by Marie Dennis
Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace

The coronavirus has upended communities around the world, threatening livelihoods and lives, forcing a previously unthinkable change in daily routines, helping everyone to recognize the fragility of life and the deep injustice that leaves too many people, communities and countries vastly more vulnerable than others. At the same time, the impact of the pandemic is being universally felt as it crosses political, geographic, economic, social, religious and cultural boundaries, powerfully illustrating the reality of global interdependence and calling into question our basic assumptions about security and the politics of fear and division.

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Perhaps this pandemic will help us to recognize the critical need for a transformative shift away from violence in our values and priorities. Some reasons that such a shift is urgent are clearly visible:

  • Those who are living on the margins, exposed by war and forced displacement, poverty and environmental disruption, are the most vulnerable to the pandemic’s ravages. The violences of economic injustice and ecological devastation are intensified by this global crisis. National and international priorities must be shaped by and meet the needs of the most vulnerable communities.
  • The experience of radical social-distancing has helped us to recognize the centrality of relationships in our lives and the importance of community. Even in cultures where individualism is held as a high value, as the coronavirus isolates us, we are building safe bridges, many of them virtual, to care for each other and those most at risk.
  • The coronavirus does not respect political borders, physical barriers or cultural differences. Responding effectively to transnational threats requires respectful global cooperation to promote the well-being of the whole earth community rather than xenophobia and nationalism.
  • Spending hundreds of billions of dollars annually on weapons and preparations for war has not given us the tools to address a global pandemic. In fact, military spending steals resources from providing for healthy, resilient communities across the country and around the world that can slow the spread of disease and more quickly recover from serious threats like the COVID-19 pandemic…

Read the entire article at this link.

2 thoughts on “COVID-19: Toward authentic security rooted in nonviolence

  1. My meditations on the posted articles related to COVID-19 pandemic tend towards some priceless thoughts of the patron of the Catholic Dioceses of Wilmington, Delaware, Saint Francis de Sales. I love how he sums up the faith, and I’d say rather succinctly: “There are many counterfeits, but there is only one true devotion”. The body of thoughts surrounding that gem are worth buying and reading “Philothea, or An Introduction To The Devout Life” cover to cover. Clearly (quite so to these jaded eyes!) the abandonment of this classic work in modern Catholic parish life has been a tragic mistake. A greater tragedy is difficult for me to conceive, even in the face of the pandemic now upon us. Thanks be to God for your hard work in pursuit of the path less chosen. A tree is known by its fruit, and your fruits are excellent.

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