COUNTLESS SOULS CRY OUT TO GOD
The waters that rose up from the deep last week, drowning tens of thousands of people across a wide arc of South and Southeast Asia, were a cataclysm of Biblical proportions. But most of those who survived to weep and mourn--like most of those who died--had never heard of Noah or the Biblical God of Wrath, figures so familiar to Christians and Jews; they were, instead, Hindus, Muslims and Buddhists. Caught up in the disaster, they had no time for religious ceremonies of any kind. In Sri Lanka, as in coastal southern India and along the beaches of Indonesia, there was only time to dig huge holes in the ground and shovel in the dead. "In this kind of tragedy, there is no religion," said Syed Abdullah, a local imam in the ancient south Indian port of Nagapattinam, where Muslims, Hindus and Christians have lived together peacefully for centuries. "Let the dead be buried together. They died together in the sea. Let their souls get peace together."
But no survivor of a disaster of this magnitude can long avoid asking the Job-like questions, "Why us? Why here? Why now?"
HINDUS: Those hardest hit by last week's tsunami were poor fishing communities whose inhabitants--mostly Hindus--are untutored in refined theological speculation on life and death. For them, all of life is controlled by the play of capricious deities. Yet their religious world views and practices provide a measure of spiritual relief from the toil of their labor. Along the coast of south India, Hindus tend to worship local deities, most of them female and far down the Hindu hierarchy of divinities. But like Shiva and other classic gods and goddesses, these local deities are ambivalent: they have the power to destroy as well as to create. The ocean itself is a terrible god who eats people and boats, but also provides fish as food. "Hindus use the deities to think about and explain happenings like the tsunami as destructive acts of god," says Richard Davis, a specialist in South Asian Hinduism at Bard College in New York. "Relating to the local deity and cooling her anger through propitiation is more important than thinking about personal or collective guilt for what has happened."
BUDDHISTS: Among coastline Buddhists in Thailand and Sri Lanka, two of the hardest-hit areas, there are many weather gods to both blame and propitiate with assorted prayers and offerings. "But when the time comes to make sense of it all," says Donald Lopez, professor of Buddhist studies at the University of Michigan, "Buddhists will look to the idea of karma and ask what they did, individually and collectively, that a tragedy like this happened." Their main concern will be to generate good merit that can be transferred to the deceased as a positive force in their next lifetime. To this end, families will go to a temple to pray or have a special ceremony performed by a monk acting as an intermediary in the transfer of merit.
MUSLIMS: Like the Bible, the Qur'an recognizes no natural laws independent of God's will. All that happens is Allah's doing, and nature itself--wind, rain, storms--constitutes signs of his mercy and compassion. Even the destructive tsunami, therefore, must have some hidden, positive purpose. "Ninety percent of Muslims will understand a tragedy like this in this way," says Akbar Ahmed, chair of Islamic studies at American University. "On the individual level, they also have this notion that God is testing them by taking away a child or a spouse. Will you lose your faith or will you continue to believe?" This idea of testing and the patience it requires, Ahmed argues, provides "an in-built psychological cushion which allows Muslims to absorb a tragedy of this scale."
CHRISTIANS: Though a minority in places like Sri Lanka and south India, Christians also had to look to their faith to make some sense out of the sudden loss of lives and of whatever possessions they had accumulated. For them there is the example of Jesus on the cross--the God who takes on human flesh and, with it, a criminal's cruel torturing and death. But even though the acceptance of suffering is deeply embedded in the Christian world view, the death of so many innocent children alone was an excruciating test of the Christian belief that their God is a God of love.
Job, too, was tested, his patience tried to the extreme. But he was only one just man. Whole families, whole communities, countless pasts and futures have been obliterated by this tsunami's roiling force. Little wonder that from Sumatra to Madagascar, innumerable voices cry out to God. The miracle, if there is one, may be that so many still believe.
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Kenneth L. Woodward is a contributing editor of Newsweek where he had been Religion editor for 38 years. In that time he reported on a variety of subjects from six continents for various departments of the magazine. Woodward is the author of some 750 articles for Newsweek , including more than 100 cover stories He has written articles, essays and book reviews for other publications such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Wall Street Journal, Commonweal, America, First Things, Concillium, The Christian Century, The Tablet (London) and The Nation. He is a contributor to the forthcoming Encyclopedia of Protestantism and the author of three books: Grandparents Grandchildren: The Vital Connection, with Arthur Kornhaber; MD, Making Saints: How the Catholic Church Determines Who Becomes a Saint, Who Doesn't and Why, and most recently, The Book of Miracles: The Meaning of the Miracle Stories in Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism and Islam. He is a winner of the National Magazine Award among other honors. He has lectured at over 50 universities; has been a Fellow of the National Humanities Center and Regents' Lecturer in Religion at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He holds four honorary degrees, and appears frequently on television as a commentator.
Mr. Woodward is a native of Cleveland Ohio. He is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame and has done post-graduate work at the University of Michigan Law School, the University of Iowa and the University of Strasbourg, France. He and his wife, Betty, have three grown children and five grandchildren.
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