Probably most of you have seen the news video of Eman al-Obaidi and heard her screams as she tried to tell her story to foreign journalists in a Libyan hotel. She showed the blood and bruises from being gang-raped by Ghadafi’s soldiers, before Libyan security intervened and bundled her away in a car.
This video clip may well be a defining moment in the Libyan uprising for freedom and justice. The many stories of atrocities, terrible though they are, simply become a backdrop to Ghadafi’s rule, but this dramatic presentation of distress from vicious cruelty sears the mind. It becomes the symbol of the systematic violence of autocratic oppression, not only in Libya, but much of the Arab world.
Emergency rule, allowing the detention of anyone without arrest or trial, has been in place for decades in Egypt, Libya, Algeria, Syria, and probably other Arab states. The number of repeats of Obaidi’s experience, and other variations of nationally sanctioned intimidation, in so many nations for up to half a century, defies imagination.
These atrocities rival Stalin’s purges and Hitler’s holocaust. The only difference: these victims died, and continue to die, one at a time over decades, unnoticed apart from grieving families.
This story highlights three things for me.
First, the temperament of the Arab populations has changed. Populations’ fear, infused for half a century by their leaders, has turned to anger, against which intimidation will not work. Further episodes like Obaidi’s will only continue to stoke the wrath of the people. The turmoil is not yet over.
Second, it is a picture of human depravity and its outcome when unchecked. Given the right conditions, the murderous inclination of the human heart, from Abel and Lamech to the outrages of the last century, continue unabated, with no cure from human ability.
Finally, there is hope in Jesus Christ, the only source able to finally tame and change the human heart. His return will herald the world meant to be. Whether in spiritual darkness or in physical captivity, He will come “to open the eyes that are blind, to free captives from prison and to release from the dungeon those who sit in darkness.” “He will not falter or be discouraged till He establishes justice on earth” (Isaiah 42:7 and 4).
1 comment:
Thank you, Bryan. Love the conclusion. There's where I have to rest, because I can't rouse my mind big enough to encompass these horrors and overwhelming social shifts in attitude and climate. Thanks for keeping us up to date, from a Biblical perspective. You should be a news anchor man in your next career.
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