Fr Jim Nolan is a Roan Catholic priest who has sever most of his ministry in the Solomon Islands. I first met him when we were both teachers in Papua New Guinea in the 1970s. Jim, then plain Mr Nolan, taught natural sciences - our curriculum didn't allow for separate specialist teachers of physics, chemistry and biology, though I think his speciality was physics. He is originally from the Republic of Ireland. We have remained in "Christmas card-plus the occasional letter" contact ever since, and yestereday I received this letter from him. I fail to understand why it should take four moths for aan airmail letter from the Pacific to reach the UK -it used to take about a week in PNG days.
I find what Jim writes a beacon of hope in our miserably selfish world
.
24th March, 2016-07-27
Dear Peter,
Easter Greetings.
You frequently come to mind when I hear bits and pieces of the British
debate on the BBC World Service.
UK out of EU?
Donald Trump President of the US?
What more could one ask to set the nerves tingling? And each time I hear of bona fide migrants risking everything on a dilapidated boat from
Libya or in an overcrowded dinghy from
Turkey I recall the Irish who left for
the US, England, Australia ,New Zealand
- anywhere they could manage – in the 19th and 20th
centuries. I’d thought that migration on that scale was over
Now I’m not very proud of the EU response. Only Angela Merkel seemed to rise above the politicking at
first, remembering the humanitarian need
first. Of course she too has had to
backtrack a little. In 1989, with the
fall of the Iron Curtain, did I ever think I’d see more iron curtains in Europe,
this time to keep people out? Truly we
have a long way to go in solidarity.
These destroyers in Paris and Brussels and elsewhere destroy even the
good will towards the genuine ones. God help all honest-to- God Muslims in the
western world these days. God help the
genuine refugees from wars and conflicts our policies have often played a part
in causing. Surely there are many books
to be written in future researching the correlation between the Iraqi and
Afghan wars and western policy before and after 9/11 and the rise of al the
extreme Islamist groups. (Did you ever read
William Dalrymple’s “Return of the King” about Afghanistan in c1930-40?)
And in the midst of all this like an ever running sore is Israel and Palestine,
neither side served well by their leadership, but who could endure the daily
life of a Gaza resident or a Palestinian West Bank resident? How far back must you go to address the roots
of this issue? Surely at least 1948. The Catholic landowners evicted from their
lands in the Ulster Plantation after 1690 never ceased to look for their lands
back and this was one of the main factors in all the troubles there right up to
the Good Friday Agreement of 1998 – and beyond:
“They haven’t gone away, you know”, to quote one of the most sinister
references to the IRA.
And there’s probably an orgy of bloody remembrance going
on in Dublin this weekend, although some have begun to realise that the 20 000
Irish dead in WW1 Were fighting for what they believed in too. Maybe there’ll be more political correctness
about these commemorations. There was
none in 1966.
What is it about us human beings that we’re so tribal and
bloody-minded no matter what peaceful and
peacemaking religion we belong to?
We proclaim the universal dignity of the human being and then do all we
can to exclude anybody different from ourselves. The best bit of advice I was given as a deacon
was from an extraordinary English parish
priest in East Acton in 1979: “Always accept
people as you find them, never as you’d like them to be.” Wouldn’t the world be a different place if we
could live by that?
The same priest (….) had another remarkable quality. St Aidan’s East Acton was rebuilt after WWII in 1950 and he
insisted on the very best original art and was rightly proud that the Daily
Telegraph art correspondent c1979
had written that one of the finest works
of modern religious art in Europe was
Graham Sutherland’s Crucifixion in St Aiden’s East Acton . Like the priest who set up the crypt in St
Martin-i-the- Fields for the homeless he believed that only the best was good
enough for the poorest. (Have you been
to St Martin’s? A very good friend Fr (……)
, former Melanesian Brother, is there.
Happy Easter!
God bless.
Jim
Fr Jim very much missed from Guesserane .. as a young person I lost a bit of faith in our crazy world . Fr Jim restored it with his down to earth approach and how he looked at all as equal.
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