And it came to pass, that when the army
of the Chaldeans was broken up from
Jerusalem for fear of Pharaoh's army,
Then Jeremiah went forth out of Jerusalem
to go into the land of Benjamin, to separate
himself thence in the midst of the people.
And when he was in the gate of Benjamin,
a captain of the ward was there, whose name
was Irijah, the son of Shelemiah, the son of
Hananiah; and he took Jeremiah the prophet,
saying, Thou fallest away to the Chaldeans.
Then said Jeremiah, It is false; I fall
not away to the Chaldeans. But he hearkened
not to him: so Irijah took Jeremiah, and
brought him to the princes.
Wherefore the princes were wroth with
Jeremiah, and smote him, and put him in
prison in the house of Jonathan the scribe:
for they had made that the prison.
When Jeremiah was entered into the
dungeon, and into the cabins, and Jeremiah
had remained there many days;
Then Zedekiah the king sent, and took him
out: and the king asked him secretly in his
house, and said, Is there any word from the
Lord? And Jeremiah said, There is: for, said
he, thou shalt be delivered into the hand of
the king of Babylon.
Moreover Jeremiah said unto king
Zedekiah, What have I offended against thee,
or against thy servants, or against this
people, that ye have put me in prison?
Where are now your prophets which
prophesied unto you, saying, The king of
Babylon shall not come against you, nor
against this land?
Therefore hear now, I pray thee, O my
lord the king: let my supplication, I pray
thee, be accepted before thee; that thou
cause me not to return to the house of
Jonathan the scribe, lest I die there.
Then Zedekiah the king commanded that
they should commit Jeremiah into the court
of the prison, and that they should give him
daily a piece of bread out of the bakers'
street, until all the bread in the city were
spent. Thus Jeremiah remained in the court
of the prison.
New Testament Readings:
Matthew 4:1-17
Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into
the wilderness to be tempted of the devil.
And when he had fasted forty days and forty
nights, he was afterward an hungred.And when
the tempter came to him, he said, If thou be
the Son of God, command that these stones be
made bread. But he answered and said, It is
written, Man shall not live by bread alone,
but by every word that proceedeth out of the
mouth of God. Then the devil taketh him up
into the holy city, and setteth him on a
pinnacle of the temple, And saith unto him,
If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself
down: for it is written, He shall give his
angels charge concerning thee: and in their
hands they shall bear thee up, lest at any
time thou dash thy foot against a stone.
Jesus said unto him, It is written again,
Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God.
Again, the devil taketh him up into an
exceeding high mountain, and sheweth him all
the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of
them; And saith unto him, All these things
will I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and
worship me.
Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee
hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt
worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt
thou serve. Then the devil leaveth him, and,
behold, angels came and ministered unto him.
The Crucifixion of
Julian Assange - by Mr. Fish
Prophets are notoriously difficult
people. They are not saints. They are people
of agony, as Rabbi Abraham Heschel writes,
whose “life and soul are at stake.” The
prophet is moved by human anguish. Prophets
are not soothsayers. They do not divine the
future. Injustice, for the prophet, “assumes
almost cosmic proportions.” A prophet,
consumed by an unnatural fury, gives witness
to “the divine pathos.” “God,” Heschel
writes, “is raging in the prophet’s
words.” He or she stands unflinchingly with
the crucified of the earth, even to the
point of their own destruction. “While the
world is at ease and asleep,” Heschel
writes, “the prophet feels the blast from
heaven.”
And the prophet “is often compelled
to proclaim the very opposite of what his
[or her] heart desires.”
Prophets believe in justice even when the
world around them says there will be no
justice. It is not that they transcend
reality. It is that they are compelled to
strike out against it, refusing to be silent
no matter how hard life becomes. They are
gripped by what Reinhold Niebuhr calls “a
sublime madness in the soul,” for “nothing
but such madness will do battle with
malignant power” and “spiritual wickedness
in high places.” This madness is dangerous,
but vital because without it “truth is
obscured.” Liberalism, Niebuhr goes on,
“lacks the spirit of enthusiasm, not to say
fanaticism, which is so necessary to move
the world out of its beaten tracks. It is
too intellectual and too little emotional to
be an efficient force in history.”
