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On exile: Yoder, said, and a theology of land and return.


We travel like other people, but we return to nowhere. As if traveling
Is the way of the clouds. We have buried our loved ones in the
     Darkness of the clouds, between the roots of the trees.
And we said to our wives: go on giving birth to people like us
     For hundreds of years so we can complete this journey
To the hour of a country, to a meter of the impossible.
We travel in the carriages of the psalms, sleep in the tents of the
     Prophets and come out of the speech of the gypsies.
We measure space with a hoopoe's beak or sing to while away the
     Distance and cleanse the light of the moon.
Your path is long so dream of seven women to bear this long path
On your shoulders. Shake for them palm trees so as to know their
     Names and who'll be the mother of the boy of Galilee.
We have a country of words. Speak speak so we may know the end of
     This travel.

Mahmoud Darwish, "We Travel Like Other People" (1984) (1)


THE PALESTINIAN POET Mahmoud Darwish Mahmoud Darwish (Arabic: محمود درويش; born 1941 in Al-Birwah, British Mandate of Palestine) is a contemporary Palestinian poet and writer of prose.  captures well the ambiguities of exile: travel without end; the pain of disconnection and the nostalgia of memory; the realization, encoded in the closing demand to "Speak speak," that, for a people who have "a country of words," return from exile, the end of travel, will more likely than not be textual rather than physical. Darwish thus shows the reality of millions of Palestinians exiled from their land, living without fixed destination and sustained by the tenuous hope of return.

How should Palestinian exile, and exile more generally, be understood theologically? How should Christians understand the dreams of many exiles, dreams which often appear hopeless, of return to their homes? The late John Howard Yoder John Howard Yoder (December 29 1927 – December 30, 1997) was a Christian theologian, ethicist, and Biblical scholar best known for his radical Christian pacifism, his mentoring of future theologians such as Stanley Hauerwas, his loyalty to his Mennonite faith, and his 1972  would probably have objected to starting with such general questions; they might have struck him as too "methodologistic," beginning theological reflection with abstract questions rather than with God's story in Scripture and the church. (2) Nevertheless, the drama of exile, especially as displayed in Jeremiah's call to the exiles to seek the peace of the city in which they find themselves (Jer. 29:7), played a key role in shaping Yoder's reading of Scripture, his ecclesiology ec·cle·si·ol·o·gy  
n.
1. The branch of theology that is concerned with the nature, constitution, and functions of a church.

2. The study of ecclesiastical architecture and ornamentation.
 and his missiology Missiology, or mission science, is the area of practical theology which investigates the mandate, message and work of the Christian missionary. Missiology is a multi-disciplinary and cross-cultural reflexion on all aspects of the propagation of the Christian faith, embracing . As early as 1973 Yoder was probing the fruitfulness of the theme of exile for theology writing in CrossCurrents of exile and exodus as two faces of liberation. (3) Exile, while painful, opens up a new chapter in the history of the people of God's radical reliance on God alone; God's peop le, for Yoder, are called to a nonviolent dependence on God which eschews the sovereignty of the sword in favor of embodying an alternative politics amidst the Babylons of the world.

Yoder tentatively wondered about the relevance of this exilic, Jeremian vision for other exiled peoples. Was there "something about this Jewish vision of the dignity and ministry of the scattered people of God which might be echoed or replicated by other migrant peoples," Yoder asked. "Might there even be," he continued, "something helpful in this memory which would speak by a more distant analogy to the condition of peoples overwhelmed by imperial immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. , like the original Americans or Australians, or the Ainu or the Maori?" (4) Yoder recognized the potential affront of his question, I believe, and thus phrased it carefully. The provocation remains, however: can those who have been violently uprooted from their lands embrace as good news the prophetic admonition Any formal verbal statement made during a trial by a judge to advise and caution the jury on their duty as jurors, on the admissibility or nonadmissibility of evidence, or on the purpose for which any evidence admitted may be considered by them.  to build houses and plant gardens in exile? What does Jeremiah's call mean for a return to one's land, for justice for the exiled refugee? Are justice and return endlessly deferred, postponed until the eschaton?

In this paper I seek to answer Yoder's question through an examination of the way in which the motif of exile functions in the thought and politics of the Palestinian-American critic Edward Said Edward Wadie Saïd, Arabic: إدوارد وديع سعيد, . After a summary of the role of exile in Yoder's reading of Scripture and his understanding of the church's mission, I turn to an examination of Edward Said's multifaceted appraisal of exile, while insisting on the harrowing character of exile, Said also expounds at length on the critical epistemological and moral possibilities opened up by exile. Finally, I sketch how an exilic consciousness of not being fully at home in one's home so long as injustice endures can contribute to a theology of living rightly and justly in the land, taking the particular case of justice in the land of Palestine/Israel as a springboard for my reflections; the view from exile, I suggest, poses a challenge to exclusionary politics which would deny a just place in the land for both Palestinian and Israeli.

John Howard Yoder on the Theological Politics of Exile

Just as "Constantinianism" named for Yoder the perennial threat and temptation for the people of God, so did the Jeremian vision of the people of God living faithfully in exile form Yoder's positive vision for the church. (5) Grasping the importance of Jeremiah's call to the exiles for Yoder sheds light on his reading of Scripture, his understanding of church history, and his theology of Judaism. (6)

Let us begin with Scripture. Any Christian reading of the Old Testament must inevitably grapple with the plurality of voices and genres presented therein, interpreting its multiple strands and perspectives from God's definitive revelation in Jesus Christ Jesus Christ: see Jesus.

Jesus Christ

40 days after Resurrection, ascended into heaven. [N.T.: Acts 1:1–11]

See : Ascension


Jesus Christ

kind to the poor, forgiving to the sinful. [N.T.
. (7) The pacifist Christian, in particular, must struggle to understand the continuity of the two Testaments without resorting to a Marcionite dismissal of the God of the Old Testament and its wars of conquest as different from the God of love incarnated in Jesus Christ; rather, we must insist that the Triune God who reveals the nonviolent "grain of the universe" in Jesus' life, death and resurrection is the God of Israel. (8)

The theological vision from exile, Yoder argued, is one of "not being in charge." The exiles in Babylon do not rule the empire, or even a little corner of it, but instead live without sovereignty in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of empire. Because "God is sovereign over history, there is no need. . .to seize (or subvert) sovereignty in order for God's will Noun 1. God's Will - the omnipotence of a divine being
omnipotence - the state of being omnipotent; having unlimited power
 to be done." Living outside of the land, the community in Babylon relies solely on God for the sustaining of its life and becomes nonviolent in style and substance. (9) The continuity of this exilic vision with Yoder's ecclesiology should be clear: the church is the community called to go out into the world, into diaspora (Malt. 25), a community which refuses to wield violent force, pointing instead to God's sovereignty and the conviction that Jesus has already triumphed over the powers of death, a triumph which will ultimately be revealed to all. (10)

If the continuity between Jeremiah's vision for the exiles and New Testament ecclesiology (as interpreted by Yoder) should be clear, the relationship between the call to exile and other parts of the Old Testament, such as the embrace of sovereign kingship in the land or the violent conquest of the land, might well appear to be one of tension, even conflict. (11) Yoder resolved this tension by focusing his attention on one thematic strand in the Old Testament, namely, Israel's radical dependence on God done. Yoder did not deny and need not have denied that Scripture contains multiple stands, some of them in tension with one another; he did believe, however, that by identifying a strand within Scripture which repeatedly insists on God's absolute sovereignty and the people's concomitant dependence on God alone, one could highlight the continuity between YHWH YHWH also YHVH or JHVH or JHWH  
n.
The Hebrew Tetragrammaton representing the name of God.

Noun 1. YHWH - a name for the God of the Old Testament as transliterated from the Hebrew consonants YHVH
 the God of Israel and the Triune God incarnate in·car·nate  
adj.
1.
a. Invested with bodily nature and form: an incarnate spirit.

b. Embodied in human form; personified: a villain who is evil incarnate.
 in the nonviolent Messiah. (12)

Exile, Yoder suggested, did not simply equal punishment in Israel's history, but represented a new opportunity for mission in the world and stood in continuity with God's previous gracious acts of dispersal, dispersal which highlighted the people of God's absolute dependence on God. Interpreting the Babel Babel (bā`bəl) [Heb.,=confused], in the Bible, place where Noah's descendants (who spoke one language) tried to build a tower reaching up to heaven to make a name for themselves.  story in Genesis 11, Yoder wrote that "Diversity was the original divine intent; if God is good and diversity is good, then each of the many diverse identities which resulted from the multiplying of languages and the resultant scattering is also good." (13) The exile to Babylon then becomes on this reading another act of gracious dispersal: while the false prophets preach a premature return to the land, Jeremiah calls on the exiles to "seek the peace/salvation (shalom) of the city" (29:7).

Just as the exiles in Babylon live dependent on God and without reliance on their own sovereignty, so do the narratives of Exodus and the conquest of the land in the wars of YHWH exhibit a radical, completely dependent trust in God. "'Trust in JHWH[sic]/Adonai' is what opens the door to His saving intervention," claimed Yoder. "It is the opposite of making one's own political/military arrangements." (14) When addressing the question of Israelite monarchy with its violent exercise of sovereignty, Yoder turned to such texts as Judges 9, I Samuel Noun 1. I Samuel - the first of two books in the Old Testament that tell of Saul and David
1 Samuel

Old Testament - the collection of books comprising the sacred scripture of the Hebrews and recording their history as the chosen people; the first half of the
 8 and Deuteronomy 17:14ff, texts which exhibit "the antiroyal strand of the earlier history" of Israel which rejected any sovereign other than God. Exile, for Yoder, was not a brief hiatus between monarchy and the return to the land; rather, monarchy formed a problematic interruption in a history of dispersal as mission. "The move to Babylon," Yoder argued, "was not a two-generation parenthesis parenthesis: see punctuation.


