testament scholar observes, Jesus’ aim in this prayer and throughout much of his ministry was the dismantling of the honor/shame system characteristic of a Galilean society that emerged from unjust economic practices. Forgiveness of debt means the refusal of patronal relations, even to the empire.
The limitation of forgiveness is that it preserves the creditor-debtor relation even in abolishing the debt. What is needed, instead, is liberation or release from debt. The difference between forgiveness and liberation is in the object: forgiveness is of the debt while preserving the creditor-debtor relation; liberation is from the unjust relation itself. Thus, only the latter attacks the imbalance of power that infinitely generates debit.
We see this drive toward liberation in the structure of the Lord’s prayer that situates the one who prays between forgiving and being forgiven. The hierarchical power relations that are structured into the debt system offer both benefit and burden to those whose role is inscribed in the system. To be liberated from the system, one has to be enabled to refuse both. For all of the complications and dangers that it involves, this vision of liberation from debt has the advantage of stressing the agency of indebted persons, who destroy the system of debt insofar as they achieve collective action: a collective refusal and collective construction of an alternative system of non-exploitative social credit. The plural first-person pronoun here is crucial: liberation can only be an act of the "we." The “we” factor in Lord’s prayer points to the communitarian dimension of the people’s resistance.

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Life @ Eschata



Margin is not the fragile side of the society but it is where the fragility of any society manifests itself. [1]
     - Vitor Westhelle.
The migrant laborers are on their way back home on their feet! Tens of thousands of people, including women and children, are trudging down hundreds of kilometers to reach their small hometowns and villages. Joblessness, food shortage, fear, and anxiety induced by the locked-down made the people take up this uncanny challenge! Rajkumar[2] one of the daily wagers in Delhi has set out for his home with just a thousand rupees in hand, whose hometown is Chhapra in Bihar,1050km away. He has a toddler in his arms while his wife walks beside him! He is hoping to hitch a ride or several to reach home! The authority and the majority overlooked these people. Indeed, the disenfranchised ones are always on the vulnerable side of the orders and borders. These migrant laborers have to encounter many orders and borders in their journey in a realistic sense. They are genuinely at the Eschata / ends/margins!
Lent has a recurring theme of Eschata, the ends! The biblical traditions of the Sabbath, Jubilee, and lent are potent examples of revisiting the margins and resisting the forces of death, and exclusions. The Deuteronomist( Deut 24: 10-22)tradition in the Hebrew Bible reminds of the memory of the Exodus event. The slave memories connected to the Exodus event put demands on the people of God, not to practice slavery because once they were slaves! Here the Exodus event comes as a “dangerous memory”[3] that challenges the people to keep always room for the alien, orphan, and widow in their community. This memory re-shapes not only their community life but also their economic/political practices at the micro-level.
In a country where crony capitalism exercises hegemony, the poor are invisible, and their cry becomes unheard and overlooked. This opacity or blindness of the regime is brutal. There is a story about the current "economy of life" in India! A beggar was receiving alms at a roadside, holding a Pan. Suddenly few military officers came over there in a military vehicle. Holding the gun at him, one of the military officers asked brusquely: "Have you linked your begging-pan with Aadhar Card?" He said NO! He was immediately taken to the detention camp! Whenever the quality of life is taken over by political correctness, it can be named fascism.
However, people inhabiting quotidian eschata are on their long journey home. I think a simple gaze at them, disentangled from our presuppositions and preoccupied opacity would be radically revelatory and transformative. But sadly we often miss these significant epiphanies! Hans von Balthasar is obviously intuitive when he writes, “we often resist the sheer unfolding of the truth.”[4]



[1] Vitor Westhelle, Eschatology and Space (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012)
[2] The Times of India, March 27, 2020.
[3] Johannes Baptist Metz, Faith in History and Society: Toward a Practical Fundamental Theology (New York: Seabury Press, 1980), 109.
[4] Rephrased from memory! Refer Hans Urs von Balthasar, The Way of the Cross.