But as the priest Amaziah says of the
prophet Amos, “The land is not able to bear
all his words.”
The Biblical prophets — Elijah, Amos,
Jeremiah, Isaiah — believed that anything
worth living for was worth dying for. Their
enemy was not only suffering, calumny,
poverty, injustice, but a life devoid of
meaning. “You have to be prepared to die
before you can begin to live,” the civil
rights icon Fred Shuttlesworth said.
Prophets cannot be intimidated. They cannot
be bought. They are single-mindedly
obsessed. James Baldwin, himself a prophet,
understands. He writes:
“Ultimately, the artist and the
revolutionary function as they function,
and pay whatever dues they must pay
behind it because they are both
possessed by a vision, and they do not
so much follow this vision as find
themselves driven by it. Otherwise, they
could never endure, much less embrace,
the lives they are compelled to lead.”
The powerful and the rich make war on the
prophet. They slander and insult the
prophet. They question the prophet’s sanity
and motives. They make it hard for the
prophet to survive removing the prophet’s
meager source of income. They punish and
marginalize those who stand with the
prophet. They silence the prophet’s voice,
through censorship, imprisonment and often
murder. The list of martyred prophets is
long. Socrates. Joan of Arc. Isaac Babel.
Federico García Lorca. Miklós
Radnóti.Irène Némirovsky.
Malcolm X. Martin Luther King Jr. Victor
Jara. Ken Saro-Wiwa.
The truth grips the prophet so that he or
she is bound so strongly to it that nothing
but death can separate them from it. In that
truth they find God.
“One can never wrestle enough with God if
one does so out of a pure regard for truth,”
Simone Weil writes. “Christ likes for us to
prefer truth to him because, before being
Christ, he is truth. If one turns aside from
him to go toward the truth, one will not go
far before falling into his arms.”
Who crucified Jesus? Organized religion.
Organized politics. Organized business.
The executioners have not changed. They
simply changed the story, created a
counterfeit gospel, as the poet Langston
Hughes writes:
Listen, Christ,
You did alright in your day, I reckon
–
But that day’s gone now.
They ghosted you up a swell story,
too,
Called it Bible –
But it’s dead now.
The popes and the preachers’ve
Made too much money from it.
They’ve sold you to many
Kings, generals, robbers, and killers
–
Even to the Tzar and Cossacks,
Even to Rockefeller’s Church,
Even to THE SATURDAY EVENING POST.
You ain’t no good no more.
They’ve pawned you
Till you’ve done wore out.
The Carthaginian general Hannibal, who
came close to defeating the Roman Republic
in the Second Punic War, committed suicide
in 181 B.C. in exile as Roman soldiers
closed in on his residence in Bithynia, now
modern-day Turkey. It had been more than 30
years since he led his army across the Alps
and annihilated Roman legions. Rome was only
able to save itself from defeat by
replicating Hannibal’s military tactics.
It did not matter that there had been
over 20 Roman consuls since Hannibal’s
invasion. It did not matter that Hannibal
had been hunted for decades and forced to
perpetually flee, always just beyond the
reach of Roman authorities. He had
humiliated Rome. He had punctured its myth
of omnipotence. And he would pay. With his
life. Years after Hannibal was gone, the
Romans were still not satisfied. They
finished their work of apocalyptic vengeance
in 146 B.C. by razing Carthage to the ground
and selling its remaining population into
slavery. Cato the Censor summed up the
sentiments of Empire: Carthāgō dēlenda
est — Carthage must be destroyed.
Nothing about Empire, from then until now,
has changed.
Imperial powers do not forgive those who
make public the sordid and immoral inner
workings of Empire. Empires are fragile
constructions. Their power is as much one of
perception as of military strength. The
virtues they claim to uphold and defend,
usually in the name of their superior
civilization, are a mask for pillage,
corruption, lies, the exploitation of cheap
labor, indiscriminate mass violence against
innocents and state terror.
