Title: Terry Waite Speaks at Lutheran College
ELCA NEWS SERVICE
March 20, 1997
TERRY WAITE STILL STRIVES FOR PEACE
97-10-026-MS*
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (ELCA) -- When he met with the hostage
takers, Terry Waite was blindfolded, his body was searched, his
scars were probed and his teeth were examined. After he was
inspected for locating and recording devices, he was given a
change of clothing. Waite endured all this, then he tried to
implement peace in Lebanon.
Waite spoke March 8 at the annual Peace Prize Forum at
Augustana College. The theme was: "Striving for Peace: Science
and Ethics in International Affairs." Waite was kidnapped by
Shiite Muslims in Beirut while he was attempting to secure the
release of American and European hostages in 1987. He was held
hostage for nearly five years.
Waite started working against terrorism as an adviser on
foreign affairs to the Archbishop of Canterbury, world leader of
the Anglican Church. The church became involved in hostage
situations because people had no where to turn, Waite said.
"Needy people, desperate people came to the church and said,
'Please help,'" Waite said. "The church had international
contacts and the ability to make and develop new contacts, so
there was a chance that something could be done on behalf of
suffering people," he said.
Waite encouraged Peace Prize Forum participants to promote
and spread the understanding of peace. The search for peace is a
demanding agenda, he said. "If you agree to help someone, you
pick up part of the burden that they are bearing, and you must be
prepared to stick with it."
Waite encouraged people to find hope within their hearts to
become peacemakers. "Enable the weak to be strong and the just
to be compassionate," he said.
According to Waite, terrorism is a contemporary threat that
is becoming more and more evident to those who live in the United
States. "Most people do not understand the devastating
destruction of these types of behaviors until it impinges on
them," Waite said.
"Terrorists know that by taking hostages, they will get some
power," he said. "It gives them the ability perhaps to tweak the
tail of the mighty United States or to make Europe jump."
As a hostage negotiator, Waite said he was very vulnerable.
He had nothing to give people except the promise that he would
work to find a face-saving solution to the problem, a solution
that would enable all parties involved in the problem to walk
away from the situation with their dignity intact.
Waite was kept in solitary confinement for almost four
years, his arms and legs often chained to the wall. He was
denied sunlight and any news from the outside world. In
captivity, there were times, in fact, most of the time, I
wouldn't say that I felt the close presence of God," Waite said.
"In fact, I felt alone, afraid and vulnerable."
However, religion did enable him to maintain hope, and hope
is an essential ingredient to survival, Waite said. Hope allowed
Waite to understand that his kidnappers could never have total
control over him. "You have the power to break my body," he
said. "You have the power to bend my mind, but my soul is not
yours to possess."
Communication between different countries and different
cultures is a necessity, Waite said. It is important for us to
keep the communication channels open so that minority groups and
religious organizations are heard and they feel they are
generally a part of the community, he said.
The annual Peace Prize Forum is hosted on a rotating basis
by five colleges of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America,
each sharing Norwegian heritage. The other participating
colleges are Augsburg College, Minneapolis; Concordia College,
Moorhead, Minn.; Luther College, Decorah, Iowa; and St. Olaf
College, Northfield, Minn.
Other speakers at the event were Dr. Francesco Calogero,
1995 Nobel Laureate, secretary general, Pugwash Conferences on
Science and World Affairs and professor of theoretical physics,
University of Rome; and Betty A. Reardon, director of the Peace
Education Program, Teacher's College, Columbia University, New
York; and Joseph Rotblat, London, 1995 Nobel Laureate, physicist
and anti-nuclear weapons activist.
[*Michelle Spence, Moorpark, Calif., is a senior at
Augustana College, majoring in journalism and
government/international affairs.]
For information contact:
Ann Hafften, Director (773) 380-2958 or [log in to unmask]
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html
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