Friday, March 27, 2020

Sacramentality of Slowing Down



Above all, trust in the slow work of God.
We are quite naturally impatient in everything
To reach the end without delay.
We should like to skip the intermediate stages…
And yet it is the law of all progress
That it is made by passing through
Some stages of instability-
And that it may take a very long time…
Give our Lord the benefit of believing
That his hand is leading you,
And accept the anxiety of feeling yourself
in suspense and incomplete.

-       Pierre Teilhard De Chardin, Hearts on Fire

Most often we put ourselves “over“ or “out“ of the time not “in” and “inside” the time! Often our ego would not allow to put ourselves under the gaze of the time. We say time is money. But it is not true! Time is life. Our current common predicament says it loudly! It also reminds us of our mortality. “We are merely moving shadows, and all our busy rushing ends in nothing”(Psalm 39:6). A common word for human being used in almost all the Indian languages is “Marthya”- which means one who is having “Mrithyu”(death). If we put it another way, “one who is intentionally aware about life’s finitude, is “Marthya.” The simple awareness about our finitude would make us slow down to the essential things and focus.
Unfortunately the present culture of haste produces restlessness, waste, and hurt both in personal and communal levels. The reality of restlessness in our contemporary society is obvious and epidemic. Walter Brueggemann names the present market driven culture of speed, restlessness, endless desires as the “liturgy of consumerism.”[1] The liturgy of consumerism/commodity should be replaced by the liturgy of rest / sabbath. Jesus’ words are the clear embodiment of rest/sabbath- “Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest (Mat 11:28).” Weariness, being heavy-laden, yoke  are the symbols of commodity-society. In the first century context, these symbols refer to the strenuous taxation system of Roman Empire and the endless requirements of an over-coded religious system which demanded stressful attentiveness. But Jesus offers an alternative : “come to me and rest!” In rest we truly celebrate our being. Sabbath/ rest is a radical transition from human-doings to human-beings!         
We really need to reclaim the sacramentality of slowing down today! Milan Kundera asks “ why has the pleasure of slowness disappeared? Ah, where have they gone, the amblers of yesteryear? Where have they gone, those loafing heroes of folk song, those vagabonds who roam from one mill to another and bed down under the stars? Have they vanished along with foot paths, with grasslands and clearings, with nature?[2]
Life is not an emergency, but it is e/merging. We are the emerging selves in-between the last and present moments. Let us be creative liminal beings! There is a Czech proverb that describes being at the liminal by a metaphor: “They are gazing at God’s windows.” A person gazing at God’s windows is not bored; but excited!





[1] Walter Brueggemann, Sabbath as Resistance ( Louisville: John Knox Press,2014),13.
[2] Milan Kundera, Slowness (New York: Harper Perennial, 2006), 3.


Neoliberal Virus and Systems View of Life



Tabish Khair insightfully writes, "The Coronavirus that causes the COVID-19 disease is the first neoliberal virus in the world."[1] To say so is not to reduce its dangers( e.g., vulnerable people who cannot isolate without starving), but to criticize how most governments across the world have confronted it. For the past two decades, whenever corporations or significant banks have stumbled, national governments have pumped public money into them, while cutting public services (including health and research) to raise the money. This has happened anywhere, and still happening again and again! It has severe implications at least in two levels;
i)              Most of these buffer funds are not being strictly earmarked to preserve jobs, and the lowest wage earners are particularly ignored.
ii)            Almost no country has put incomparable amounts into health, social, and educational aspects of combating the pandemic.
Moreover, some western countries openly conceded with the neoliberal logic: financial value is the only value that matters! The lack of sufficient action to control the spread of disease evidenced another neo-liberal logic, as critics already pointed out;  "The virus mostly kills the old, the ill, and the undernourished poor, and we do not care whether such economically underproductive people live or die." More than this brutal oversight of the vulnerable people, the situation precipitated strong feelings of xenophobia, nationalism, and subterranean racism.
             The point is that we need to consider the whole ecology of Covid-19 seriously! Beyond the medical means of combating our current common predicament, we need to have a radical perspectival change in our approach to life. Fritjof Capra and Pier Luigi Luisi propose a new understanding of life, i.e., "Systems view of life" to combat the significant problems of our time, including our current health crisis. This new conception of life involves a new kind of thinking-thinking in terms of relationships, patterns, and context.[2] In Capra’s own prophetical words;
“ There are solutions to the major problems of our time; some of them even simple. But they require a radical shift in our perceptions, our thinking, our values. And indeed, we are now at the beginning of such a fundamental change of worldview in science and society, a  change of paradigms as radical as the Copernican revolution. Unfortunately, this realization has not yet dawned on most political leaders, who are unable to  “connect the dots.” They fail to see how the major problems of our time are interrelated.Moreover, they refuse to recognize how their so-called solutions affect future generations. From the systemic point of view, the only viable solutions are those that sustainable. A sustainable society must be designed  in such a way that its ways of life, businesses, economy, physical structures, and technologies do interfere with nature’s inherent ability to sustain life.”[3]

