reciprocating hospitality after years of visits to his Palestine farm Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/reciprocating-hospitality-after-years-of-visits-to-his-palestine-farm/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Sat, 17 Nov 2018 21:05:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 黑料正能量 hosts Tent of Nations鈥 Daoud Nassar, reciprocating hospitality after years of visits to his Palestine farm /now/news/2018/emu-hosts-tent-of-nations-daoud-nassar-reciprocating-hospitality-after-years-of-visits-to-his-palestine-farm/ /now/news/2018/emu-hosts-tent-of-nations-daoud-nassar-reciprocating-hospitality-after-years-of-visits-to-his-palestine-farm/#comments Fri, 16 Nov 2018 18:05:40 +0000 /now/news/?p=40478 Since 1998, undergraduate, graduate and alumni groups from 黑料正能量 and Eastern Mennonite Seminary have made the farm outside of Bethlehem a regular stop on their Middle East trips. Several hundred have visited the Nassar family鈥檚 100 acres in Palestine to plant trees, harvest olives and fruit, and learn about the family鈥檚 witness to peace through non-violent action. Workshops, seminars and camps are also offered to between 5-7,000 visitors annually from around the world.

Daoud Nassar gets a tour of 黑料正能量’s sustainability efforts. (Photo by Macson McGuigan)

In those 20 years, one family member, Bshara Nassar, attended and graduated from the . (Bshara, married to Kiersten Rossetto Nassar 鈥13, 聽is a founder of 聽in Washington D.C.)

But his uncle, Daoud Nassar, who directs farm operations and is the lead spokesperson for Tent of Nations, had never visited 黑料正能量.

That changed the first week of November when Nassar spent two days on campus, participating in several interactions: a seminary chapel sermon, a lunch discussion with present and future Middle East cross-cultural participants, a classroom discussion with students at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, and an evening forum and discussion open to the community. Nassar鈥檚 time on campus concluded with a student-led tour of 黑料正能量鈥檚 sustainability efforts, a request he specifically made to gain more ideas for his own family farm in Palestine.

Among many familiar faces on campus to greet Nassar was Timothy Seidel, director of 黑料正能量鈥檚 Center for Interfaith Engagement (CIE) and assistant professor of international development. While living in Bethlehem and working for Mennonite Central Committee from 2004-07, Seidel visited the farm on a number of occasions and saw the family regularly at Christmas Lutheran Church. More recently, he into nonviolence and civil resistance in Palestine. 聽

Nassar鈥檚 visit was sponsored by CIE, Eastern Mennonite Seminary, and the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding. 聽

鈥榃ho Is My Neighbor?鈥

Emeritus Professor Dorothy Jean Weaver introduced Nassar to the seminary audience, delighted to finally be able to reciprocate the hospitality and love the family had shown to her and her students over more than 10 visits to Palestine since the 1990s.

鈥淭heir ongoing friendship has blessed my life,鈥 Weaver said. 鈥淎nd like me, I would venture that many of our seminary students who have visited Tent of Nations would say their experience was uplifting and inspiring, seeing how the Nassar family has endured their situation with a deeply hopeful approach to life and so guided by Christian principles.’鈥

Daoud Nassar speaks to graduate students in 黑料正能量’s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding. (Photo by Jon Styer)

The Nassar family lives on land that they have owned for generations, yet nevertheless has been in continuous litigation with the Israeli government since 1991. Their choice of family motto聽鈥 鈥淲e refuse to be enemies鈥 鈥 was deeply intentional and has strong links to the scripture text about the Good Samaritan, he explained during the seminary chapel service. 聽

鈥淭he good Samaritan did not raise the question what would happen to me if I stop? He asked what would happen to that man if I don鈥檛 stop?,鈥 Nassar said. 鈥淭his is the true meaning of love which is action, to see and act in a different way 鈥 Acting differently, that is what Jesus meant by loving your neighbor. When you act in a different way, you open a new perspective for someone else to see the other differently.鈥

Acting with violence toward their oppressors would not change their situation, Nassar said, recounting the family discussions that led to the eventual establishment of Tent of Nations. 鈥淲e decided there must be another way of resistance, to resist with love, because we believe that hatred creates more hatred, darkness more darkness.鈥

Spiritual experiences and more

Bill Goldberg, director of CJP鈥檚 Summer Peacebuilding Institute, spent a memorable week at Tent of Nations while co-leading the fall 2017 cross-cultural with his wife Lisa Schirch, son Levi and daughter Miranda.

Students from the fall 2017 cross-cultural share at a reunion with Daoud Nassar in Common Grounds. Professor Tim Seidel (right) made many trips to Tent of Nations while with Mennonite Central Committee and for his doctoral research. (Photo by Macson McGuigan)

The days were simple, rich and full, he remembered, with hours of labor helping with the olive harvest followed by meals and fellowship around a fire at night. While the nights were dark, peaceful and still, the hum of construction and the sight of electricity in nearby Israeli settlements, as well as the main road blockade set by Israeli soldiers, was a constant threatening reminder of the situation in Palestine. 聽

Reconnecting with Nassar on campus brought back strong recollections for Goldberg of the site of his 鈥渕ost profound spiritual experience.鈥 Palestinian guide Alaa Hamdan MA 鈥08 (the group also had an Israeli guide) had said that the Muslim call to prayer is 鈥渃onstant, circling the globe continuously, starting a few seconds to a few minutes later in each village as the earth rotates.

On a hilltop at Tent of Nations one evening, Goldberg says he thought the call was merely echoing off the hills. 鈥But then, in succession, it stopped in each village. 聽I was actually hearing the call to prayer travel around the world. It was beautiful and uplifts my heart now just to think about it.鈥

At the reunion, students shared reflections of their own experiences at the farm. 鈥淒aoud talked about the land and updated us on the complex legal situation,鈥 Goldberg said. 鈥淲hile we were there, the family was rushing to refile paperwork to keep their land ownership case in the Israeli court system, a cycle that has sadly become as much a part of their calendar as the olive and fruit harvests. So that was something we wanted to know about.鈥

鈥淗e also talked about volunteers helping at the farm,鈥 Goldberg added, 鈥渁nd of course, tried to recruit a few to come back.鈥

Future Middle East travel

  • 黑料正能量鈥檚 connection to the Middle East expanded last year with the first Alumni and Friends Cross-Cultural to the Middle East with longtime and much beloved leaders Linford and Janet Stutzman.聽Read more here.
  • Check out the Alumni and Friends Cross Cultural webpage for more information on other travels, including the next Middle East trip with the Stutzmans in fall 2019.
  • Seminary professors Dorothy Jean Weaver and Kevin Clark co-lead a Middle East cross-cultural for seminary students in summer 2019.
  • The next Middle East cross cultural for 黑料正能量 undergraduate students travels with the Stutzmans in spring 2019.

 

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