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by Chaplain George
Zabelka
Father
George Zabelka, a Catholic chaplain with the U.S. Air Force,
served as a priest for the airmen who dropped the atomic bombs
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, and gave them his
blessing. Over the next twenty years, he gradually came to
believe that he had been terribly wrong, that he had denied the
very foundations of his faith by lending moral and religious
support to the bombing. Zabelka, who died in 1992, gave this
speech on the 40th anniversary of the bombings.
The
destruction of civilians in war was always forbidden by the
Church, and if a soldier came to me and asked if he could put a
bullet through a child's head, I would have told him, absolutely
not. That would be mortally sinful. But in 1945 Tinian Island
was the largest airfield in the world. Three planes a minute
could take off from it around the clock. Many of these planes
went to Japan with the express purpose of killing not one child
or one civilian but of slaughtering hundreds and thousands and
tens of thousands of children and civilians – and I said
nothing.
As a
Catholic chaplain I watched as the Boxcar, piloted by a good
Irish Catholic pilot, dropped the bomb on Urakami Cathedral in
Nagasaki, the center of Catholicism in Japan.
I never
preached a single sermon against killing civilians to the men
who were doing it. I was brainwashed! It never entered my mind
to protest publicly the consequences of these massive air raids.
I was told it was necessary – told openly by the military and
told implicitly by my Church's leadership. (To the best of my
knowledge no American cardinals or bishops were opposing these
mass air raids. Silence in such matters is a stamp of approval.)
I worked
with Martin Luther King, Jr., during the Civil Rights struggle
in Flint, Michigan. His example and his words of nonviolent
action, choosing love instead of hate, truth instead of lies,
and nonviolence instead of violence stirred me deeply. This
brought me face to face with pacifism – active nonviolent
resistance to evil. I recall his words after he was jailed in
Montgomery, and this blew my mind. He said, "Blood may flow in
the streets of Montgomery before we gain our freedom, but it
must be our blood that flows, and not that of the white man. We
must not harm a single hair on the head of our white brothers."
I struggled.
I argued. But yes, there it was in the Sermon on the Mount, very
clear: "Love your enemies. Return good for evil." I went through
a crisis of faith. Either accept what Christ said, as unpassable
and silly as it may seem, or deny him completely.
For the last
1700 years the Church has not only been making war respectable:
it has been inducing people to believe it is an honorable
profession, an honorable Christian profession. This is not true.
We have been brainwashed. This is a lie.
War is now,
always has been, and always will be bad, bad news. I was there.
I saw real war. Those who have seen real war will bear me out. I
assure you, it is not of Christ. It is not Christ's way. There
is no way to conduct real war in conformity with the teachings
of Jesus. There is no way to train people for real war in
conformity with the teachings of Jesus.
The morality
of the balance of terrorism is a morality that Christ never
taught. The ethics of mass butchery cannot be found in the
teachings of Jesus. In Just War ethics, Jesus Christ, who is
supposed to be all in the Christian life, is irrelevant. He
might as well never have existed. In Just War ethics, no appeal
is made to him or his teaching, because no appeal can be made to
him or his teaching, for neither he nor his teaching gives
standards for Christians to follow in order to determine what
level of slaughter is acceptable.
So the world
is watching today. Ethical hairsplitting over the morality of
various types of instruments and structures of mass slaughter is
not what the world needs from the Church, although it is what
the world has come to expect from the followers of Christ. What
the world needs is a grouping of Christians that will stand up
and pay up with Jesus Christ. What the world needs is Christians
who, in language that the simplest soul could understand, will
proclaim: the follower of Christ cannot participate in mass
slaughter. He or she must love as Christ loved, live as Christ
lived, and, if necessary, die as Christ died, loving ones
enemies.
For the 300
years immediately following Jesus' resurrection, the Church
universally saw Christ and his teaching as nonviolent. Remember
that the Church taught this ethic in the face of at least three
serious attempts by the state to liquidate her. It was subject
to horrendous and ongoing torture and death. If ever there was
an occasion for justified retaliation and defensive slaughter,
whether in form of a just war or a just revolution, this was it.
The economic and political elite of the Roman state and their
military had turned the citizens of the state against Christians
and were embarked on a murderous public policy of exterminating
the Christian community.
Yet the
Church, in the face of the heinous crimes committed against her
members, insisted without reservation that when Christ disarmed
Peter he disarmed all Christians.
Christians
continued to believe that Christ was, to use the words of an
ancient liturgy, their fortress, their refuge, and their
strength, and that if Christ was all they needed for security
and defense, then Christ was all they should have. Indeed, this
was a new security ethic. Christians understood that if they
would only follow Christ and his teaching, they couldn't fail.
When opportunities were given for Christians to appease the
state by joining the fighting Roman army, these opportunities
were rejected, because the early Church saw a complete and an
obvious incompatibility between loving as Christ loved and
killing. It was Christ, not Mars, who gave security and peace.
Today the
world is on the brink of ruin because the Church refuses to be
the Church, because we Christians have been deceiving ourselves
and the non-Christian world about the truth of Christ. There is
no way to follow Christ, to love as Christ loved, and
simultaneously to kill other people. It is a lie to say that the
spirit that moves the trigger of a flamethrower is the Holy
Spirit. It is a lie to say that learning to kill is learning to
be Christ-like. It is a lie to say that learning to drive a
bayonet into the heart of another is motivated from having put
on the mind of Christ. Militarized Christianity is a lie. It is
radically out of conformity with the teaching, life, and spirit
of Jesus.