The left parenthesis "(" and right parenthesis ")" are used to delineate one expression from another. For example, in the query list for size="34" and (color = "red" or color ="green")
 after which the Davidic or Solomonic project was supposed to tale up again w here it had left off. It was rather the beginning, under a firm, fresh prophetic mandate, of a new phase of the Mosaic project." (15) "Jeremiah's abandoning statehood state·hood  
n.
The status of being a state, especially of the United States, rather than being a territory or dependency.
 for the future," Yoder continued, "is thus not so much forsaking an earlier hope as it is returning to the original trust in JHWH [sic]." (16)

Yoder thus identified a strand within the multiplicity of texts in the Old Testament which insists on complete dependence on God alone. Reading back from the Resurrection, we can not only observe that this strand stands in continuity with Jesus' nonviolent trust in God unto death, but can identify certain aspects of that strand, such as Jeremiah's counsel to the exiles, as very close to the nonviolent coming of God in Jesus. (17) Jesus "rounds out" the mitigation of violence within the prophetic portions of the Old Testament, "and says that what it meant for Abraham to let God's future be in God's hands, and what it meant for Moses and Joshua to let the survival of the people be a miracle, means that now we don't have to kill anybody." This view is not "evolutionary" in that it does not assume some "survival of the fittest" in a contest of ideas, but Yoder concedes that its assumption of "organic growth under guidance" is in some ways similar to models which see evolutionary development within Scripture. (18)

"How can we sing the Lord's songs in a foreign land?" the Psalmist psalm·ist  
n.
A writer or composer of psalms.


psalmist
Noun

a writer of psalms

Noun 1.
 asks. "Painful as the question is," Yoder responded, "that is what the Jews learned to do, and do well." (19) Exile marked a new beginning in the history of God's people, one which would continue in the history of the early church and in the life of the Jewish people in diaspora. While the church would lose sight of its calling to live as an embodied alternative to the violent politics of empire, becoming entangled en·tan·gle  
tr.v. en·tan·gled, en·tan·gling, en·tan·gles
1. To twist together or entwine into a confusing mass; snarl.

2. To complicate; confuse.

3. To involve in or as if in a tangle.
 in various forms of Constantinian compromise, Jewish communities in exile more successfully stayed true to the Jeremian call. "Occasionally privileged after the model of Joseph," Yoder noted, "more often emigrating, frequently suffering martyrdom nonviolently, [Jews] were able to maintain identity without turf or sword, community without sovereignty. They thereby demonstrated pragmatically the viability of the ethic of Jeremiah and Jesus. In sum: the Jews of the Diaspora were for over a millennium the closest thing to the ethic of J esus existing on any significant scale anywhere in Christendom." (20) Jewish communities in Diaspora thus lived as embodied critiques of Constantinian Christendom. Zionism, in contrast, as a late nineteenth-century form of European nationalism, represents a sharp departure from Jeremiah's exilic vision. (21) An analysis of the ways in which Zionist discourse negates the diaspora and an assessment of the possibilities of retrieving an exilic politics after Zionism will be my concern in the final part of this paper.

Edward Said: The Moral Task of the Exilic Intellectual

Yoder's appropriation of Jeremiah's call to the exiles has, I believe, undeniable power for a hermeneutics hermeneutics, the theory and practice of interpretation. During the Reformation hermeneutics came into being as a special discipline concerned with biblical criticism.  of Scripture, for an interpretation of church history, and for the articulation of a nonviolent ecclesiological ec·cle·si·ol·o·gy  
n.
1. The branch of theology that is concerned with the nature, constitution, and functions of a church.

2. The study of ecclesiastical architecture and ornamentation.
 politics. Can the call to seek the peace of the city of one's exile, however, also be heard as good news, even if only by "distant analogy," for the millions upon millions of people in the modern period violently uprooted by imperial and colonial practice? Is Jeremiah's call compatible with a struggle to return to one's land, with a struggle for justice? To answer these questions, I turn to a consideration of Palestinian dispossession The wrongful, nonconsensual ouster or removal of a person from his or her property by trick, compulsion, or misuse of the law, whereby the violator obtains actual occupation of the land. Dispossession encompasses intrusion, disseisin, or deforcement.  and the writings of the most prolific, provocative, and insightful Palestinian intellectual, Edward Said, whose writings display the agonies and the promise of exile.

An initial caveat: Said, given his relentless critique of "religion," his stark opposition between "religious" (bad) and "secular" (good) criticism, and his desire to keep religion in proper bounds, might appear an odd thinker to bring into conversation with Yoder, someone who operated within an explicit theological horizon, who lived under the authority of God's Word and the church, and who resisted liberalism's attempts to confine the church's witness. (22) Apart from noting the similarities in the wide-ranging, "amateur" character of their intellects, what theologically useful observations can possibly come of bringing Yoder into conversation with such an aggressive, even dogmatic, secularist? (23) Clearly, Said's treatment of religion is problematic at many levels. Nevertheless, I maintain that in Said's appropriation of exile we find a "distant analogy" (Yoder) to Jeremiah's vision for the people of God in exile; exploring these "distant analogies," what Karl Barth Noun 1. Karl Barth - Swiss Protestant theologian (1886-1968)
Barth
 called "secular parables of the kingdo m," provides provocative material for reflection as Christians seek to articulate theologies of exile, land, and return. (24)

Palestinian existence is at root one of exile. Said observes that Palestinians form "a community, if at heart a community built on suffering and exile." (25) Palestinians are dispersed geographically, separated by borders, exiled from one another. In the Arab-Israeli war of 1948, in what Palestinians call al-Nakba ("the Catastrophe"), well over 700,000 Palestinians fled in fear from the fighting or were driven from their homes by Israeli military forces who destroyed over 400 villages: many of these refugees and their descendants now live in UN administered camps throughout the Middle East, denied the possibility of returning to their homes and properties. For the Palestinians left behind in what became the State of Israel, many were classified as "present absentees" under the Absentee Property Law of 1951. and denied return to their land. Tens of thousands more Palestinians, many of them already refugees, became refugees once more in 1967, driven out of Mandate Palestine across the Jordan River Jordan River

River, Middle East. It rises on the Syria-Lebanon border, flows through Lake Tiberias (Sea of Galilee), and then receives its main tributary, the Yarmuk River.
 by Israeli f orces. Since 1967, for Palestinians in the occupied territories This article is about occupied territory in general: for more specific discussion of the territories captured by Israel in the Six-Day War, see Israeli-occupied territories.

Occupied territories
 of the West Bank, East Jerusalem East Jerusalem refers to the part of Jerusalem captured by Jordan in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, and subsequently by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War. It includes Jerusalem's Old City and some of the holiest sites of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, such as the Temple Mount, Western , and the Gaza Strip Gaza Strip (gäz`ə), (2003 est. pop. 1,330,000) rectangular coastal area, c.140 sq mi (370 sq km), SW Asia, on the Mediterranean Sea adjoining Egypt and Israel, in what was formerly SW Palestine. , dispossession has taken on a variety of forms: the Israeli civil administration confiscates land from Palestinians for the construction of colonies illegal under international law; Israeli bulldozers destroy Palestinian homes and rip up Palestinian orchards and vineyards; checkpoints and roadblocks separate Palestinian from Palestinian, making travel between, say, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip nearly impossible, while travel within the north and south of the West Bank becomes excruciatingly long, humiliating hu·mil·i·ate  
tr.v. hu·mil·i·at·ed, hu·mil·i·at·ing, hu·mil·i·ates
To lower the pride, dignity, or self-respect of. See Synonyms at degrade.
, and, at times, dangerous. (26)

Palestinians are thus continually ripped out of their contexts and find themselves travelers in a strange world. "The Palestinian is very much a person in transit," Said notes. "Suitcase or bundle of possessions in hand, each family vacates territory left behind for others, even as new boundaries are traversed, new opportunities created, new realities set up." (27) If, as Said indicates, exile creates "new opportunities," exile also is profoundly alienating. "Exile is a series of portraits without names, without contexts," Said observes. "Images that are largely unexplained, nameless, mute." (28) Without continuity of place, Palestinians experience no continuity of identity. "Palestinian life is scattered, discontinuous discontinuous /dis·con·tin·u·ous/ (dis?kon-tin´u-us)
1. interrupted; intermittent; marked by breaks.

2. discrete; separate.

3. lacking logical order or coherence.
, marked by the artificial and imposed arrangements of interrupted or confined space Confined space is a term from labor-safety regulations that refers to an area whose enclosed conditions and limited access make it dangerous. Description
A confined space is any space: 1) that has limited or restricted means of entry or exit; 2) is large enough for a
, by the dislocations and unsynchronized rhythms of disturbed time," Said explains: "where no straight line leads from home to birthplace to school to maturity, all events are accidents, all progress is a digre ssion, all residence is exile." (29) De-centered, out of place, Palestinian life becomes one of travel without fixed destination: "our truest reality is expressed in the way we cross over from one place to another," Said insists. "We are migrants and perhaps hybrids in, but not of, any situation in which we find ourselves. This is the deepest continuity of our lives as a nation in exile and constantly on the move." (30) Rupture of continuity is the fate of the defeated, while the victors, the powerful, remain in place. "Continuity for them, the dominant population," Said notes, as opposed to "discontinuity for us, the dispossessed and dispersed." (31) Said's emphasis on the Palestinians' "privilege of obduracy," their steadfastness (sumud), the declaration that "Here we are, unmoved by your power, proceeding with our lives and with future generations," is a way of desperately trying to hold on amidst the transit of exile, so that the de-centeredness of exile does not become dissolution. (32)

Said strenuously objects to any attempt to romanticize ro·man·ti·cize  
v. ro·man·ti·cized, ro·man·ti·ciz·ing, ro·man·ti·ciz·es

v.tr.
To view or interpret romantically; make romantic.

v.intr.
To think in a romantic way.
 exile. "Exile is one of the saddest fates," he claims. "There has always been an association between the idea of exile and the terrors of being a leper leper /lep·er/ (lep´er) a person with leprosy; a term now in disfavor.

lep·er
n.
One who has leprosy.
, a social and moral untouchable untouchable

Former classification of various low-status persons and those outside the Hindu caste system in Indian society. The term Dalit is now used for such people (in preference to Mohandas K.
." (33)

For Palestinians, the experience of exile has not only been physically and emotionally painful, but has had negative effects on individual exiles and the exiled community as a whole. "Our collective history fil-kharij ('in the exterior') or in the manfa and ghurba ('exile' and estrangement') has been singularly unsuccessful," Said judges, "progressively graceless, unblessed, more and more eccentic, de-centered, and alienated." (34) Exile can turn people inwards, generating a form of sectarian withdrawal which shuns those outside the community. (35) Exile is a "jealous state," Said observes, which can create "an exaggerated sense of group solidarity, and a passionate hostility to outsiders, even those who may in fact be in the same predicament as you." (36) Ripped out of place, the exile often seeks solace in uncritical commitment to political parties and institutions, a tendency which Said, as a perpetual critic of the Palestine Liberation Organization Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), coordinating council for Palestinian organizations, founded (1964) by Egypt and the Arab League and initially controlled by Egypt. , has carefully resisted. Those, meanwhile, who resist the temptation to subscribe blindly to political programs face the temptation of individualistic withdrawal away from all communities. Exile is marked, Said suggests, by "the sheer fact of isolation and displacement, which produces the kind of narcissistic nar·cis·sism   also nar·cism
n.
1. Excessive love or admiration of oneself. See Synonyms at conceit.

