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Commentary: Why U.S. Soldiers Donate Blood to Injured Terrorists

Chuck Colson

BreakPoint

March 6, 2007

What difference does a worldview make? Around the world, we are seeing the clash of civilizations in action. In recent days, that clash has given us a story of life, and stories of death.

In Baghdad yesterday, a terrorist blew himself up with a car bomb, killing at least twenty-eight people and wounding dozens more. One witness told the Associated Press that pieces of human flesh were scattered all around the marketplace.

In Afghanistan last month, another terrorist blew himself up near a crowd gathered for a ceremony to open a hospital emergency ward. A few days later, a Sunni Muslim blew herself up and forty others at a college in Baghdad.

In all three cases, Muslims blew up Muslims. The response of Europe and the Muslim world to the stories of death? Outrage? No. Silence. Did the Western press condemn them? No.

Last week, another story was told on NBC News—this time, a riveting story of life.

NBC has been running a gripping series on the emergency military triage facilities in Iraq. Last Thursday, NBC showed wounded Iraqi insurgents being brought to Camp Speicher near Tikrit. Two of them had been caught placing an explosive device on a nearby road, intending to kill Americans, when a U.S. helicopter opened fire on them.

The U.S. medical team moved heaven and earth to save their lives. One insurgent, however, was not going to survive unless he got thirty pints of blood.

But the base was low on blood. The call went out for volunteer donors; minutes later, dozens of G.I.s had lined up.

At the head of the line was a battle-hardened soldier named Brian Suam. Asked if it mattered that his blood was going to an insurgent, he smiled and said, no—“A human life is a human life.”

I have never seen a more dramatic example of worldviews in contrast, nor have I been prouder of an American G.I. On one hand, we have the horrors of a civilization that values death—even the death of its own children—if by killing them they can hurt the infidels. On the other side, we have a story that makes us realize just how deeply embedded within American life is our Judeo-Christian heritage. This heritage teaches that human life is sacred—even the life of an enemy who falls into our hands.

These stories make nonsense of the claim that there is no real difference between Christianity and Islam. The clash of civilizations is not only about a fundamental difference between ways of viewing God, reality, life, and life’s meaning; it’s also about good versus evil, life versus death.

Of course, this doesn’t apply to peace-loving Muslims, but to the radicals now surging in the Arab world.

It’s time for the West to wake up. As Thomas Friedman of the New York Times put it last week, there is no accepted source of Arab-Muslim authority today for peace-loving Muslims “to anchor their souls in.” We need, Friedman writes, “a counter-terrorism strategy that delegitimizes suicide bombers.” But that will happen only when Muslim leaders condemn violence.

Friedman is right. We ignore the horrors of radical Islam to our peril. If we do nothing, in time, the stories of life will be overwhelmed by the stories of death.


 

Chuck Colson is the Founder and Chairman of Prison Fellowship and the host of the radio program 'BreakPoint with Chuck Colson.' BreakPoint is a program of The Wilberforce Forum, a division of Prison Fellowship. It's mission is to develop and communicate Christian worldview messages that offer a critique of contemporary culture and encourage and equip the church to think and live Christianly.

Copyright 2007 Prison Fellowship. Used with Permission.

Learn more about the new Wide Angle worldview curriculum and how you can purchase it. Call 1-877-322-5527.

 

Most Recent User Comments
majdoob
8/24/2007 9:07 AM
Q: "Why U.S. Soldiers Donate Blood to Injured Terrorists."

A: So that they can get them well enough to have them tortured.
hootgibsonfarm
3/10/2007 4:57 AM
Dear Ruru,
I am a retired military man. I also have served overseas. I also have given blood. I believe it is good to give blood. Jesus gave blood... to save me. I'm sorry you are angry. I pray that you may see the Light... and know why we give blood.
Ruru
3/7/2007 6:47 PM
To call this a “difference between Christianity and Islam” is completely absurd. Saying that this statement “doesn’t apply to peace-loving Muslims” does not lessen the ridiculousness and blatant ignorance of the statement.
Did anybody ask the blood donors of their religious backgrounds before making this argument? Is one saying that only Christians join the US forces? Please. What if every person standing in that line was Jewish? They could have all been Muslim…or I guess the author of this article would consider them “peace-loving Muslims.”
Maybe the soldiers read a heroic story about a person they admired helping his/her enemy right before hearing the news that an insurgent needed blood. Maybe that mindset was the deciding factor in their heroic act. It is impossible to exclude all other possibilities of causation other than religion from this act, therefore this article is merely the product of one person trying to make his/her own religion stand out among the rest by falsity.
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