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Cláudio
Bueno da
Silva |
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Persecuted for
love of justice
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The life story
of great men
persecuted for
fighting for the
sake of good is
impregnated with
human injustice.
In all times and
places History,
not always
official,
records the
attack of
stationary and
hybrid forces
against those
who propose new
paths for
Humanity, on the
basis of love
and education,
freedom and
progress, peace
and fraternity.
The methods used
by these forces
translate the
evolutionary
stage in which
they find
themselves:
treachery,
betrayal, lies,
deception,
everything, at
the service of
selfish and
transitory
interests.
There is no need
to comment on
the most heinous
persecution
registered on
Earth: it is
recorded in the
Gospels. Many
other well-known
examples of
persecution
serve as a
lesson to all of
us, in order to
strengthen our
convictions
about
egalitarian
justice,
fraternal love,
peace among men,
and confidence
in the future.
These episodes
show that the
performance of
the shadows -
whether of men
or Spirits - is
always acting in
the context of
human actions.
There are men of
dubious
character
associated with
inhuman
phalanxes with
which they
identify
themselves, who
cause great
damage to life,
sometimes in the
physical plane,
sometimes in the
spiritual plane.
I will mention
only a few cases
that show how
good and evil
fight each other
in this land of
trials and
atonement in
which we live.
The work and
ideas of these
"persecuted",
each in its
context, were
all the more
important the
greater the
opposition they
suffered. Even
though they were
misunderstood by
many, they did
well to the
societies and
God certainly
rewarded them
for that.
The isolated
facts of the
life of these
benefactors do
not always
portray the
fundamental
importance they
had in society
and in the time
in which they
lived.
Their lives are
certainly filled
with innumerable
small
humanitarian
actions
practiced daily
that did not
enter their
biographies but
which fed the
great deeds that
Humanity today
reveres with
respect. For
this reason,
they must have
suffered daily
persecutions,
constant,
apparent or
subtle, a
natural
reaction, of
those who do not
accept to live
with the
emancipatory
ideals of
freedom,
equality and
fraternity.
Allan Kardec,
"signatory" of
the Christ
On June 12, 1856
Mr. Rivail
(Allan
Kardec-1804-1869),
through the
medium Miss.
Aline C., asks
the Spirit of
Truth about the
important
mission that
some Spirits
attributed to
him. "I have, as
you know, the
greatest desire
to contribute to
the disclosure
of truth", says
Rivail, "but
from the role of
a simple worker
to that of a
chief
missionary, the
distance is
immense".
The Spirit of
Truth not only
reaffirms the
assignment
revealed to
Rivail, but also
warns him: "The
reformers’
mission is full
of obstacles and
dangers. Yours
is a rough one,
I warn you,
because you have
to stir and form
the whole
world". He also
warned him about
the
misunderstandings
and persecutions
that the future
Encoder of
Spiritism would
fall victim to.
Almost eleven
years after that
meaningful
dialogue with
the Spirit of
Truth, Allan
Kardec writes a
bitter note on
January 1, 1867,
confirming that
the predictions
given by that
Spirit – who had
previously
announced the
great obstacles
and difficulties
of his mission -
had fully come
true.
The note says:
"I have been the
target of the
hatred of
intransigent
enemies,
slander, envy
and jealousy;
shameful libels
were published
against me; my
best
instructions
were falsified;
I was betrayed
by those whom I
trusted most and
paid with
ingratitude by
those whom I
served. The
Paris Society
was a constant
focus of
intrigue woven
by those who
claimed to be in
my favor and
who, embraced
me, but stabbed
me in the back.
They said that
my sectarians
were paid with
the money I got
with Spiritism.
I had no rest
and often I gave
in to the amount
of work, and
compromised my
health and
risked my life".
It is
unbelievable
that a good,
educated,
intelligent,
highly educated
man, a very
successful
educator in
France, was
treated with
such disregard
as soon as he
saw the truth in
what would
become Spiritism
and the good it
would bring to
Mankind. A man,
whose mission
was to attend to
the call of the
higher spheres
of Life in the
preparation of
the Earth for
the change of
the evolutionary
stage and
consequent
regeneration of
Humanity; a man,
who believed
primarily in the
education of the
Spirit, as a
form of ultimate
transformation.
A man, who
fought for
Charity and Love
to his neighbor,
a "signatory" of
Christ's moral
teaching.
Such a man was
persecuted!