2. A psychological condition characterized by self-preoccupation, lack of empathy, and unconscious deficits in
 masochism masochism (măs`əkĭzəm), sexual disorder in which sexual arousal is derived from subjection to physical and emotional degradation.  that resists all efforts at amelioration a·me·lio·ra·tion  
n.
1. The act or an instance of ameliorating.

2. The state of being ameliorated; improvement.

Noun 1.
, acculturation acculturation, culture changes resulting from contact among various societies over time. Contact may have distinct results, such as the borrowing of certain traits by one culture from another, or the relative fusion of separate cultures. , and community. At this extreme," Said warns, "the exile can make a fetish fetish (fĕt`ĭsh), inanimate object believed to possess some magical power. The fetish may be a natural thing, such as a stone, a feather, a shell, or the claw of an animal, or it may be artificial, such as carvings in wood.  of exile, a practice that distances him or her from all connections and commitments." (37)

Warning against finding a moral within exile, Said demands that the reality of life in the refugee camp be given priority over the literature produced by such exiles as James Joyce and Vladimir Nabokov Noun 1. Vladimir Nabokov - United States writer (born in Russia) (1899-1977)
Nabokov, Vladimir vladimirovich Nabokov
 in any evaluation of exile. "Exiled poets and writers lend dignity to a condition legislated to deny dignity--to deny an identity to people," Said maintains. "To concentrate on exile as a contemporary political punishment," he counsels, "you must therefore map territories of experience beyond those mapped by the literature of exile itself You must first set aside Joyce and Nabokov and think instead of the uncountable uncountable - countable  masses for whom UN agencies have been created." (38) Literature and religion, Said believes, run the risk of downplaying the horrors of exile in the interests of extracting new insights from exile itself In contrast, Said insists that

On the twentieth-century scale, exile is neither aesthetically nor humanistically comprehensible: at most the literature about exile objectifies an anguish and a predicament most people rarely experience first hand; but to think of the exile informing this literature as beneficially humanistic is to banalize its mutilations, the losses it inflicts on those who suffer them, the muteness with which it responds to any attempt to understand it as "good for us." Is it not true that the views of exile in literature and, moreover, in religion obscure what is truly horrendous: that exile is irremediably ir·re·me·di·a·ble  
adj.
Impossible to remedy, correct, or repair; incurable or irreparable: irremediable errors in judgment.



ir
 secular and unbearably historical? (39)

Here Said would appear to be challenging Yoder's theological appropriation of exile directly, accusing this religious view which uncovers a dignity of the vocation of the exilic community of banalizing the losses exile inflicts on those who undergo it.

Said's caution about an aesthetic or religious amelioration of exile's pains serves as a needed reminder not to lose sight of the fact that exile does not simply name a concept but names a condition in which millions of people live. That said, however, it is equally important to recognize that, just as Yoder articulates a missiological vocation for the people of God in exile, so Said argues that exile opens up an intellectual and moral space which provides a place for the intellectual from which to resist attempts to co-opt him or her into becoming an apologist Apologist

Any of the Christian writers, primarily in the 2nd century, who attempted to provide a defense of Christianity against Greco-Roman culture. Many of their writings were addressed to Roman emperors and were submitted to government secretaries in order to defend
 for power and which creates a discomfort with being settled in one's home so long as injustice forces homelessness on others.

Exile, Said believes, is the proper place for the critic, the intellectual. "If you think about exile as a permanent state," Said suggests, "both in the literal and in the intellectual sense, then it's a much more promising, if difficult, thing. Then you're really talking about movement, about homelessness in the sense in which [Georg] Lukacs talks about it in The Theory of the Novel--'transcendental homelessness'--which can acquire a particular intellectual mission that I associate with criticism." (40) While exile, Said recognizes, "is an actual condition," it also functions in Said's thought as "a metaphorical condition." Developing a distinction between insider and outsider intellectuals reminiscent of Yoder's contrast between the Constantinian and free churches, Said differentiates between

those on the one hand who belong fully to the society as it is, who flourish in it without an overwhelming sense of dissonance or dissent, those who can be called yea-sayers; and on the other hand, the nay-sayers, the individuals at odds with their society and therefore outsiders and exiles so far as privileges, power, and honors are concerned. (41)

The responsibility of the intellectual, as articulated by Said in his 1993 Reith lectures A Reith Lecture is a lecture in a series of annual radio lectures given by leading figures of the day, commissioned by the BBC and broadcast on BBC Radio 4. They were begun in 1948, in honour of the first Director-General of the BBC, John Reith. , is to offer a critique from exile. "Exile for the intellectual in this metaphysical sense," Said explains, "is restlessness, movement, constantly being unsettled, and unsettling un·set·tle  
v. un·set·tled, un·set·tling, un·set·tles

v.tr.
1. To displace from a settled condition; disrupt.

2. To make uneasy; disturb.

v.intr.
 others. You cannot go back to some earlier arid perhaps more stable condition of being at home; and, alas, you can never fully arrive, be at one with your new home or situation." (42) Even those who have not experienced the pain of being physically uprooted from their homes can be marginal to the powers (of the academy, government, the news media, etc.) which reward uncritical support for policies which oppress op·press  
tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es
1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny.

2.
, exclude and dispossess dispossess v. to eject someone from real property, either legally or by self help. . "Exile means that you are always going to be marginal," Said claims. "Exile is a model for the intellectual who is tempted, and even beset and overwhelmed, by the rewards of accommodation, yea-saying, settling in." (43) Furthermore, the exilic intellectual should not succumb to a morose mo·rose  
adj.
Sullenly melancholy; gloomy.



[Latin mr
 despair. "The intellectual in exile is," according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Said, "necessarily ironic, skeptical, even playful---but not cynical." (44)

Even more than to Georg Lukacs's notion of "transcendental homelessness," Said's positive appropriation of exile for his construal con·strue  
v. con·strued, con·stru·ing, con·strues

v.tr.
1. To adduce or explain the meaning of; interpret: construed my smile as assent. See Synonyms at explain.
 of the intellectual vocation owes a debt to the reflections of the German Jewish theorist Theodor Adorno on dwelling. In his biographical reflections, Minima Moralia. Adorno asserted that:

Dwelling, in the proper sense, is now impossible. The traditional residences we grew up in have grown intolerable: each trait of comfort in them is paid for with a betrayal of knowledge, each vestige vestige /ves·tige/ (ves´tij) the remnant of a structure that functioned in a previous stage of species or individual development.vestig´ial

ves·tige
n.
 of shelter with the musty pact of family interests....The house is past...it is part of morality not to be at home in one's home. (45)

Adorno's insight, amplified by Said, is that particular economic and political configurations make the condition of having a home, of landedness one could also say, possible; it is "part of morality," then, to recognize how these economic and political systems also exclude others from the condition of landedness. In the case of Palestine/Israel, we will see, this insight can be deployed to suggest that no one, neither Palestinian nor Israeli, can truly be "at home" in the land so long as the structures which generate homelessness are perpetuated.

Adorno, having grasped the impossibility of dwelling securely given the knowledge of the conditions which make such dwelling possible, looked to the text, to literary production, for new dwelling. "In his text, the writer sets up house," Adorno suggested. "For a man who no longer has a homeland, writing becomes a place to live." Text provides only elusive comfort, however; Adorno noted that "In the end, the writer is not even allowed to live in his writing." (46) Said develops Adorno's point, noting that the intellectual in his or her writing "achieves at most a provisional satisfaction, which is quickly ambushed by doubt, and a need to rewrite and redo To reverse an undo operation. See undo.  that renders the text uninhabitable." (47) A comparison to Yoder proves useful at this point: while doubt and existential agony drive Said's exilix intellectual to rewrite her text again and again, the exilic community--the church--for Yoder is driven not by doubt but by the workings of the Holy Spirit to engage continually in the theological, missionary task of bringing the Gospel into new thought worlds. Lacking any theological horizon, Said can only view the poeisis of the text as production and construction, whereas for the church the textual task of revising and renewing its proclamation of the Gospel occurs within the framework of pathos, of a suffering receptivity to the Word of the Triune God. (48)

Said does, it turns out, "redeem" exile by stressing its moral possibilities; in particular, the exile, because she is not at home in her home, can resist accommodation to the powers, intellectual and political, which exclude and dispossess. Is this critically beneficial aspect of exile, however, compatible with a struggle to end the physical condition of exile? Specifically, in the case of Palestinian refugees and other Palestinians who have lost their lands, can one work for al-Awdah (return) and not lose the moral perspective granted by exile? This question relates to our earlier question of whether or not Yoder's exilic politics could speak to a theology of landedness, of justice in the land. To begin to tackle this question, let us examine how Said discusses the right of Palestinian refugees to return.

