Francis Gonsalves

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Heavenly heights

You’ve grown a halo and wings!” joked a friend upon my return last week from a yatra embracing Israel, Egypt and Jordan.

Holy land of the heart

As you read this, I am headed for Israel — to visit places connected to the birth, life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. And yet, even before I reach there, I am already visiting those sacred spots in my imagination. Sacred spaces exist not only on our landscape, but flower upon the fertile soil of our minds and hearts.

The benefit of doubt

Doubt seems opposed to faith. “If you doubt, you don’t have faith; if you have faith, you don’t doubt” runs the simplistic logic to show that doubt and faith are irreconcilable bedfellows.

Crosses and crowns

My cross is just too heavy to bear,” wept a young widow whose husband drowned, whose teenaged son was alcoholic and whose daughter had failed her SSC exams.

Martyrs & Mahatmas

You shall never die” is what we can say to martyrs and mahatmas who leave indelible footprints upon the sands of time. On March 24, 1980, Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero was shot dead because he fearlessly defended human rights. His assassins believed that they silenced him. But, the UNO “raised him up” by declaring March 24 as the “International Day for the Right to the Truth of Victims of Gross Human Rights Violations and for the Dignity of Victims”.

A little of David in all of us

David and Goliath are among the most popular pairs in the Bible. While Goliath is considered the embodiment of evil, David is an enigmatic hero. The name David, meaning “beloved”, appears a thousand times in the Bible. Judaism and Islam, too, regard David or Dawud, as Yahweh’s or Allah’s favoured king and prophet.
The story of David slaying the gigantic Goliath is well known. When King Saul tries to arm the boy David with armour and helmet, David pleads: “Remove these, for I’m not used to them!” (1 Samuel 17:39) Then, approaching Goliath, he says defiantly: “You come to me with sword, spear and javelin, but I come to you armed with the name of God.” David’s slingshot seems a ridiculous mismatch for Goliath’s sword and shield. Yet, David wins.

A leap significance

Today, the “leap day”, will come again only after four years. It is a special day and those born on February 29 are, in some way, special. Morarji Desai, the former Prime Minister of India, remained evergreen even in the dusk of his life with his tongue-in-cheek “I’m only 20 years old!” remark when he was, really, 80 years old.

Pearls of sorrow, joy

Which is the Bible’s shortest sentence? Its longest psalm? Interestingly, the Bible’s shortest sentence (John 11:35) and its longest psalm (119) have one commonality: tears! The two-word sentence “Jesus wept” and the lengthiest 176-verse psalm reading: “My eyes shed streams of tears” (v.126) make me wonder: aren’t tears God-gifted?
Greek philosophy saw God as “The Unmoved Mover” who moves everything while being immovable. While one might associate joy and anger with God, weeping is surely unbecoming of Almighty God. Against this “high” Greek conception of deity, it would seem stupid and shameful for early Christians to even suggest that Jesus wept. Yet, they did.

Colours of martyrdom

Let us all be brave enough to die the death of a martyr, but let no one lust for martyrdom,” wrote Mahatma Gandhi, cautioning us about the ambiguities in our understanding of martyrdom.

Veiled choices

Among other adjectives, the Election Commission’s recent order to veil the statues of Uttar Pradesh chief minister Mayawati and her party’s symbol is described as “elephantine”. Incompetent though I am to comment upon a political mandate of mammoth proportions, my interest in veils — in India, where everyone from the aam aadmi to its President has a view on veils — is merely to assess their value.

The just-concluded summit meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) in Chicago leaves gaping questions about the viability and direction of the world’s largest military alliance.

If we rework Shankar’s cartoon with, say, Mahatma Gandhi riding a bullock cart of democracy in his dwija dress and Jawaharlal Nehru standing in his sanatan pundit’s dress, a thread across his body, an