The current American Empire, damaged and
humiliated by troves of internal documents
published by WikiLeaks, will, for this
reason, persecute Julian for the rest of his
life. It does not matter who is president or
which political party is in power.
Imperialists speak with one despotic voice.
Julian, for this reason, is undergoing a
slow-motion execution. Seven years trapped
in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. Four
years in Belmarsh Prison. He
ripped back the veil on the dark
machinations of the U.S. Empire, the
wholesale
slaughter of civilians in
Iraq and
Afghanistan, the
lies, the
corruption, the brutal
suppression of those who attempt to
speak the truth. The Empire intends to make
him pay. He is to be an example to anyone
who might think of doing what he did.
Julian had other options. His genius and
his skill as a computer programmer and
cryptographer would have seen him highly
compensated by security agencies, private
contractors or Silicon Valley. He could have
made a very comfortable living if he served
the Empire. His soul, as Christopher Marlow
shows us in
Doctor Faustus, would have atrophied and
died, like the souls of all who prostitute
themselves to power, but the material
rewards would have been significant. He
would have been a success, at least a
success as measured by the powerful and the
wealthy.
Satan tempts Jesus by offering him power,
“all the kingdoms of the world,” accompanied
by glory and authority.
“If you, then, will worship me,” Satan
says, “it will all be yours.”
This temptation is the fatal disease of
those who serve power and with it the hubris
and avarice that hastens, as the prophet
Amos says, “the reign of violence.”
And yet these malevolent forces are not
the most dangerous.
“When I was a rabbi of the Jewish
community in Berlin under the Hitler
regime…the most important lesson I learned
under those tragic circumstances was that
bigotry and hatred are not the most urgent
problems,” Rabbi Joachim Prinz says. “The
most urgent and most disgraceful, the most
shameful, the most tragic problem, is
silence.”
Julian’s crucifixion is a public
spectacle. It is not hidden. And yet we
watch passively. We do not flood the streets
with our protests. We do not condemn the
executioners, including Donald Trump and
Joe Biden. We give his crucifixion our
silent consent. W. H. Auden in Musee des
Beaux Arts writes:
About suffering they were never
wrong,
The old Masters: how well they
understood
Its human position: how it takes place
While someone else is eating or opening
a window or just walking dully along;
How, when the aged are reverently,
passionately waiting
For the miraculous birth, there always
must be
Children who did not specially want it
to happen, skating
On a pond at the edge of the wood:
They never forgot
That even the dreadful martyrdom must
run its course
Anyhow in a corner, some untidy spot
Where the dogs go on with their doggy
life and the torturer's horse
Scratches its innocent behind on a tree.
In Breughel's Icarus, for instance:
how everything turns away
Quite leisurely from the disaster; the
ploughman may
Have heard the splash, the forsaken cry,
But for him it was not an important
failure; the sun shone
As it had to on the white legs
disappearing into the green
Water, and the expensive delicate ship
that must have seen
Something amazing, a boy falling out of
the sky,
Had somewhere to get to and sailed
calmly on.
Sacrifice, self-sacrifice, is the cost of
discipleship. But few are willing to pay
that price. We prefer to look away from
suffering, a boy falling out of the sky. And
it is our indifference, and with our
indifference, our complicity, that condemns
all prophets.
“But what of the price of peace?” the
radical priest
Father Daniel Berrigan, who spent two
years in a federal prison for
burning draft records during the Vietnam
War, asks in his book “No Bars to Manhood”:
I think of the good, decent,
peace-loving people I have known by the
thousands, and I wonder. How many of
them are so afflicted with the wasting
disease of normalcy that, even as they
declare for the peace, their hands reach
out with an instinctive spasm … in the
direction of their comforts, their home,
their security, their income, their
future, their plans—that five-year plan
of studies, that ten-year plan of
professional status, that twenty-year
plan of family growth and unity, that
fifty-year plan of decent life and
honorable natural demise. “Of course,
let us have the peace,” we cry, “but at
the same time let us have normalcy, let
us lose nothing, let our lives stand
intact, let us know neither prison nor
ill repute nor disruption of ties.” And
because we must encompass this and
protect that, and because at all
costs—at all costs—our hopes must march
on schedule, and because it is unheard
of that in the name of peace a sword
should fall, disjoining that fine and
cunning web that our lives have woven,
because it is unheard of that good men
should suffer injustice or families be
sundered or good repute be lost—because
of this we cry peace and cry peace, and
there is no peace. There is no peace
because there are no peacemakers. There
are no makers of peace because the
making of peace is at least as costly as
the making of war—at least as exigent,
at least as disruptive, at least as
liable to bring disgrace and prison and
death in its wake.