A victim of
intolerance
Euripides
Barsanulfo
(1880-1918),
even though he
was a man of
integrity at the
service of true
Charity, he also
was a victim of
the society
where he lived,
that insulted,
persecuted,
accused and
wanted to arrest
him.
Euripides was
persecuted not
because he was a
medium, but
because he was a
Spiritist
medium, he
professed
Spiritism. In a
region of
extreme poverty
and totally
devoid of
doctors like the
mining triangle
of the early
twentieth
century,
Barsanulfo was
the caretaker of
the ills of a
whole
population. He
was referred to
when evils were
incurable, when
child-birth was
difficult, when
the emergency
called for an
amputation, when
an accident
called for
immediate
action, when the
so-called "mad"
were brought
undeceived but
healed by their
moral strength.
The medium
attended all,
indiscriminately,
always with
great success.
In his pharmacy,
he wrote psychic
prescriptions
under the
inspiration of
Dr. Bezerra de
Menezes, and
exported the
medicines
without charging
a penny.
Euripides, a man
who lived by the
Gospel, was
doubly
persecuted.
Victim of the
religious
intolerance of
the Catholic
clergy and
traditionalist
segments of the
city of
Sacramento,
State of Minas
Gerais he was
also reported
and prosecuted
for "practicing
illegal
medicine".
Author of the
complaint: a
religious
association that
should treasure
the examples of
the Christ on
Earth.
But the lawsuit
against him did
not go ahead.
After a long
pilgrimage, from
hand to hand,
from judges to
judges, after
countless
allegations of
impediment and
suspicions on
the part of the
authorities to
try the
proceedings, the
document was
filed without a
decision on the
merits of the
complaint.
The judges, in
addition to
respecting the
accused, had
themselves, or
their relatives
and friends,
received some
kind of benefit
from the medium,
which morally
prevented them
from
incriminating
Euripides.
Euripides'
sympathetic Love
overcame
intolerance and
prejudice.
Gandhi, the
power of
convictions
Mohandas Gandhi
(1869-1948), an
Indian leader,
became a
worldwide
celebrity for
his tireless
work for Peace
among men. His
patience and
determination
freed India from
the English
dominion of more
than a century.
His methods of
fighting
exploitation and
injustice, that
his people
suffered, were
none other than
personal
examples of
peaceful action
and the
conscious and
orderly
attitudes of
civil
insubordination.
A graduated
attorney, Gandhi
found it
difficult to
practice his
profession and
went to South
Africa, another
English colony,
where he worked
for fifteen
years defending
causes of
Indians and
Muslims who
lived there and
who made him
famous. Upon
returning to
India, the
persecution of
the English
settlers began
and they
regarded him as
a "dangerous
nationalist."
His detached
style of life,
fully consistent
with his ethical
principles, and
his growing
popular
charisma,
hampered
attempts by the
English
government to
retaliate
against his
campaigns for
justice and
civil rights of
the Indian
people. Even so,
Gandhi was
arrested several
times, sometimes
for long
periods, which
he used
politically by
going on hunger
strikes. This
type of
demonstration
based on his
convictions
reinforced in
the people the
belief that the
Mahatma (Great
Soul) was really
willing to fight
for his country
and constrained
the authorities
to moderate
repression
against the
citizens.
With his
fearless
performance,
Gandhi strongly
influenced the
conquest of the
independence of
his country
using the
principle of
non-violence as
a way of
protesting. A
defender of the
dialogue between
religions, he
always fought
against
authoritarian
abuses and for
equal rights
between people.
He was murdered
by a radical
Indian who
disagreed with
his position of
tolerance in the
Hindu-Muslim
religious
conflict that
would originate
the division of
India with the
creation of
Pakistan, a
Muslim majority
state.
"I have a dream"
In 1955 in
Montgomery,
Alabama, in the
United States,
an American
black woman
refused to give
up her seat on
the bus to a
white passenger
and was
arrested.
The case greatly
impacted the
city's black
community, and
the Protestant
pastor Martin
Luther King Jr.
(1929-1968),
along with local
leaderships,
organized a
boycott of the
Montgomery buses
that lasted
about a year.
The protest only
ended when,
under heavy
pressure, the US
Supreme Court
decided to
consider race
discrimination
illegal on
public
transportation.
From this
emblematic
episode, Luther
King founded the
Conference of
Southern
Christian
Leadership,
an institution
that would play
a fundamental
role in
organizing
movements around
the defense of
the civil rights
of women, the
poor and black
Americans.
