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by Lorenzo Albacete
From the very beginning, the events of September 11, 2001, had a
strong religious dimension. All terrorism, in a certain sense, has a
religious basis, as the very word suggests. “Terror” is a religious
experience. Anthropologists of religion describe it as the experience
of “dread” before the unexplainable. A terrorist attack does not
intend to bring about the military defeat of the enemy. It aims to
bring about a paralyzing fear. It is a theatrical, ritual, liturgical
event—a symbolic gesture, so to speak, suggesting or pointing toward
the abyss of nothingness.
Religious patriotism
It is not surprising, therefore, that the reaction of the American
people to the terrorist attack of September 11th last year had a
strong religious dimension to it. Indeed, the American story, the
“narrative” through which the American people define their national
identity and purpose, has always had a strong religious undercurrent
to it, even after its fundamental terms (election, liberty, mission,
etc) were secularized. September 11th awakened this dimension to an
explosion of “religious patriotism,” as seen, for example, in the
spectacle of the members of the House and Senate on the steps of the
Capitol in Washington singing “God Bless America.” The President
immediately assumed the status of the nation’s Priest-Prophet-King,
with a popular approval rating soaring above all political
possibilities. (Remember that, at the beginning of his term, opponents
questioned even the legitimacy of his election.) Almost every speech
sounded like a sermon, appealing to sacrifice for the highest human
values, defined as identical to the “American way of life” (life,
freedom, democracy, and the free market!). Religious advisors–Catholic,
Protestant, Jewish, and Islamic–appeared on the scene and became an
integral part of the group preparing the American response to the
attack. The American people were given frequent lessons about religion
and peace, religious tolerance, and the importance of religious
liberty. Churches were packed, and articles about religion and life
filled the pages of newspapers and magazines—from the most
intellectual journals to the purveyors of entertainment and show
business gossip. One of the nation’s most popular television comedians
almost decided to resign from his program, but when it re-aired again
a week after the attack, he explained his decision to continue almost
in terms of religious duty, and devoted the week’s show to an
exploration of the attack’s “ultimate meaning.” The Mayor of New York
and other political leaders encouraged the American people to reject
all intimidation by praying more to strengthen the spirit of the
nation, and spending more to strengthen the economy.
Outside the United
States, this reaction was considered amazing, and some treated it with
cynicism and scorn. And yet, it allowed the American people to
recognize that the attack involved far more than a geo-political and
economic struggle, that all such explanations for it were an immoral
reduction of its ultimate significance.
The nation’s “mood”
Now, a year later,
this “religious” reaction to the attack of September 11th has not
entirely disappeared. In many ways, things appear to have returned to
a more normal situation, but that is deceiving. The economic
uncertainty on the part of employers and investors, for example, is
not only due to the recent scandals in the financial world, but to a
change in the nation’s “mood” that is still very difficult to assess,
since it suggests an uncertainty at the deepest level of the
experience of national purpose. This is precisely the level of the
religious sense. The decision of the television networks, leading
newspapers, and the largest corporations to suspend all advertising on
the day of the anniversary (at an enormous economic cost) must amaze
those religious leaders who were convinced that the country had lost
all sense of the “Sabbath” rest and its equivalent in other traditions.
(Not that long ago, this was a practice in Catholic countries, for
example in Latin America, only on Good Friday. It has never been a
national tradition in the United States.)
Sacred space
The part
of the Pentagon destroyed by the attack has been repaired, and all
activity resumed, now even at a higher pace than before as the nation
continues its military response, apparently involving a war with Iraq.
In New York City, however, the empty space where the World Trade
Center stood has become a place of silent pilgrimage. Each day,
thousands of Americans and visitors walk slowly and silently along the
promenade that allows them to peer into the hole where the Twin Towers
once proudly soared into the sky. The names, photos, and personal
items of those whose remains were never found are pinned on walls and
fences around the “sacred space.” Even more revealing, throughout the
city, many New Yorkers seem afraid to look in the direction where the
Twin Towers were once visible. Someone compared it to the fear of
looking into the room in funeral parlors where the corpse of a dead
friend or close relative is being prepared for viewing. This is, of
course, evidence of the continuing experience of religious dread, even
after a year has passed from the initial shock. A passenger on a plane
landing at La Guardia Airport (the closest to the Manhattan, with an
approach path offering stunning views of the skyline) said: “I used to
look down at the City and feel a great excitement, as if I was being
energized by the awesome view, but now I feel a great emptiness. In
fact, I don’t even want to look, but I still feel compelled to glance
at it quickly and look away, as if I had seen what should not be seen.”
On TV
On the week of the attack’s anniversary, the prestigious
non-commercial television network PBS aired a two-hour documentary
called “Faith and Doubt at Ground Zero: The Spiritual Aftermath of
September 11.” I was involved in the preparation of this program,
during which we interviewed over three hundred people about the
religious implications of the attack. There was not a single person
with whom we talked that did not acknowledge that their experience of
what happened was, in one way or another, an experience of Mystery. (An
atheist told us that it was a challenge to her atheism, since the
attack was entirely the deed of men.) Toward the end of the program,
the questioning began to concentrate on the possible meaning of the
shocking view of two of the victims holding hands as they jumped to
their death from one of the Towers. At the end of the show, I was able
to summarize this discussion in terms of the judgments made by the
Movement: The gesture of those who fell to their deaths holding hands
has two possible meanings. We can see it as the tragic confirmation
that death and the victory of Power have the last word about human
life, friendship, and the desires of the heart. Or we can see it as a
heroic affirmation, a symbolic one (“sym-bolic” means unifying,
bringing together; while that which destroys through separation is
called “dia-bolic”), a gesture that points to the awareness of
a Mystery containing the ultimate word about the meaning and value of
human life, a Mystery greater than death, the Mystery that makes human
friendship and solidarity possible and, in the end, triumphant–the
Mystery of Being revealed as Charity. |