Bearing the cross, living in truth, is
not about the pursuit of happiness. It does
not embrace the
illusion of inevitable human progress.
It is not about achieving wealth, celebrity
or power. It entails sacrifice. It is about
our neighbor. The organs of state security
monitor and
harass you. They amass
huge files on your activities. They
disrupt your life. They throw you in prison,
even when, like Julian, you did not commit a
crime. It is not a new story. Nor is our
indifference to evil; palpable evil we can
see in front of us, new.
In the reading from the Hebrew Bible we
hear the story of the prophet Jeremiah. He,
like Julian, exposed the corruption and lust
for war by the powerful. He warned of the
catastrophe that inevitably comes when the
covenant with God is broken. He condemned
idolatry, the corruption of kings, priests
and false prophets. Jeremiah was arrested,
beaten and put in stocks. He was forbidden
from preaching. An attempt was made on his
life. After Egypt was conquered by Babylon,
and Judea began to prepare for war, Jeremiah
delivered an oracle warning the king to
maintain peace. King Zedekiah ignored him.
Babylon besieged Jerusalem. Jeremiah was
arrested and imprisoned. He was freed by the
Babylonians after Jerusalem’s conquest, but
was exiled to Egypt, where, according to the
Biblical tradition, he was stoned to death.
Jeremiah, like Julian, understood that a
society that prohibits the capacity to speak
in truth extinguishes the capacity to live
in justice.
Yes, all of us who know and admire Julian
decry his
prolonged suffering and the suffering of
his
family. Yes, we demand that the many
wrongs and injustices that have been visited
upon him end. Yes, we honor him for his
courage and his integrity. But the battle
for Julian’s liberty has always been much
more than the persecution of a publisher. It
is the
most important battle for press freedom,
and truth, of our era. And if we lose this
battle, it will be devastating, not only for
Julian and his family, but for us.
Tyrannies, from Biblical times to the
present, invert the rule of law. They turn
the law into an instrument of injustice.
They cloak their crimes in a faux legality.
They use the decorum of the courts and
trials, to mask their criminality. Those,
such as Julian, who expose that criminality
to the public are dangerous, for without the
pretext of legitimacy the tyranny loses
credibility and has nothing left in its
arsenal but fear, coercion and violence.
The long campaign against Julian and
WikiLeaks is a window into the collapse of
the rule of law, the rise of what the
political philosopher Sheldon Wolin
calls our system of “inverted
totalitarianism,” a form of totalitarianism
that maintains the fictions of the old
capitalist democracy, including its
institutions, iconography, patriotic symbols
and rhetoric, but internally has surrendered
total control to the dictates of global
corporations.
I was in the London courtroom during
Julian’s extradition hearing overseen by
Judge Vanessa Baraitser, an updated version
of the Queen of Hearts in “Alice in
Wonderland”, demanding the sentence before
pronouncing the verdict. It was a judicial
farce. There was no legal basis to hold
Julian in prison. There was no legal basis
to try him, an Australian citizen, under the
U.S. Espionage Act. The CIA
spiedon Julian in the embassy through
the Spanish company, UC Global, contracted
to provide embassy security. This spying
included recording the privileged
conversations between Julian and his lawyers
as they discussed his defense. This fact
alone invalidated the hearing. Julian is
being held in a high security prison so the
state can, as Nils Melzer, the U.N. Special
Rapporteur on Torture, has
testified, continue the degrading abuse
and torture it hopes will lead to his
psychological, if not physical
disintegration.
