To learn of a war while on a silent Ignatian retreat is, indeed, a strange experience. It was on the morning of my second day, Thursday, March 20, 2003, of an eight-day retreat at Grand Coteau, Louisiana, that I learned the United States had bombed Iraq. The scriptural passage assigned for my first meditation of the day was Sirach 43, a reflection on God and nature. My written thoughts are given as follows:
“Even on a day with magnificent weather, it is difficult to pray about the grandeur of nature and of the Creator when mankind has released the dogs of war. At our session this morning, Fr. Tom informed me that It has begun! Last night the United States of America initiated its attack against Saddam Hussein with fourteen cruise missel strikes on ‘selected’ targets around Bagdad. Bush has started his war, the war his father began a decade or so ago. For the first time in history, America has launched a war without first being fired upon by the direct foe. It will not end until Saddam, himself, is destroyed. And if he flees, what then? Whom does Bush attack next? It may be a longer conflict than the so-called leaders in Washington predict.
“Yet here I am, to contemplate God’s marvelous creation, the sun’s light and the blue vault of heaven. The warm breeze from the south again stirs the fields of wildflowers before me. The birds sing merrily the songs taught to them ages ago, unconcerned by the new cries thousands of miles away. Oh, that I could sing so merrily!
“Instead, I hear the drone of an airliner passing overhead and assume that death will not leap forth … unlike the thoughts of innocent Iraqis who hear death on a day when only Allah’s glory should be sounded.
“This creation of Yours, miLord , has survived the folly of your creatures over the centuries. You continue to sustain us. I’m not sure why. The sun continues to shine with its warmth; the winds continue to cool us. The balance remains. We remain in your hands, in your care, in your love. You tried to teach us about Peace by becoming one of us. For some you succeeded. Others have ignored your words; they even make a mockery of those they have heard.
“Our journey has begun, miLord. I know not how it will continue nor how it will end. This is to be a season of trust, of hope. Strengthen my trust and my hope. Walk with me and all those who truly want to follow you. Guide us in the hours and days ahead so that we may honor all you have created and given to us.”
The next day, Day 3 of my retreat, had an afternoon meditation on Matthew 4: 1- 11, the temptations of Jesus in the desert. My reflection includes the following:
“What a bucolic place to think of war! The pale-yellow barn with its white silos stands before me as a fortress of tranquility. The pecan trees flex leafless fingers against the clouding sky. The stable roofs rust slowly beneath the overpowering live oaks. All is silent except for a cow lowing in the distance and a few birds twittering nearby. Even the black flies are going about their own business and leaving me alone with my contemplation on this second day of a war fought so far away in time and space.
“Men, women, and children are surely dying as they do in all wars. There may be terrorism striking here in the U.S., but I do not know of any of this, wrapped in my silent Retreat. If only the world, itself, could be on such a Retreat instead of its own retreat from civilization.
“My assigned meditation is on the Temptations of Christ, your temptations, miLord. Your encounter with Evil, itself. Temptations to life without effort, living food from dead stones. Power without effort: merely step forward, you will not fall. Control without compassion: speak the name of Evil and all will follow you.
“Begin a war and your popularity will increase. Provide a circus and the people will forget their problems. History will remember you as being decisive. Or will future generations call you a fool? It depends upon the outcome. A quick victory with a minimum loss of lives (yet what is a ‘minimum’ when lives are to be counted?) and your actions are justified. A long war with vast destructions, and the event is recalled as folly. Temptations for the quick fix; for precipitous change in contrast with the change resulting from a change of heart, from growth into maturity.
“Enough of my jottings. It is time for Prayer.”
Yes, it is always “time for prayer.” The Gulf War finally was terminated. Bagdad was captured a month later; President Bush declared “the end of major combat operations” in his “Mission Accomplished” speech of May 1st. Saddam Hussein was captured on December 13, 2003; convicted by the Iraqi High Tribunal of crimes against humanity and executed, by hanging, on December 30, 2006.
Twenty years later, in October 2023, the forces under Hamas, the Palestinian military authority in Gaza, attacked Israel. A counterattack has followed and once again, the “Holy Land” is the site for warfare which could expand into a major conflict for the entire world. Once more we witness the temptations in the desert and continue to pray.