Local Editor
The sacrosanctity of martyrdom is inarguable when it is for the
sake of a just cause. It is a choice that goes way beyond the material existence
to reach utmost nobility and altruism.
Martyrs preferred to fall than to live dishonored. They
chose sacrifice so that the rest of us shall live in dignity. They are people
who believed in their cause, and hence sacrificed themselves for it. The thought
of death did not fright them. They nay continued to struggle till the end. Their
strife is part of the culture of an eternal life.
Nonetheless, shallow
mischievous people did not spare the fine culture of martyrdom from their scold.
They saw it as a culture of death that terminates life. They shrugged off the
very meaning of it, that is, had it not been for martyrdom, there would have
been no meaning for existence. Why is this noble and fine act targeted? Can any
victory be scored if it weren't for the culture of martyrdom and resistance in
any society?
Martyrdom, a Bridge for a Better
Life
The Holy Quran and holy books spoke of martyrdom and its
importance. They promised martyrs the higher degree of paradise. Loyalty to the
Resistance parliamentary bloc member Ali Fayyad gives a lowdown on martyrdom.
"It is self-sacrifice for the sake of God, the nation, or public interests. It
is God's selection of men, upon whom He bestowed His very blessing to sacrifice
themselves;" he says.
"It is a high rank where martyrs would be next to
Al-Awliyaa (true and sincere believers); it is also a high level of morals and
patriotism," he adds.
For his part, the Secretary General of the Communist
Party, Khaled Hdadeh, points out that martyrdom is not an aim per se, but rather
a fact that occurs during strife and struggle for the sake of a social or
national cause. "Martyrdom is an event that can take place, since fighters-in
their fight for liberation-know very well that they can fall in the battle," he
says, adding that fighters do not fear to fall for the sake of their
cause.
Hdadeh also corroborates that martyrdom turns from being a goal per se
into a bridge for a better life, whether for the fighter himself, or for the
coming generations.
"This is when martyrdom becomes part of the culture
of life and of events fighters encounter, of which they are aware fearlessly,"
he says.
Furthermore, Nationalist poet Ghassan Matar says that martyrdom
is when men sacrifice their life and blood for the sake of a major cause they
consider as fateful ad decisive. He depicts those fighters as life messengers
because with their blood they sacrifice, they grant others a dignified life. "In
a nutshell, [martyrdom] is giving with no limits."
"Martyrdom is
sacrificing for the sake of what is most sacred," Nassif Azzi from the Free
Patriotic Movement says. "It is choosing to die for what we believe in, for what
we see as the noblest aim. Everyone who dies for the sake of a just cause or
principle is a martyr," he says.
The Culture of Martyrdom, a
Preamble for the Culture of Life
This noble cause was not saved
the retardation bids which attempted to tamper with is
sacrosanctity.
Some saw it as a culture of death rather than a culture of life. Some
even disregarded that martyrdom is the only way to recuperate human dignity.
History actually abounds with experiences only proving [the efficacy] of this
weapon. MP Ali Fayyad wonders at depicting the culture of martyrdom as the
culture of death. He sees that the death of a martyr constitutes a life for
others. He even says that martyrdom is not death per se but rather a sort of
rising above the essence of life. "The upshot of martyrdom helps protect the
society," he argues.
Martyrdom has nothing to do with the so-called
culture of death. Azzi says that the culture of death is the language of
criminals and oppressors, while the culture of martyrdom aims at struggling for
the sake of justice and peace. "Aren't we all eventually people who fight
for their right to their land and dignity?" he wonders. "What we have
experienced for the past years blurred all images and stripped things from their
meaning," he says, pointing out at the atrocity of this political investment of
martyrdom and daily exploitation in politics.
For his part, Hdadeh goes
way beyond the depiction of a martyrdom culture. He insists that such a culture
is called the culture of resistance. According to him, it is part of the culture
of life and beauty and not of death. He says that he who calls not to fight for
fear of martyrdom indeed calls to support occupation and spreading retardation,
nay to the culture of death. Hdadeh relates how fighters used to go to the
battle with joy, knowing they might die for the sake of their cause. "We are a
party which the civil war has cost hundreds of martyrs, also hundreds were
martyred and injured while thousands of detainees remain in the enemy's prisons
in order to liberate the land," he says. "Martyrdom is a price we pay during our
struggle. We consider it as part of the change process for the sake of joy, the
joy of liberation or the joy of democratic change," he maintains.
Martyrs
don't die; they are alive. The Holy Quran says so. Hence, there is no room for
death in the culture of martyrdom.
Poet Matar stresses that death doesn't end the life of believers but
that their life rather starts with death. All monotheistic religions promised
paradise to people if they were good and satisfied God. "Depicting martyrdom as
the culture of death only shows the primitive understanding of the Jihad
culture. The culture of death is the culture of humiliation and surrender. But
to sacrifice ourselves for the sake of our nation and major causes is the
culture of life par excellence," he underlines. "It is not important if our
bodies fall. What is important is to have our souls rising," he
corroborates.
"Bodies can die but souls continue to affect others on
their path towards dignity and justice," he says. "Did Imam Hussein fall because
he loved to die or because he refused a life of humiliation and servility? Was
Jesus killed because he loved to die or because he sought to sacrifice his blood
for the sake of humankind?" "Just as usual, when they like to tamper with a
salient cause, they try to lower themselves to silly material levels; they do
not see all the nobility, the light, the decency, the beauty and the values
behind martyrdom," he underlines.
No Resistance, No Room for
Victory
History abounds with experiences that relate how dignity
and rights were recuperated, with martyrdom being the most powerful key. Not a
single people would have gained back what had been stripped from them if it
weren't for the resistance. And Lebanon is just the best example.
Fayyad
says that all nations and civilizations had been through challenges relevant to
their existence, sovereignty, and dignity, and that they had no choice but
martyrdom for the sake of the cause or the nation. "It is hard to imagine that
nations can protect themselves without being ready for sacrifice or martyrdom.
This is an issue that is not only restricted to the religious meaning of
martyrdom, but to a general humanitarian question which nations and peoples have
experienced."
Within this context, he rakes up the experience of Hizbullah, noting the
importance of having considered martyrdom as the mainstay to succeeding in
scoring achievements.
Echoing Fayyad, poet Matar says that all peoples
who have been colonized and whose lands have been occupied resorted to the
resistance. He adds that only submissive people believe that with politics and
diplomacy, they can achieve victory. "Experiences have proven that, ever since
the beginning of the world, namely in Lebanon and Palestine, neither land can be
liberated nor enemy can be evicted had it not been for ultimate giving and the
blood sating the land."
"Victory cannot be scored if blood was not sacrificed
for the sake of the cause we believe in," he utters.
Just like Matar,
Hdadeh sees that struggling peoples had to pay the price of liberation.
For
his part, Azzi maintains that martyrdom is an act of belief in the land and
dignity, in God and Man, in the construction evolution of peoples. He even
stresses that martyrdom for the sake of the Right must be completed by
sacrificing its own body in order that the humanity of humankind is
achieved.Source: al-Intiqad, translated and edited
by moqawama.org
**By Fatima Salameh
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