The new paradigm may be called a holistic worldview, seeing the world as an integrated whole rather than a disassociated collection of parts. From a Deep ecological perspective, it is an appraisal of fundamental interdependence of all phenomena and the fact that, as individuals and societies, we are all embedded in the cyclical processes of nature. Many scientific and religious resources converge at this juncture.  John Thatamanil beautifully connects this Systems view of interdependence sensibility to the Buddhist doctrine of Pratitya Samudpada ( Dependent Origination). Thatamanil pens; “You cannot build “big beautiful walls” against reality; no matter how we might try to sever connections between each other, inseparability will reassert itself. We are like spiders bound up with the webs they spin.”[4] Yes, the current social distancing and quarantining is a temporary mitigation strategy!
Furthermore, what is health from a systems point of view? In the biomedical model, health is defined as the absence of disease, and disease as the malfunctioning of biological mechanisms. An alternative conception of health, based on the systems view of life, begins with the realization that it is impossible to give a precise definition of health. The reason is that health is mostly a subjective experience whose quality cannot always be quantified. Health is a state of well-being that arises when the organism functions in a certain way. Systems thinking is process thinking, and hence the systems view perceives health as an ongoing process. Rather than defining health as a static state of perfect well-being, the systemic conception of health implies continual activity and change, reflecting the organism’s creative response to environmental challenges.
Health is a multidimensional process. The systems view of life recognizes that living systems in nature include individual organisms, parts of organisms, and communities of organisms, and they all share a set of common properties and principles of organization. Accordingly, the systems view of health can be applied to different levels, with corresponding levels of health being mutually interconnected. In sum, the systems view of life leads us to see health as a process and as a multidimensional and multileveled phenomenon, which demands an integrative system of health care. An integrative system of health care is based on the recognition that the health of an entity is determined, above all, by the health of the environment- which is intentionally overlooked by any health care system grounded on neo-liberal values.
A careful study on the social-ecology of the current neoliberal virus-attack reminds us that we desperately need a different economic system. There is no way to avoid the conclusion that the present global economy itself has become a fundamental threat to our health. Moreover, it is also increasingly evident that social and ecological health- the health of this beautiful blue planet-are inextricably intertwined. Therefore, the current “quaran-time” should be followed by another radical "quality-time” replete with planetary love, organic practices of justice, liberative economic practices of care, redeeming touch, and costly in[ter]carnations.




[1] Khair, Tabir, The Age of Neoliberal Virus (The Hindu, Tuesday, March 24),10.
[2] Capra, Fritjof, and Luisi, The Systems View of Life (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014), xii.
[3]  Capra, xi.

[4] Thatamanil, John. The Butterfly Effect and the Coronavirus: The Truth of Interrelatedness – Counterpoint: Navigating Knowledge, https://www.counterpointknowledge.org/the-butterfly-effect-and-the-corona-virus-the-truth-of-interrelatedness/?


THE INTERSECTIONAL DALITITY

  [Note:  The pictures are from the Dalit History Month  Celebrations and Panel Discussion on Endurance, Solidarity and Liberation , conduc...