On the one hand, return is clearly not only a metaphorical concept for Said. In a volume of essays examining Palestinian refugee rights and ways to press for return and compensation, Said expresses dismay with what he views as the current Palestinian leadership's historical amnesia and willingness to forgo the demand for return; what Palestinians must do, Said urges, is to "press the claims for return and compensation in earnest with new leaders." Said cites as exemplary the work of the Badil Refugee Resource Center and the Palestinian researcher Salman Abu Sitta for their work on developing concrete plans and campaigns for the actual return of refugees. (49)

On the other hand, Said also writes about return in a more metaphorical fashion and warns against an easy symmetry between exile and return which threatens to undermine the moral insights exile provides. "All of us speak of awdah, 'return,"' Said notes, "but do we mean that literally, or do we mean 'we must restore ourselves to ourselves"? The latter is the real point, I think, although I know of many Palestinians who want their houses and their way of life back, exactly. But is there any place that fits us, together with our accumulated memories and experiences?" (50) Exile, by separating people from place, threatens to separate people from their history, de-centering and disorienting dis·o·ri·ent  
tr.v. dis·o·ri·ent·ed, dis·o·ri·ent·ing, dis·o·ri·ents
To cause (a person, for example) to experience disorientation.

Adj. 1.
 them to the point of threatening their identity. What return would then mean is a "return to oneself, that is to say, a return to history, so that we understand what exactly happened, why it happened, and who we are. That we are a people from that land, maybe not living there, but with important historical claims and roots." (5 1) The greatness of Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish, Said explains, consists in his refusal in his poems to provide the reader with an easy return, with simple closure: Darwish's work, Said contends, "amounts to an epic effort to transform the lyrics of loss into the indefinitely postponed drama of return.... The pathos of exile is in the loss of contact with the solidity and the satisfaction of earth: homecoming is out of the question." (52) A return which forsakes the moral insights of exile, a return which reaches back to retrieve a pristine past without concern for the human cost, must be avoided. The Zionist project of a return to bring closure to Jewish exile stands for Said in marked contrast to the positive dimensions of Palestinian exile. Darwish, he believes, captures the key dimensions of the exilic experience, dimensions vital to the critical intellectual's task: "Fragments over wholes. Restless nomadic See nomadic computing.  activity over the settlements of held territory. Criticism over resignation... Attention, aler tness, focus. To do as others do, but somehow to stand apart. To tell your story in pieces, as it is." (53) The openness of exile presents more powerful political and moral possibilities for the intellectual, Said emphasizes, than the closed symmetry of Zionist return. The broken story of Palestinian exile, Said observes, occurs "alongside and intervening in a closed orbit of Jewish exile and a recuperated, much-celebrated patriotism of which Israel is the emblem. Better our wanderings," Said goes on to suggest, "than the horrid, clanging clang  
n.
1. A loud, resonant, metallic sound.

2. The strident call of a crane or goose.

intr. & tr.v. clanged, clang·ing, clangs
To make or cause to make a clang.
 shutters of their return. The open secular element, and not the symmetry of redemption." (54)

An Exilic Politics of Land and Return?

Said's positive appropriation of exile as a critical posture provides, I believe, a positive answer to Yoder's question about whether or not Jeremiah's vision for the exilic community might speak by "distant analogy" to other dispossessed peoples. Pressing questions remain, however. Can Yoder's exilic politics of the church as the nonviolent body of Christ
This article is about the religious concept. For article about the sect, see The Body of Christ.


The Body of Christ is a term used by Christians to describe believers in Christ. Jesus Christ is seen as the "head" of the body, which is the church.
 in diaspora speak to the call for justice and right living in the land, to the desire, the justice, of people returning to their homes? Gerald Schlabach, in a friendly challenge to Yoder's "Jeremian" reading of Scripture and church history, provides a helpful reminder of the "Deuternomic" admonition to live rightly in the land (cf. Deut. 6-9). European-American Christians, particularly those in urban and suburban settings whose livelihoods are not dependent on the cultivation of the land, could be tempted to confuse Jeremiah's vision for life in exile with the roofless, virtual reality of much postmodernist thought; such confusion would be self-deceptive, i n that it would obscure the ways in which general North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 prosperity has been built at the expense and on the land of its original inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
, and would further avoid the desire of many exiled peoples to return to live justly in the land. Schlabach sharply observes that "we do no favor to any dispossessed people if we think of land only in a figurative rather than an earthy sense." (55)

If, however, we do not avoid the challenges of return and justice, can we envision a politics of return, a politics of living rightly in the land, which does not simply replicate injustice and create new exiles in the wake of return? To answer these questions, I will first examine how traditional Zionist discourse about a Jewish "return" from exile was not only dependent on a binary opposition In critical theory, a binary opposition (also binary system) is a pair of theoretical opposites. In structuralism, it is seen as a fundamental organizer of human philosophy, culture, and language.  between exile and return but that such discourse depended on the erasure ERASURE, contracts, evidence. The obliteration of a writing; it will render it void or not under the same circumstances as an interlineation. (q.v.) Vide 5 Pet. S. C. R. 560; 11 Co. 88; 4 Cruise, Dig. 368; 13 Vin. Ab. 41; Fitzg. 207; 5 Bing. R. 183; 3 C. & P. 65; 2 Wend. R. 555; 11 Conn.  of the indigenous Arab Palestinian presence and the positing of an "empty land" in which the drama of the return from exile might unfold. (56) In practice this discourse translated into the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes and continues to underwrite Palestinian dispossession today. For a future in Palestine/Israel which does not depend on the violent uprooting of others, we must paradoxically articulate an exilic politics of land and return. "Christians can live rightly in the 'land' that God gives," Schlabach su ggests, "only if they sustain a tension with landedness itself." (57) Part of this tension, I suggest, is not being fully "at home" in the land so long as others are excluded from the benefits of landedness.

"The binarism of homeland/exile is central to Zionism," writes Laurence Silberstein in his perceptive study of "postzionist" debates within Israel. (58) The homeland of Eretz Yisrael and the exile of Jewish life elsewhere are not complementary in traditional Zionist discourse but stand, rather, in tension, even contradiction. Sander Gilman observes that Zionist discourse places the land at the center and diasporic communities on the periphery. This model, however, is not innocent of ideological baggage, however, but "is in truth a symbolic structure of the understanding of the impossibility of a Diasporic life within this model of center and periphery. Such a definition," Gilman continues, "demands the existence of a 'real' center and thus defines the Jews in terms of their relationships to that center." (59)

Silberstein delineates a series of binary oppositions issuing from the initial opposition of exile and homeland:

homeland as a source of security, stability, refugee, nurturing, safety/exile as site of danger, insecurity, instability, threat, anxiety; heimlich/unheimlich; homeland is good/exile is bad; homeland is productive/exile is parasitic; homeland is conducive/exile is not conducive to redemption through labor; homeland is welcoming/exile is hostile; homeland is life-giving/exile is life-threatening; homeland is creative/exile is stultifying; homeland is nurturing to Jewish national culture/exile is destructive; homeland is unifying/exile is fragmenting. (60)

These oppositions present life in exile as an intolerable condition whose only cure can be found in immigration to the "homeland." The Hebrew word for immigration to Israel, aliyah aliyah

(Hebrew; “ascending”)

In Judaism, the honour, accorded to a worshiper, of being called up to read an assigned passage from the Torah at Sabbath morning services; or Jewish immigration to Israel.
, or ascent, encodes the negative valuation which Zionism accords life in diaspora; those who grow disenchanted dis·en·chant  
tr.v. dis·en·chant·ed, dis·en·chant·ing, dis·en·chants
To free from illusion or false belief; undeceive.



[Obsolete French desenchanter, from Old French,
 with life in Israel, meanwhile, are classified as yoridim, or "those who descend."

Zionism, in most of its traditional forms, thus meant the "negation of the diaspora" (shelilat ha-galuth). "The fulfillment of the Zionist dream," Silberstein explains, "depends upon acts of deterritorialization and reterritorialization... Jews and Jewish culture must be deterritorialized from diaspora spaces and reterritorialized in the spaces of the homeland." Silberstein also perceptively notes that the "reterritorialization" of Jewish immigrants into Mandate Palestine eventually involved the "deterritorializing and reterritorializing of large numbers of Palestinian Arabs, particularly during the 1948 War." (61) Israeli political theorist Amnon Raz-Krakotzkin argues persuasively that the traditional Zionist negation of the diaspora went hand-in-hand with a negation of a prior Palestinian presence in the land. "The definition of Zionist settlement as an expression of 'shelilat hagalut' [negation of diaspora] and 'shivat haam' [the return of the nation] to its homeland," Raz-Krakotzkin contends, "prevented r elating e·late  
tr.v. e·lat·ed, e·lat·ing, e·lates
To make proud or joyful: Her success elated the family.

adj.
Elated.
 to the collective yearnings of the local Arab population and its perspective. It [also] undoubtedly made it impossible to turn the fact of this collective's existence into an essential foundation for establishing a new Jewish identity Jewish identity is the subjective state of perceiving oneself as as a Jew and as relating to being Jewish. Jewish identity, by this definition, does not depend on whether or not a person is regarded as a Jew by others, or by an external set of religious, or legal, or sociological ." (62) Raz-Krakotzkin argues that the Zionist valorization val·or·ize  
tr.v. val·or·ized, val·or·iz·ing, val·or·iz·es
1. To establish and maintain the price of (a commodity) by governmental action.

2.
 of a "return to history" accepted the Christian and Enlightenment perception that exilic existence had been an exclusion from history, an exclusion from grace. (63) The Zionist "return to history," sadly, has mirrored much of the Christian West's violent and exclusivist ex·clu·siv·ism  
n.
The practice of excluding or of being exclusive.



ex·clusiv·ist adj. & n.
 practice. "The historical conception of shelilat hagalut, the emptiness of Jewish time that separates the loss of sovereignty over the land and its renewed settlement," Raz-Krakotzkin suggests, "is completed in a direct way through the image of the land-the place for the realization and resolution of history-as an 'empty land.'" (64) The distance between conceiving of the land as empty and actually emptying the land of its indigenous inhabitants p roved unfortunately short.