The U.S. government directed London
barrister James Lewis. Lewis presented these
directives to Baraitser. Baraitser adopted
them as her legal decision. It was a
judicial pantomime. Lewis and the judge
insisted they were not attempting to
criminalize journalists and muzzle the press
while they busily set up the legal framework
to criminalize journalists and muzzle the
press. And that is why the court worked so
hard to mask the proceedings from the
public; limiting access to the courtroom to
a handful of observers and making it hard,
and at times impossible, to access
the hearing online. It was a tawdry show
trial, not an example of the best of English
jurisprudence, but the Lubyanka.
Prophets call for justice in an unjust
world. What they demand is not radical. On
the political spectrum it is conservative.
The restoration of the rule of law. It is
simple and basic. It should not, in a
functioning democracy, be incendiary. But
living in truth in a despotic system is the
supreme act of defiance. This truth
terrifies those in power.
The architects of imperialism, the
masters of war, the corporate-controlled
legislative, judicial and executive branches
of government and their obsequious
courtiers in the media, are
illegitimate. Say this simple truth and you
are
banished, as many of us have been, to
the margins of the media landscape. Prove
this truth, as Julian, Chelsea Manning,
Jeremy Hammond and Edward Snowden have done
by allowing us to peer into the inner
workings of power, and you are
hunted down and persecuted.
In Oct. 2010, WikiLeaks released the Iraq
War Logs. The War Logs
documented numerous U.S. war crimes —
including video images of the
gunning down of two Reuters journalists
and 10 other unarmed civilians in the
“Collateral Murder” video, the routine
torture of Iraqi prisoners, the
covering up of thousands of civilian
deaths and the
killing of nearly 700 civilians who
approached too closely to U.S. checkpoints.
The towering civil rights attorneys Len
Weinglass and my good friend
Michael Ratner— who I would later
accompany to meet Julian in the Ecuadoran
Embassy — met with Julian in a studio
apartment in Central London. Julian’s
personal bank cards had been blocked. Three
encrypted laptops with documents detailing
U.S. war crimes had disappeared from his
luggage en route to London. Swedish police
were fabricating a case against him in a
move, Ratner warned, was about extraditing
Julian to the United States.
“WikiLeaks and you personally are facing
a battle that is both legal and political,”
Weinglass told Julian. “As we learned in the
Pentagon Papers case, the US government
doesn’t like the truth coming out. And it
doesn’t like to be humiliated. No matter if
it’s Nixon or Bush or Obama, Republican or
Democrat in the White House. The US
government will try to stop you from
publishing its ugly secrets. And if they
have to destroy you and the First Amendment
and the rights of publishers with you, they
are willing to do it. We believe they are
going to come after WikiLeaks and you,
Julian, as the publisher.”
“Come after me for what?” asked Julian.
“Espionage,” Weinglass continued.
“They’re going to charge Bradley Manning
with treason under the Espionage Act of
1917. We don’t think it applies to him
because he’s a whistleblower, not a spy. And
we don’t think it applies to you either
because you are a publisher. But they are
going to try to force Manning into
implicating you as his collaborator.”
“Come after me for what?’
That is the question.
They came after Julian not for his vices,
but his virtues.
They came after Julian because he
exposed the more than 15,000 unreported
deaths of Iraqi civilians; because he
exposed the torture and abuse of some
800 men and boys, aged between 14 and 89, at
Guantánamo; because he
exposed that Hillary Clinton in 2009
ordered U.S. diplomats to spy on U.N.
