Fleeing to Stay Alive: Tales of Forced Displacement in Venezuela & Gaza – Bruce N. Fisk
Fleeing to Stay Alive:
Tales of Forced Displacement in Venezuela and Gaza
Bruce N. Fisk, NEME Senior Research Fellow
From Panamá’s shiny capital we drove our rental as far as we could toward the border of Colombia. My wife and I had flown from Peru to attend a fortunate cousin’s unforgettable wedding, but we were as eager to meet some of the forgettable unfortunates desperately squeezing through the “narrow waist” of the American hemisphere. After years roaming the Middle East, we counted a number of Palestinian refugees among our friends, but thus far these Latino refugiados en movimiento existed for us in only two dimensions, as fodder for news reports and topics of awkward conversation.
Five hours on the road brought us to an impassable tangle of jungle, mountains and rivers. The Darién Gap as it’s called is the only break in the Pan-American highway—the 30,000 mile thread that weaves through fourteen countries from Alaska to Argentina. In Spanish it’s el Tapón, The Plug. For migrants and asylum seekers it’s the largest obstacle on the path from South America to their land of hope, the U.S.A.
More than half a million souls dared the 100-kilometer Gap last year (2023). That’s 1,400 per day. They travel solo, as couples, as single parents with children. They form small groups along the way, many retracing the path of relatives who have sent money, and Instagram photos that romanticize immigrant life in the U.S. They encounter thieves and coyotes (human smugglers). They face abuse and sexual violation. They fear snake bites and injury, wolf attacks and drowning.
Our drive ended in the dusty shambles of Lajas Blancas, a reception hamlet where migrants, emerging from the jungle on foot or in dugout canoes, find a few services and handouts. UN and Red Cross vehicles came and went. Trekkers clutched brand new sweatshirts bestowed by some NGO, oddly out of place in the tropical heat.
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Reprise: Easter Song, Keith Green and Reflections on the Resurrection – Wayne Northey
Happy Easter all! Every year I reissue a reflection on Easter done a couple of years ago: Easter Song, Keith Green, and Reflections on the Resurrection. So some of you will have seen this before in earlier iteration. It obviously speaks for itself–and to a...
The Genesis Flood: A Critique of Violence by Tabitha Sheeder
Introduction The story of Noah’s ark has always been a favorite for children’s ministry, yet beneath the images of docile beasts walking two by two, there runs a current of violence unparalleled in the Old Testament. “Rarely today are we shown images of those children...
Grace and Participation – Eileen Robbins
“From beginning to end, in the work of man’s conversion and sanctification there run side by side two lines: divine grace and human free will.” - Panagiotis Trembelas in How Are We Saved? By Kallistos Ware. Before I took any steps to seek out Orthodoxy, I was...
Stones – Jim Jones
STONES One of Zeno's paradoxes claims to prove you can never arrive at your destination, as you must first travel halfway there,then halfway again, another half always in front of you.Forever prohibited from finishing the race. Another claims,...
COVID-19 & the USA – Ron Dart
COVID 19 has spread with much rapidity from China through countries in Europe (Italy, Spain, France, UK, Belgium, Netherlands and Germany being ravaged the most) to the USA. But, in the recent posting by Worldometer, the USA has now passed, in deaths, the most...
descendit ad inferos “The Harrowing of Hades” with Sample Texts (compiled by Brad Jersak)
The early church regarded this descent as far more than Jesus being entombed or visiting the place of the dead. They regarded it as Christ’s victorious rescue mission into the kingdom of darkness—“hell” if you like. This is our Lord’s great conquest of the underworld in which Satan is bound, defeated and his captive souls rescued.
Where Lent Meets Ramadan – Brad Jersak with Safi Kaskas
Safi Kaskas The purpose of worshiping God: As we approach Ramadan, I keep reminding myself that God doesn't need my fasting or my five times a day prayers. So why I'm totally focused on fasting and praying? It is because I need to fast and feel with the poor...
A Crucible to Call Our Own – Josh Valley
Today marks the 75th anniversary of Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s martyrdom. The crucible in which Bonhoeffer lived and died—Nazi Germany, the Holocaust, and World War Two—has been seen, up until now, as the greatest existential threat humanity has faced in modern...
The Universe Doesn’t Love You – Kenneth Tanner
Galaxy cluster SDSS J1038+484 (NASA) The universe is vast, mysterious, dark, and lovely. The images of the universe that we are the first privileged humans to see boggle the mind and provoke deep emotion. The size and beauty of the cosmos compel us to ask questions of...
On Death this Resurrection Sunday – Sarah Van Diest
Magnetized toward the quest to find the harmonious amid the dissonant, the common amid the diverse, the contemplative mind untethers itself from the attentions of the day and looks beyond what is demanded of it in hopes of finding order and continuity. A profoundly...