To counter Zionist discourse and practice of dispossession, Raz-Krakotzkin proposes to recover exile, or galut, as a critical concept. Exile as a concept, for Raz-Krakotzkin, represents an "absence, the consciousness of being in an incomplete present, the consciousness of a blemished blem·ish  
tr.v. blem·ished, blem·ish·ing, blem·ish·es
To mar or impair by a flaw.

n.
An imperfection that mars or impairs; a flaw or defect.
 world." The absence, moreover, involves a lack of justice for Palestinians. To "return" from exile, then, must mean justice for the dispossessed. To yearn for redemption, Raz-Krakotzkin maintains, is to engage in political activity "that values the perspective of the oppressed op·press  
tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es
1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny.

2.
, the only perspective from which a moral stance can develop." (65) A recovery of exile as a critical concept demands that Israeli Jews incorporate the consciousness of exiled Palestinians into their own longing for return. As Silberstein explicates Raz-Krakotzkin's position, "By identifying with and assuming responsibility for, attending to, and responding to 'the consciousness of the conquered Palestinian,' the Jew recovers the 'principles embodied in the theological concept of galut.'" (66)

The critical use to which a secular political theorist like Raz-Krakotzkin puts exile finds a theological counterpart in the Jewish theologian Marc Ellis's recent insistence on exile as the proper place for prophetic Jewish communities. For Ellis, "the reality of exile is less the return to geography or tradition than it is a journey without return." (67) While certainly not downplaying the painful history of many Jewish communities in the diaspora, Ellis also views as a threat to Jewish self-understanding the assimilation of Judaism in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  and in Israel to the state and to power, a "Constantinian Judaism" which threatens to undermine the Jewish prophetic voice from exile. Noting that "the assimilation to the state and power itself creates a wave of dissent," and that "there are Jews in Israel and the United States who oppose injustice and therefore refuse this assimilation," Ellis envisions a community choosing exile from structures of power in order to stand in solidarity with those marginaliz ed and excluded by power. Those in the exilic community then work together for a "return" which means justice for all, not simply landedness for some at the expense of others. (68)

A recovery of exile as a critical concept for political theory or for a theology of the people of God seeking shalom for all will be critical not only of exclusivist Zionist practice but also of any narrow nationalism, including Palestinian nationalism Palestinian nationalism is a nationalist ideology which calls for the creation of a Palestinian state in all or part of the former British Mandate of Palestine. Early history , which would threaten to exclude others from sharing in God's gift of landed security. In this critique Edward Said would again be an ally. While typically viewed as a champion of Palestinian nationalism, Said does not view Palestinian statehood as an end in itself, but rather as one potential way for bringing landed security to all in Paiestine/Israel. In recent years, in fact, Said has become increasingly critical of political arrangements in Palestine/Israel based on separation. "The idea of separation is an idea that I'm just sort of terminally opposed to," Said explains, "just as I'm opposed to most forms of nationalism, just as I'm opposed to secession, to isolation, to separatism of one sort or another." (69) Politics of separation too easily become a po litics of apartheid, with one group enjoying benefits and privileges denied to the other. (70) As an alternative to the politics of separation, Said offers the model of the bi-national state in all of Mandate Palestine, a state in which Jews and Palestinians live as equal citizens. In a fascinating interview with Ari Shavit of the leading Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz, Said connects his appropriation of Adomo's critique of the home with his support for a bi-national state. "Adorno says that in the twentieth century the idea of home has been superseded," Said begins.

I suppose part of my critique of Zionism is that it attaches too much importance to home. Saying, we need a home. And we'll do anything to get a home, even if it means making others homeless. Why do you think I'm so interested in the bi-national state? Because I want a rich fabric of some sort, which no one can fully comprehend, and no one can fully own. I never understood the idea of this is my place, and you are out. I do not appreciate going back to the origin, to the pure. Even if I were a Jew, I'd fight against it. And it won't last. Take it from me Ari. Take my word for it. I'm older than you. It won't even be remembered.

Shavit replies to Said, "You sound very Jewish," to which Said playfully and somewhat provocatively responds, "Of course. I'm the last Jewish intellectual.... The only true follower of Adorno. Let me put it this way: I'm a JewishPalestinian." (71)

Said, Ellis, and Raz-Krakotzkin, I believe, all articulate in similar ways an exilic politics of land and return, a politics which embraces the challenge of living rightly in the land and nonviolently struggles for a return to the land of the dispossessed but which maintains an enduring tension with landedness. The late Palestinian-Israeli writer, Emile Habiby, summed up the necessary tensions of an exilic politics of land when he spoke of a "freedom of longing for the land within the land." (72) This "longing for the land within the land," suggests RazKrakotzkin, can be "a new starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point
terminus a quo

commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the
 of all who dwell in the land, a basis for their partnership." (73)

John Howard Yoder, focused as he was on the church's calling to embody a nonviolent politics amidst the Babylons of the worlds, was wary of attempts to theorize the·o·rize  
v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es

v.intr.
To formulate theories or a theory; speculate.

v.tr.
To propose a theory about.
 the shape of the ideal state, deeming such efforts as surreptitiously sur·rep·ti·tious  
adj.
1. Obtained, done, or made by clandestine or stealthy means.

2. Acting with or marked by stealth. See Synonyms at secret.
 "Constantinian" attempts to identify the state rather than the church as the primary bearer of the gospel of reconciliation, renewal and redemption. (74) Yoder probably would have therefore been skeptical of the enthusiasm with which Said promotes the bi-national state. That said, Yoder did not shy away from Verb 1. shy away from - avoid having to deal with some unpleasant task; "I shy away from this task"
avoid - stay clear from; keep away from; keep out of the way of someone or something; "Her former friends now avoid her"
 ad hoc For this purpose. Meaning "to this" in Latin, it refers to dealing with special situations as they occur rather than functions that are repeated on a regular basis. See ad hoc query and ad hoc mode.  engagements with the state, encouraging Christians to target particular abuses rather than offering up grand political schemes. Yoder's understanding of the people of God as a political body living nonviolently amidst empires while seeking their peace and welfare is, moreover, compatible with the exilic politics of land and return articulated by Ellis, Raz-Krakotzkin, and Said, even as it also operates within an eschatological es·cha·tol·o·gy  
n.
1. The branch of theology that is concerned with the end of the world or of humankind.

2. A belief or a doctrine concerning the ultimate or final things, such as death, the destiny of humanity, the Second
 horizon which animates Yoder's vision with mo re reasons for hope than can be provided by the secular proponents of an exilic politics like Said and Raz-Krakotzkin. Christians, together with others, must embrace the challenge of living rightly in the land: this can include calling for just distribution of land (see, for example, Yader's treatment of the Jubilee), and working nonviolently for landed security for refugees. (75) Part of living rightly in the land, however, will mean living lightly: Christians, as citizens of the heavenly city on pilgrimage in the Babylons of the world, will not use violence to establish justice in the land or to bring about a return to the land. Rather than pursue the sovereignty of the sword, they will pray unceasingly and work nonviolently, impelled im·pel  
tr.v. im·pelled, im·pel·ling, im·pels
1. To urge to action through moral pressure; drive: I was impelled by events to take a stand.

2. To drive forward; propel.
 by a "longing for the land within the land," for the day when all of God's children will dwell securely within the land which God so graciously gives.

Notes

(1.) Mahmoud Darwish. "We Travel Like Other People." included in Larry Towell Larry Towell (born 1953) is a Canadian photographer, poet, and oral historian.

Towell grew up in a large family in rural Ontario and studied visual arts at York University in Toronto where his interest in photography first began.
, Then Palestine (New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: Aperture, 1998), 32.

(2.) For Yoder on "methodologism," see his article, "Walk and Word: The Alternatives to Methodologism." in Theology without Foundations: Religious Practice and the Future of Theological Truth. ed. Stanley Hauerwas Stanley Hauerwas (b. July 24, 1940) is a United Methodist theologian, ethicist, and professor of law. He received a PhD from Yale University and a D.D. from University of Edinburgh, and he has taught at the University of Notre Dame and is currently the Gilbert T. , Nancey Murphy Nancey Murphy is a Christian theologian and philosopher known for her works on theology and science. She is currently Professor of Christian Philosophy at Fuller Theological Seminary. [1] She received a B.A. , and Mark Nation (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1994): 77-90.

(3.) John Howard Yoder, "Exodus and Exile: Two Faces of Liberation," CrossCurrents (Fall 1973): 279-309.

(4.) Yoder, For the Nations: Essays Public and Evangelical (Grand Rapids Grand Rapids, city (1990 pop. 189,126), seat of Kent co., SW central Mich., on the Grand River; inc. 1850. The second largest city in the state, it is a distribution, wholesale, and industrial center for an area that yields fruit, dairy products, farm produce, . Mi.: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1997), 82.

(5.) For Yoder, "Constantinianism" did not simply name the church's alliance with and dissolution into the violent politics of empire, but also designated the perennial temptation for the church to abandon discipleship to its nonviolent Lord in favor of alignment with other, allegedly wider, social movements This is a partial list of social movements.
  • Abahlali baseMjondolo - South African shack dwellers' movement
  • Animal rights movement
  • Anti-consumerism
  • Anti-war movement
  • Anti-globalization movement
  • Brights movement
  • Civil rights movement
. For a nuanced treatment of Yoder on "Constantinianism," see Michael G. Cartwright, "Radical Reform, Radical Catholicity: John Howard For other persons of the same name, see John Howard (disambiguation).
John Winston Howard (born 26 July 1939) is an Australian politician and the 25th Prime Minister of Australia.
 Yoder's Vision of the Faithful Church," in John Howard Yoder, The Royal Priesthood: Essays Ecciesiological and Ecumenical (Grand Rapids, Mi.: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1994), esp. pp. 5-14. See also Craig A. Carter, The Politics of the Cross: The Theology and Social Ethics of John Howard Yoder (Grand Rapids, Mi.: Brazos Press, 2001), 155-178 and Alain Epp Weaver, "After Politics: John Howard Yoder, Body Politics, and the Witnessing Church," The Review of Politics 61/4 (Fall 1999), 649-652.