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and other U.N.
representatives from China, France, Russia,
and the U.K., spying that included obtaining
DNA, iris scans, fingerprints, and personal
passwords (part of the long pattern of
illegal surveillance that included the
eavesdropping on U.N. Secretary General Kofi
Annan in the weeks before the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq in 2003); because he
exposed that Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton
and the CIA backed the June 2009 military
coup in Honduras that overthrew the
democratically elected president Manuel
Zelaya, replacing him with a murderous and
corrupt military regime; because he exposed
that George W. Bush, Barack Obama and
General David Petraeus prosecuted a war in
Iraq that under post-Nuremberg laws is
defined as a criminal war of aggression, a
war crime; that they
authorized hundreds of targeted
assassinations, including those of U.S.
citizens in Yemen, and that they secretly
launched missile, bomb, and drone
attacks on Yemen, killing scores of
civilians; because Julian exposed the
contents of the speeches Hillary Clinton
gave to Goldman Sachs for which she was paid
$675,000, a sum so large it can only be
considered a bribe, and that she privately
assured corporate leaders she would do
their bidding while promising the public
financial regulation and reform; because he
exposed how the hacking tools used by
the CIA and the National Security Agency
permits the wholesale government
surveillance of our televisions, computers,
smart phones and anti-virus software,
allowing the government to record and store
our conversations, images and private text
messages, even from encrypted apps.
Julian exposed the truth. He exposed it
over and over and over until there was no
question of the endemic illegality,
corruption and mendacity that defines the
global ruling class And for these truths
they came after Julian, as they have come
after all who dared rip back the veil on
power. “Red Rosa now has vanished too,”
Bertolt Brecht wrote after the German
socialist Rosa Luxemburg was murdered. “She
told the poor what life is about, And so the
rich have rubbed her out.”
We have undergone a corporate coup, where
poor and working men and women are reduced
to joblessness and hunger, where war,
financial speculation and internal
surveillance are the only real business of
the state, where even habeas corpus no
longer exists, where we, as citizens, are
nothing more than commodities to corporate
systems of power, ones to be used, fleeced
and discarded.
To refuse to fight back, to reach out and
help the weak, the oppressed and the
suffering, to save the planet from ecocide,
to decry the domestic and international
crimes of the ruling class, to demand
justice, to live in truth, is to bear the
mark of Cain. Those in power must feel our
wrath, and this means constant acts of mass
civil disobedience, it means constant acts
of social and political disruption, for this
organized power from below is the only power
that will save us and the only power that
will free Julian. Politics is a game of
fear. It is our moral and civic duty to make
those in power very, very afraid.
The criminal ruling class has all of us
locked in its death grip. It cannot be
reformed. It has abolished the rule of law.
It obscures and falsifies the truth. It
seeks the consolidation of its obscene
wealth and power. But to do this, we must,
as Julian has done, as all prophets have
done, pick up the cross and bear its awful
weight on our back.
“This is the cross that we must bear for
the freedom of our people…” Martin Luther
King Jr. reminds us. “The cross we bear
precedes the crown we wear. To be a
Christian, one must take up the cross, with
all its difficulties agonizing and
tension-packed content and carry it until
that very cross leaves its marks upon us and
redeems us, to that more excellent way which
comes only through suffering…When I took up
the cross, I recognized its meaning…The
cross is something you bear, and ultimately
that you die on.”
“Hope has two beautiful daughters,”
Augustine writes. “Their names are anger and
courage;anger at the way things are, and
courage to see that they do not remain the
way they are.”
Those who hold fast to the eternal and
the sacred, to truth, as the sociologist
Emile Durkeim understood, are not merely
those who see new truths of which most
others are ignorant, but are men and women,
possessed by sublime madness, who are driven
by a transcendent force that allows them to
endure the trials of existence or conquer
them. They transform the world through
suffering.
My friend Julian is suffering. He is
suffering for our sins and our indifference.
As Rabbi Heschel reminds us, “some are
guilty, but all are responsible.” There are
two choices. We stand for the truth, for
Julian, and free him. We find the courage to
be responsible, to pick up the cross. Or we
are complicit in the dark night of corporate
tyranny that will envelope us all.
Let us pray:
God of grace and God of glory
In thy people pour thy power;
Crown thine ancient church’s story,
Bring her bud to glorious flower.
Grant us wisdom, grant us courage,
For the facing of this hour
For the facing of this hour.
Christopher Lynn
Hedges
(born September 18, 1956) is an American
journalist, author, commentator and
Presbyterian minister.
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solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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