Now,
brothers and sisters, on the anniversary of this terrible
atrocity carried out by Christians, I must be the first to say
that I made a terrible mistake. I was had by the father of lies.
I participated in the big ecumenical lie of the Catholic,
Protestant, and Orthodox churches. I wore the uniform. I was
part of the system. When I said Mass over there I put on those
beautiful vestments over my uniform. (When Father Dave Becker
left the Trident submarine base in 1982 and resigned as Catholic
chaplain there, he said, "Every time I went to Mass in my
uniform and put the vestments on over my uniform, I couldn't
help but think of the words of Christ applying to me: Beware of
wolves in sheep's clothing.")
As an Air
Force chaplain I painted a machine gun in the loving hands of
the nonviolent Jesus, and then handed this perverse picture to
the world as truth. I sang "Praise the Lord" and passed the
ammunition. As Catholic chaplain for the 509th Composite Group,
I was the final channel that communicated this fraudulent image
of Christ to the crews of the Enola Gay and the Boxcar.
All I can
say today is that I was wrong. Christ would not be the
instrument to unleash such horror on his people. Therefore no
follower of Christ can legitimately unleash the horror of war on
God's people. Excuses and self-justifying explanations are
without merit. All I can say is: I was wrong! But, if this is
all I can say, this I must do, feeble as it is. For to do
otherwise would be to bypass the first and absolutely essential
step in the process of repentance and reconciliation: admission
of error, admission of guilt.
There is no
way to conduct real war in conformity with the teachings of
Jesus.
I was there,
and I was wrong. Yes, war is Hell, and Christ did not come to
justify the creation of Hell on earth by his disciples. The
justification of war may be compatible with some religions and
philosophies, but it is not compatible with the nonviolent
teaching of Jesus. I was wrong. And to those of whatever
nationality or religion who have been hurt because I fell under
the influence of the father of lies, I say with my whole heart
and soul I am sorry. I beg forgiveness.
I asked
forgiveness from the Hibakushas (the Japanese survivors of the
atomic bombings) in Japan last year, in a pilgrimage that I made
with a group from Tokyo to Hiroshima. I fell on my face there at
the peace shrine after offering flowers, and I prayed for
forgiveness – for myself, for my country, for my Church. Both
Nagasaki and Hiroshima. This year in Toronto, I again asked
forgiveness from the Hibakushas present. I asked forgiveness,
and they asked forgiveness for Pearl Harbor and some of the
horrible deeds of the Japanese military, and there were some,
and I knew of them. We embraced. We cried. Tears flowed. That is
the first step of reconciliation – admission of guilt and
forgiveness. Pray to God that others will find this way to
peace.
All
religions have taught brotherhood. All people want peace. It is
only the governments and war departments that promote war and
slaughter. So today again I call upon people to make their
voices heard. We can no longer just leave this to our leaders,
both political and religious. They will move when we make them
move. They represent us. Let us tell them that they must think
and act for the safety and security of all the people in our
world, not just for the safety and security of one country. All
countries are interdependent. We all need one another. It is no
longer possible for individual countries to think only of
themselves. We can all live together as brothers and sisters or
we are doomed to die together as fools in a world holocaust.
Each one of
us becomes responsible for the crime of war by cooperating in
its preparation and in its execution. This includes the
military. This includes the making of weapons. And it includes
paying for the weapons. There's no question about that. We've
got to realize we all become responsible. Silence, doing
nothing, can be one of the greatest sins.
The bombing
of Nagasaki means even more to me than the bombing of Hiroshima.
By August 9, 1945, we knew what that bomb would do, but we still
dropped it. We knew that agonies and sufferings would ensue, and
we also knew – at least our leaders knew – that it was not
necessary. The Japanese were already defeated. They were already
suing for peace. But we insisted on unconditional surrender, and
this is even against the Just War theory. Once the enemy is
defeated, once the enemy is not able to hurt you, you must make
peace.
Militarized
Christianity is a lie. It is radically out of conformity with
the teaching, life, and spirit of Jesus.
As a
Catholic chaplain I watched as the Boxcar, piloted by a good
Irish Catholic pilot, dropped the bomb on Urakami Cathedral in
Nagasaki, the center of Catholicism in Japan. I knew that St.
Francis Xavier, centuries before, had brought the Catholic faith
to Japan. I knew that schools, churches, and religious orders
were annihilated. And yet I said nothing.
Thank God
that I'm able to stand here today and speak out against war, all
war. The prophets of the Old Testament spoke out against all
false gods of gold, silver, and metal. Today we are worshipping
the gods of metal, the bomb. We are putting our trust in
physical power, militarism, and nationalism. The bomb, not God,
is our security and our strength. The prophets of the Old
Testament said simply: Do not put your trust in chariots and
weapons, but put your trust in God. Their message was simple,
and so is mine.
We must all
become prophets. I really mean that. We must all do something
for peace. We must stop this insanity of worshipping the gods of
metal. We must take a stand against evil and idolatry. This is
our destiny at the most critical time of human history. But it's
also the greatest opportunity ever offered to any group of
people in the history of our world – to save our world from
complete annihilation.
August
17, 2005
This article
was originally published by Bruderhof_com, and is reprinted with
their permission.
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