(6.) Yoder's unpublished writings on Judaism, mostly consisting of lectures delivered at Bethel College Bethel College can refer to:
  • Bethel College (Indiana)
  • Bethel College (Kansas)
  • Bethel College (Kentucky)
  • Bethel University (Minnesota) which was called Bethel College until 2004.
  • Bethel College (Tennessee)
 in Kansas, Earlham College
For other places with the same name, see Earlham (disambiguation).
Earlham College is a national, selective Quaker liberal arts college in Richmond, Indiana. It was founded in 1847 and has approximately 1,200 students. The current president is Douglas C.
 in Indiana, and the Tantur Ecumenical Institute in Jerusalem, were collected by Yoder as The Jewish-Christian Schism Revisited: A Bundle of Old Essays (Elkhart, In.: Shalom Desktop Publication, 1996). These pioneering and provocative essays are being edited for publication in the Radical Traditions series (now with Eerdmans press) by Michael Cartwright and Peter Ochs under the same title. For a more thorough discussion of Yoder's appropriation of Jeremiah's call to the exiles for a reading of Scripture, an interpretation of church history, and a theology of Judaism, see Alain Epp Weaver, Constantinianism, Zionism, Diaspora: Toward a Political Theology Political theology is a branch of both political philosophy and theology that investigates the ways in which theological concepts or ways of thinking underlie political, social, economic and cultural discourses.  of Exile and Return (Akron, Pa.: Mennonite Central Committee The Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) is a relief, service, and peace agency representing 15 Mennonite, Brethren in Christ and Amish bodies in North America. The U.S. headquarters are in Akron, Pennsylvania, the Canadian in Winnipeg, Manitoba.  Occasional Paper #28,2002), 13-22.

(7.) While I am sympathetic to those who wish to substitute the term "Hebrew Bible" for "Old Testament," I do not believe that "Old" necessarily implies a supersessionist approach to Judaism: think of the wisdom of elders, for example, or the aging of a fine wine.

(8.) The phrase, "with the grain of the universe," is Yoder's. See his article, "Armaments and Eschatology eschatology

Theological doctrine of the “last things,” or the end of the world. Mythological eschatologies depict an eternal struggle between order and chaos and celebrate the eternity of order and the repeatability of the origin of the world.
," Studies in Christian Ethics 1 (1988): 43-61. Stanley Hauerwas recently appropriated it as the title of his Gifford lectures The Gifford Lectures were established by the will of Adam Lord Gifford (d. 1887). They were established to "promote and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of the term — in other words, the knowledge of God. ; see Hauerwas, With the Grain of the Universe: The Church's Witness and Natural Theology natural theology
n.
A theology holding that knowledge of God may be acquired by human reason alone without the aid of revealed knowledge.

Noun 1.
 (Grand Rapids, Mi.: Brazos Press, 2001). Both Yoder and Hauerwas assume in their writings that it is the same, Triune God to whom both Testaments witness and whose nonviolent, self-giving love embodies the true "grain of the universe." For seminal studies which emphasize the identity of the Triune God with YHWH. the God of Israel, see R. Kendall Soulen, The God of Israel and Christian Theology Noun 1. Christian theology - the teachings of Christian churches
free grace, grace of God, grace - (Christian theology) the free and unmerited favor or beneficence of God; "God's grace is manifested in the salvation of sinners"; "there but for the grace of God go
 (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996) and Scott Bader-Saye, Church and Israel after Christendom: The Politics of Election (Boulder: Westview Press, 1996).

(9.) John Howard Yoder, "On Not Being in Charge," version of essay in The Jewish-Christian Schism Revisited: A Bundle of Old Essays (Elkhart, In.: Shalom Desktop Publications, 1996), 138-139. This particular essay was also published in War and Its Discontents: Pacifism pacifism, advocacy of opposition to war through individual or collective action against militarism. Although complete, enduring peace is the goal of all pacifism, the methods of achieving it differ.  and Quietism quietism, a heretical form of religious mysticism founded by Miguel de Molinos, a 17th-century Spanish priest. Molinism, or quietism, developed within the Roman Catholic Church in Spain and spread especially to France, where its most influential exponent was Madame  in the Abrahamic Traditions, ed. J. Patout Burns (Washington. D.C.: Georgetown University Georgetown University, in the Georgetown section of Washington, D.C.; Jesuit; coeducational; founded 1789 by John Carroll, chartered 1815, inc. 1844. Its law and medical schools are noteworthy, and its archives are especially rich in letters and manuscripts by and  Press, 1996): 74-90. Yoder also drew parallels between Jewish communities in diaspora and the "believers church Believers Church, or Believers Assembly tend to follow the teachings of William Marrion Branham (1909-1965) a minister who some associate with the Latter Rain Movement, a Pentecostal movement that began after World War II. " vision of decentralized de·cen·tral·ize  
v. de·cen·tral·ized, de·cen·tral·iz·ing, de·cen·tral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To distribute the administrative functions or powers of (a central authority) among several local authorities.
 communities gathered around Scripture and animated by the Holy Spirit. Yoder, "On Not Being in Charge," 138.

(10.) Consider, for example, the following: "That Christian pacifism Christian pacifism is a practice supported by peace churches, Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT), Christian anarchists and other Christians. Pacifism, the opposition to violence and war, is a minority view in Christianity but the dominant belief in Christian communities such as peace  which has a theological basis in the character of God and the work of Jesus Christ is one in which the calculating link between our obedience and ultimate efficacy has been broken, since the triumph of God comes through resurrection and not through effective sovereignty or assured survival."-Yoder, The Politics of Jesus: Vicit A gnus Noster, second revised edition (Grand Rapids, Mi.: Win. B. Eerdmans, 1994), 239.

(11.) For a current treatment of the theme of exile in Scripture, see the work of one of yoder's students, Daniel Smith-Christopher.--A Biblical Theology Biblical Theology is a discipline within Christian theology which studies the Bible from the perspective of understanding the progressive history of God revealing God's self to humanity following the Fall and throughout the Old Testament and New Testament.  of Exile: Overtures to Biblical Theology (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2002).

(12.) Some might accuse Yoder of random selectivity in highlighting this particular strand in his attempt to provide a unified reading of the Old Testament which stands in continuity with the New. The selectivity was certainly not random, in that Yoder read Scripture, as should all Christians, through the lens of God incarnate in Jesus of Nazareth. To those who would reject the attempt to provide a coherent reading of Scripture, championing instead a "postmodernist" interplay of competing, conflicting voices within Scripture, it can only be answered that the postmodern valorization of a plurality of voices, none with more interpretive weight than the others, is itself a particular way of unifying the texts, one with its own implicit ethical and theological agenda, an agenda, one might add, which does not make the rejection of violence central to God's purposes in the world.

(13.) John Howard Yoder, "See How They Go with Their Face to the Sun." in For the Nations: Essays Public and Evangelical (Grand Rapids, Mi.: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1997), 64. For a more extended engagement with Genesis 11, see Yoder, "Meaning after Babble: With Jeffrey Stout Jeffrey Stout (September 11, 1950 in Trenton, NJ –) is a contemporary scholar of religion who focuses on ethics. His works focus on the possibility of ethical discourse in a religiously pluralistic society.  beyond Relativism," The Journal of Religious Ethics 24 (Spring 1996): 125-39.

(14.) Yoder, "Jesus the Jewish Pacifist," in The Jewish-Christian Schism Revisited, 48. Yoder did not address, to my knowledge, the question most pressing to Palestinian Christians when reading the narratives of the Exodus and the entry into the Land, namely, the genocide of the native inhabitants. Yoder's appropriation of YHWH war is helpful and impressive; what one misses in Yoder is any appreciation for how these narratives leave the Canaanites and others outside of the sphere of moral concern. One can, of course, follow historical criticism and question the historicity his·to·ric·i·ty  
n.
Historical authenticity; fact.


historicity
Noun

historical authenticity
 of the Exodus or the conquest, but one cannot escape the fact that the voice of the Canaanite is simply silent in the texts. Instead, their cities and lands are taken over, a vision of landlessness which stands in haunting analogy to the destruction of over 400 Palestinian villages in 1948. One can observe, of course, that other parts of Scripture clearly bring the nations, the Gentiles, within the orbit of God's redemptive action: what Yod er did not do (but, I would contend, should have done) was to argue that other parts of the Scriptural witness correct for the partially defective understanding of God present in the narratives of YHWH war. For Yoder on Exodus and exile, see Yoder, "Exodus and Exile: Two Faces of Liberation." CrossCurrents (Fall 1973): 279-309. For a classic polemic noting the erasure of Canaanites and Palestinians from the sphere of moral concern, together with a critique of the attempt of a contemporary Jewish political theorist to appropriate Exodus as a model for radical politics, see Edward Said, "Michael Walzer's Exodus and Revolution:

A Canaanite Reading," in Blaming the Victims: Spurious Scholarship and the Palestinian Question (London: Verso ver·so  
n. pl. ver·sos
1. A left-hand page of a book or the reverse side of a leaf, as opposed to the recto.

2. The back of a coin or medal.
, 1988): 161-78. Finally, for a challenging article noting how the Exodus and conquest narratives have underwritten various forms of colonialist practice, see Michael Prior Michael Prior (born 6 September, 1973) is a former Australian rules footballer who played for the AFL's Essendon Football Club and the West Coast Eagles.

Drafted 3rd overall in the 1992 AFL Draft, he made the unusual choice at the time to remain with his original club, East
, "The Right to Expel: The Bible and Ethnic Cleansing ethnic cleansing

The creation of an ethnically homogenous geographic area through the elimination of unwanted ethnic groups by deportation, forcible displacement, or genocide.
," in Palestinian Refugees: The Right of Return, ed. Naseer Aruri (London: Pluto Press Pluto Press is a progressive, independent publisher based in London. It was founded in 1969 by Richard Kuper and others as an arm of International Socialism, the forerunner of the Socialist Workers Party in the UK. , 2001): 9-35.

(15.) Yoder, "See How They Go," 53.

(16.) Yoder, "Jesus the Jewish Pacifist," in The Jewish-Christian Schism Revisited, 48.

(17.) Yoder, "See How They Go," 74-75. A. James Reimer's critique, borrowing from John W. Miller, of Yoder's reading of the Old Testament, that Babylon/exile never became the "exclusively normative symbol," either in the Old Testament or in the post-Temple Diaspora, does not mount an effective challenge to Yoder's approach.-A. James Reimer, "Theological Orthodoxy and Jewish Christianity: A Personal Tribute to John Howard Yoder," in The Wisdom of the Cross: Essays in Honor of John Howard Yoder, ed. Stanley Hauerwas, Chris Huebner, Harry Huebner, Mark Nation (Grand Rapids, Mi.: Win. B. Eerdmans, 1999), 446. Yoder need not claim that the motif of a Jeremianic embrace of exile was necessarily dominant, but merely a) that this strand continued both within the scriptural witness and within the history of post-biblical Judaism in the Diaspora and b) that this strand is the one most in continuity with the Gospel message. It should be clear, moreover, from even a cursory reading of Yoder's work, that John W. Miller's characterization of Yoder's theology as "Marcionite" is simply misguided and misleading. See Miller, "In the Footsteps of Marcion: Notes Toward an Understanding of John Yoder's Theology," Conrad Grebel For the college, see .
Conrad Grebel (ca.1498-1526), son of a prominent Swiss merchant and councilman, was a co-founder of the Swiss Brethren movement and is often called the "Father of Anabaptists".
 Review 16 (Spring 1998): 82-92.

(18.) Yoder, Christian Attitudes towards War, Peace, and Revolution: A Companion to Bainton (Elkhart, In.: Distributed by Co-op Bookstore, 1983), 447.

(19.) Yoder, For the Nations, 56.

(20.) Yoder, "Jesus the Jewish Pacifist," 60. Sephardic Jews The following is a list of Sephardic Jews. See also List of Iberian Jews.

A list of Jews of Sephardic ancestry:


This is an incomplete list, which may never be able to satisfy certain standards for completeness.
 throughout the Arab world “Arab States” redirects here. For the political alliance, see Arab League.
The Arab World (Arabic: العالم العربي; Transliteration: al-`alam al-`arabi) stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the
 also lived in exilic communities, usually prospering and faring much better than Jews under Christendom.

(21.) Zionism, for Yoder, represents Judaism's full assimilation into the Christendom of the West: "The culmination of the Christianization of Judaism, then, is the development of Zionism. Zionism creates a secular democratic nation state after the model of the nation states of the West. It defines Jews, for the purpose of building the state, in such a way that it makes no difference if most of them are unbelieving or unobservant. In America the Jews are 'like a church' with a belief structures, life style commitments, and community meetings; in Israel Judaism is a nation and the belief dimension no longer matters. To be born in the state of Israel makes one less of a Jew, in the deep historical sense of the term, than to be born in a ghetto."--Yoder, "Judaism as a Non-Non-Christian Religion," in The Jewish-Christian Schism Revisited, 122.

I should stress here that the critique of Zionism I offer here is directed at Zionist theory and practice insofar in·so·far  
adv.
To such an extent.

Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice
 as it assumed the necessity to exclude and dispossess Palestinians in order to establish Jewish sovereignty in Eretz Yisrael. This does not deny, of course, that Zionism was experienced as liberation by, for example, Jews who escaped Europe during the 1930s and 1940s. Nor does it preclude the possibility of "Zionisins" which renew Jewish life in Eretz Yisrael in a way which does not exclude and dispossess the native Palestinian inhabitants.

(22.) The religious-secular opposition will surface several times in the following section. Rather than attempting to parse the different, and, to my mind, ultimately incoherent ways in which Said deploys this opposition, I will only note that I find the opposition to lack critical persuasiveness. For a helpful critique of Said on "religious" and "secular" criticism, see William D. Hart, Edward Said and the Religious Effects of Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press (known colloquially as CUP) is a publisher given a Royal Charter by Henry VIII in 1534, and one of the two privileged presses (the other being Oxford University Press). , 2000).

On the question of Yoder's relationship to liberalism, Oliver O'Donovan Oliver O'Donovan (b. 1945) FBA is a foremost scholar in the field of Christian ethics and is considered one of the most prominent working theologians in the world. He has made large contributions to political theology, both contemporary and historical.  has claimed that Yoder fell prey to the latter's consumerist voluntarism voluntarism

Metaphysical or psychological system that assigns a more predominant role to the will (Latin, voluntas) than to the intellect. Christian philosophers who have been described as voluntarist include St. Augustine, John Duns Scotus, and Blaise Pascal.
.-O'Donovan, The Desire of the Nations: Rediscovering the Roots of Political Theology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 223-224. For critiques of O'Donovan's characterization of Yoder on this point, see Alain Epp Weaver, "After Politics," 658-659 and P. Travis Kroeker, "Why O'Donovan's Christendom is Not Constantinian and Yoder's Voluntareity is Not Hobbesian: A Debate in Theological Politics Redefined," The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics 20 (2000): 41-64.

(23.) Said's defense of "amateurism," as an intellectual stance which revels "in making connections across lines and barriers, in refusing to be tied down to a specialty, in caring for ideas and values despite the restrictions of a profession" (Representations of the Intellectual [London: Vintage, 1994], 57) brings to mind Yoder's wide-ranging intellect and his fruitful bringing together of scholarship in Biblical studies Biblical studies is the academic study of the Judeo-Christian Bible and related texts. For Christianity, the Bible traditionally comprises the New Testament and Old Testament, which together are sometimes called the "Scriptures. , church history, ethics, theology and beyond.

(24.) For Barth's treatment of "secular parables of the kingdom," see Church Dogmatics dog·mat·ics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
The study of religious dogmas, especially those of a Christian church.
 IV/3:1, par. 69. sec. 2. Both Barth and Yoder-contrary to some simplistic sim·plism  
n.
The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications.



[French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple
 characterizations-could embrace truth extra muros ecclesiae. See Alain Epp Weaver, "Parables of the Kingdom and Religious Plurality: With Barth and Yoder towards a Nonresistant non·re·sis·tant
adj.
1. Not resistant, especially to a disease or environmental factor, such as heat or moisture.

2. Submissively obedient.
 Public Theology," The Mennonite Quarterly Review The Mennonite Quarterly Review (MQR) is an interdisciplinary review journal devoted to Anabaptist and Mennonite history, theology, and contemporary issues. Published continuously since its conception in 1927 by Harold S.  72 (July 1998): 411-40.

(25.) Said, After the Last Sky: Palestinian Lives (London: Vintage, 1986), 5.

(26.) For treatments of the war of 1948 and the Palestinian Nakba, see The War for Palestine: Rewriting the History of 1948, ed. Eugene L. Rogan and Avi Shlaiin (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001); llan Pappe, The Making of the Arab-Israeli Conflict The Arab-Israeli conflict (Arabic: الصراع العربي الإسرائيلي, , 1947-1951 (London: I.B. Tauris I. B. Tauris (usually typeset as I.B.Tauris) is the name of an independent publishing house with offices in London and New York. Its New York offices are co-located with those of Palgrave Macmillan who function as the company's North American distributors. , 1992); Benny Morris Benny Morris (born in 1948) is an Israeli historian, member of the New Historians school, a group of scholars who dispute the mainstream historical view of the origins of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. , The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem, 1947-1949 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987); Avi Shlaim Avi Shlaim (born October 31, 1945 in Baghdad, Iraq) is an Israeli-British dual citizen and historian and identifies ethnically as an Iraqi Jew.[1] He is considered a key member of a group of Israeli scholars known as the New Historians who put forward revised , Collusion Across the Jordan: King Abdullah King Abdullah can refer to:
  • Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz, regent of Saudi Arabia since 1995 and king since 2005.
  • Abdullah II, king of Jordan since 1999
  • Abdullah I, Emir of Transjordan (1921–1946) and King of Transjordan (1946–1951)
, the Zionist Movement Noun 1. Zionist movement - a movement of world Jewry that arose late in the 19th century with the aim of creating a Jewish state in Palestine
Zionism
, and the Partition of Palestine (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1988); Nur Musaiha, Expulsion of the Palestinians: The Concept of "Transfer" in Zionist Political Thought, 1882 -1948 (Washington, DC: Institute for Palestine Studies The Institute for Palestine Studies is a non-profit Arab research organization. According to the Institute, it was established to promote a better understanding of the question of Palestine, and claims to be the only institute in the world exclusively devoted to documentation, , 1992); Walid Khalidi Walid Khalidi (1925- ) is a Palestinian historian who has written extensively on the Palestinian exodus and the 1948 Israeli-Arab War. He is also the General Secretary and co-founder of the Institute for Palestine Studies. , ed., All That Remains: The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated de·pop·u·late  
tr.v. de·pop·u·lat·ed, de·pop·u·lat·ing, de·pop·u·lates
To reduce sharply the population of, as by disease, war, or forcible relocation.
 by Israel in 1948 (Washington, DC: Institute for Palestine Studies, 1992); Meron Benvenisti Meron Benvenisti is an Israeli political scientist who was Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem under Teddy Kollek from 1971 to 1978 and administered East Jerusalem and its largely Arab neighbourhoods[1]. , Sacred Landscape: The Buried History of the Holy Land since 1948 (Berkeley: University of California Press "UC Press" redirects here, but this is also an abbreviation for University of Chicago Press

University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing.
, 2000). F or a recent study which debunks many myths concerning the Arab-Israeli conflict, see Avi Shlaim, The Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World (New York: W.W. Norton, 2000). Finally, for a strong collections of essays analyzing the current Palestinian uprising, or Intifada, against Israeli occupation, see The New Intifada: Resisting Israel's Apartheid, ed. Roane Carey (London: Verso, 2001).

(27.) Said, After the Last Sky, 130.

(28.) Said, After the Last Sky, 12.

(29.) Said, After the Last Sky, 20-21.

(30.) Said, After the Last Sky, 164.

(31.) Said, After the Last Sky, 20-21.

(32.) Said, After the Last Sky, 68.

(33.) Said, Representations of the Intellectual, 35.

(34.) Said. After the Last Sky, 51.

(35.) The endless claims that Yoder's theology is "sectarian" in precisely this sense are sorely misguided. For one explanation of why Yoder's theology is not sectarian, see my "After Politics," 653-656.

(36.) Said, Reflections on Exile and Other Essays (Cambridge: Harvard University Press The Harvard University Press is a publishing house, a division of Harvard University, that is highly respected in academic publishing. It was established on January 13, 1913. In 2005, it published 220 new titles. , 2000), 178.

(37.) Said, Reflections on Exile, 183.

(38.) Said, Reflections on Exile, 175.

(39.) Said, Reflections on Exile, 174. "Secular" in this context appears to mean for Said that exile cannot be placed into a larger, transcendental, theological context of meaning; it is an agonizingly concrete situation with no hope for amelioration (other than what the exile him- or herself can produce).

(40.) Said, Power, Politics, and Culture: Interviews with Edward Said, ed. Gauri Viswanathan (New York:) Pantheon Books 2001), 56.

(41.) Said, Representations, 39. For Said the critic is tempted not only to be a yea-sayer for the community at large, but within one's own community; Said, it should be noted, has been a vociferous critic of the PLO PLO
abbr.
Palestine Liberation Organization


PLO Palestine Liberation Organization

Noun 1. PLO
 and its often misguided handling of the Palestinian struggle. Yoder, too, was no "yea-sayer," or apologist, for the Mennonite community, but rather reserved his most polemical barbs barbs

the primary, delicate filaments that are given off the shaft of a bird's contour feather. They project from the rachis and bear the barbules.
 for critiques of the Mennonite churches. See, for example, "Anabaptist Vision and Mennonite Reality," in Consultation on Anabaptist-Mennonite Theology: Papers Read at the 1969 Aspen Conference. ed. A.J. Klassen (Fresno: Council of Mennonite Seminaries. 1970): 1-46.

(42.) Said, Representations, 39.

(43.) Said, Representations, 46.

(44.) Said, Representations. 45.

(45.) Theodor Adorno, Minima Moralia: Reflections from Damaged Life (London: New Left Books, 1951), 38-39. Quoted in Said, Reflections on Exile, 564-565.

(46.) Adorno, Minima Moralia, 87. Quoted in Said, Reflections on Exile, 568.

(47.) Said, Reflections on Exile, 568.

(48.) For a highly useful and persuasive discussion of pathos in theology and the role of poeisis within that pathos, see Reinhard Hutter, Suffering Divine Things: Theology as Church Practice (Grand Rapids, Mi.: Win. B. Eerdmans, 2000).

(49.) Said, "Introduction: The Right of Return At Last," in Palestinian Refugees: The Right of Return, ed. Naseer Aruri (London: Pluto Press, 2001). 6.

(50.) Said, After the Last Sky, 33.

(51.) Said, Power, Politics, and Culture, 429.

(52.) Said, Reflections on Exile, 179.

(53.) Said, After the Last Sky, 150.

(54.) Said, After the Last Sky, 150. Note once more Said's rather wooden use of the religious-secular opposition. What Said cannot imagine is a religious criticism which prizes the "open" character of exile precisely because it confesses God's redeeming defeat of the powers of sin.

(55.) Gerald Schlabach, "Deuternomic or Constantinian: What Is the Most Basic Problem for Christian Social Christian Social can refer to:
  • Christian socialism, a political ideology.
  • Christian Social Party, a list of parties of which some do and some do not adhere to this ideology.
 Ethics?" in The Wisdom of the Cross, 463.

(56.) I do not mean, through this analysis of the ways in which Zionist discourse and practice have worked historically to dispossess Palestinians, to deny the possibility that other forms of Zionism, Zionisms not dependent upon the dispossession of others, might be possible. The "cultural Zionism Cultural Zionism (Hebrew: ציונות רוחנית ," for example, of an Ahad Haam or a Judah Magnes, would be cases in point. In his interview with An Shavit, Said rejects any talk of "de-Zionization" or a simple dismissal of "Zionism" as a valid term. Jews should be able to be Zionists, Said believes, and "assert their Jewish identity and their connection to the land, so long as it doesn't keep the others out so manifestly."-Said, Power, Politics, and Culture. 451

(57.) Schlabach, 470.

(58.) Laurence Silberstein, The Postzionism Debates: Knowledge and Power in Israeli Culture (Routledge: New York and London, 1999), 20.

(59.) Sander Gilman, "Introduction," in Jewries at the Frontier: Accommodation, Identity, Conflict, ed. Sander Gilman and Milton Sham (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press The University of Illinois Press (UIP), is a major American university press and part of the University of Illinois. Overview
According to the UIP's website:
, 1999), 5.

(60.) Silberstein, 22-23.

(61.) Silberstein, 20.

(62.) Quoted and translated in Silberstein, 179. For the original Hebrew, see Amnon Raz-Krakotzkin, "Exile in the Midst of Sovereignty: A Critique of 'Shelilat HaGalut' in Israeli Culture." Theory and Criticism (Theoria ve-Bikoret) 4 (Fall 1993), 44.

(63.) Raz Krakotzkin, "Redemption and Colonialism: Exile, History and the Nationalization nationalization, acquisition and operation by a country of business enterprises formerly owned and operated by private individuals or corporations. State or local authorities have traditionally taken private property for such public purposes as the construction of  of Jewish Memory," viewed August 2001 at http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/program/neareast/raz-krakotzkin.html. This conclusion bears remarkable similarities to Yoder's critique of Zionism, noted above, as a Jewish assimilation This article's grammar usage needs improvement. Please edit this article in accordance with Wikipedia's .  to Christendom.

(64.) Quoted and translated in Silberstein, 178-179; Raz-Krakotzkin, "Exile in the Midst of Sovereignty," 44.

(65.) Quoted and translated in Silberstein, 181; Raz-Krakotzkin, "Exile in the Midst of Sovereignty," 39.

(66.) Silberstein, 181, citing Raz-Krakotzkin, "Exile in the Midst of Sovereignty," 49.

(67.) Marc H. Ellis Marc H. Ellis, was born in Miami, Florida in 1952. He earned B.A. and M.A. degrees at Florida State University, where he studied under Richard Rubenstein and William Miller. He received his doctorate in contemporary social and religious thought from Marquette University in 1980. , Revolutionary Forgiveness: Essays on Judaism, Christianity, and the Future of Religious Life (Waco. Tx.: Baylor University Baylor University, mainly at Waco, Tex.; coeducational; chartered and opened 1845 by Baptists (see Baylor, Robert E. B.) at Independence, moved 1886 and absorbed Waco Univ. (chartered 1861). The library has a noted Robert Browning collection.  Press, 2000), 121.

(68.) Ellis, Revolutionary Forgiveness, 271. See also Marc Ellis. Practicing Exile: The Religious Odyssey of an American Jew (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001).

(69.) Said. Power, Politics, and Culture, 425.

(70.) Commentators of various political persuasions increasingly describe the reality in the occupied Palestinian territories This article is about the Palestinian territories as a geopolitical phenomenon. For more on their geography, demographics and general history, see West Bank and Gaza Strip.

The Palestinian territories
 as one of apartheid. See for example, several of the essays in The New Intifada: Resisting Israel's Apartheid, ed. Roane Carey (London: Verso, 2001).

(71.) Edward Said, Power, Politics, and Culture. 457-58. Some Israeli writers share aspects of Said's binational bi·na·tion·al  
adj.
Of, relating to, or involving two nations.
 vision. Raz-Krakotzin, for one, believes that galut as a critical concept makes possible "a Jewish identity based on the recognition of the potential embodied in the bi-nationality of the land."- Quoted and translated in Silberstein, 181; Raz-Krakotzkin, "Exile in the Midst of Sovereignty," 49.

(72.) Quoted and translated in Silberstein, 182; Einile Habiby, Ehtayeh, translated from Arabic into Hebrew by Anton Shammas (Tel Aviv Tel Aviv (tĕl əvēv`), city (1994 pop. 355,200), W central Israel, on the Mediterranean Sea. Oficially named Tel Aviv–Jaffa, it is Israel's commercial, financial, communications, and cultural center and the core of its largest : Am Oved, 1988), 9.

(73.) Quoted and translated in Silberstein, 182; Raz-Krakotzkin, "Exile in the Midst of Sovereignty." 52.

(74.) See, for example, Yoder, The Christian Witness to the State (Newton. Ks.: Faith and Life Press, 1964), 77. I discuss Yoder's ad hoc approach to engagements with the state in my article, "After Politics," 669-671.

(75.) For Yoder's treatment of the Jubilee, see The Politics of Jesus, 60-75. Christians, as followers of a nonviolent Lord, cannot, of course, support refugee return which would mean the violent displacement of others in turn. For a discussion of the debate on Palestinian refugee return, see Alain Epp Weaver. "Right of Return: Can Palestinians Go Back Home?" The Christian Century(May 2, 2001): 8-9.

This paper was presented at the Believers church conference in South Bend, Indiana This article is about the city in Indiana, US. For other uses of the name South Bend, see South Bend (disambiguation).
South Bend is a city in St. Joseph County, Indiana, United States.
 on March 7-9, 2002. It will appear in a forthcoming volume of essays from the conference being edited by Gayle Gerber Koontz and Ben C. Ollenburger. (Telford, Pa.: cascadia Press, forthcoming 2004.)

Alain Epp Weaver is country representative for the Mennonite Central Committee in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. In addition to editing a Festschrift fest·schrift  
n. pl. fest·schrif·ten or fest·schrifts
A volume of learned articles or essays by colleagues and admirers, serving as a tribute or memorial especially to a scholar.
 for Gordon Kaufman and writing a history of Mennonite work with Palestinians, he has published articles in the Journal of Religious Ethics, the Review of Politics, and Mennonite quarterly Review.
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