King, a graduate
in Theology and
Ph.D., set his
pacifist
activism on the
same principles
of nonviolence
inspired by
Gandhi, the
Indian leader he
had as a
reference. With
demonstrations
in various
cities and
states he
succeeded in
getting the
Civil Rights Act
(1964) approved,
which banned
racial
discrimination
in schools and
public places,
and the Right
to Vote
(1965) for black
Americans.
Martin worked
not only in
fighting racial
segregation, but
also fought for
equal rights,
improved
education and
living
conditions for
the
underprivileged,
especially in
the southern
region of the
United States,
where prejudice
and the
persecution of
blacks were
stronger. The
concern for
world peace made
him associate
with movements
against the war
in Vietnam.
His social
action against
abuse and
injustice earned
him numerous
threats of
hatred from
those who felt
superior by
color. He was
arrested and
tortured several
times. He had
his house
stoned. In 1964
he won the Nobel
Peace Prize and,
ironically, in
1968 was shot to
death by an
opponent.
He was famous
for his speech
in 1963 in
Washington,
where he
gathered more
than 200,000
people who were
militants and
sympathizers of
the humanitarian
causes that he
defended. He
said, "I have a
dream, the dream
of seeing my
children judged
by character,
not by the color
of their skin".
Far more than
legal changes,
Luther King
hoped that the
future would
bring the real,
moral changes.
Legal, but not
moral
Apartheid
(Separation or
Separate Lives)
was a regime of
racial
segregation
established in
South Africa
from 1948 to
1994. Officially
established by a
white minority
government, this
law divided
South Africans
by color,
determining
separation on
housing areas,
health and
education,
revoking even
the elementary
rights of the
immense black
majority.
A society,
self-called
"Brotherhood",
elaborated the
doctrine of
apartheid,
which (be
astonished!)
stated: "The
politics of
racial
segregation is
based on
Christian
principles of
what is fair and
reasonable. Its
purpose is to
maintain and
protect the
country's
European
population as a
pure white race,
and to maintain
and protect
indigenous
racial groups as
separate
communities in
their own areas
(...). Or we
follow the
course of
equality and at
the end it will
mean the suicide
of the white
race, or we take
the course of
segregation". It
is notorious
that much of
what is legal
has no moral
basis
whatsoever. Is
the similarity
with what we see
in the world
today a mere
historical
coincidence?
This official
regime approved
more than 300
apartheid
laws, and among
many odd ones,
there is one of
them, the (Law
of Reserve of
Social Benefits)
that reserved
public places
for a particular
race, creating
segregated
beaches, buses,
park benches,
hospitals,
schools and
universities.
Social
discomfort,
which was
already
widespread in
South African
tribes and
communities,
gained momentum
when 69 blacks
were killed and
about 180 were
wounded in the
demonstration
known as the
Sharpeville
tragedy in March
1960. Nelson
Mandela, who
already
participated in
student
movements and
led the African
National
Congress (CNA),
founded the
Young League of
the CNA, the
main political
arm of the
actions against
racial
segregation
imposed by the
white
authorities.
From then
onwards, Nelson
Mandela
(1918-2013)
assumes an
important
leadership role
in defending the
rights of the
South African
people, and the
resistance gains
popular support
and of the
international
community too,
which opposes
racist practices
and cruel
segregation.
As a consequence
of the revival
of the protests,
the government
has escalated
the persecution
of black
leaders, and
Nelson Mandela,
who had been
arrested in 1956
for
"conspiracy", is
accused and in
1964 sentenced
to life
imprisonment.
After decades of
struggle between
the official
segregation that
held power and
the sectors that
sought equality
among South
Africans,
Frederik de
Klerk, took
control of the
country in 1989
and publicly
declares the
failure of
apartheid.
That is when the
first measures
appear to reduce
the pressure of
the
authoritarian
and racist
regime that
unfortunately
affected for
such a long
period that part
of the African
continent.
Nelson Mandela
is released from
prison and a few
years later
(1994) is
elected the
first black
president of
South Africa. He
rewrote the
country's
Constitution and
implemented
reforms aimed at
mitigating the
harmful effects
of apartheid
in South African
society.
The tormentors
pass, the
benefactors of
Humanity do not
People, groups
and
institutions,
blinded by
selfishness,
foolish with
pride, dominated
by the vices of
prejudice and
intolerance,
acted and still
act as agents of
backwardness and
ignorance, in
order to prevent
the conquests of
others that
threaten their
space and their
presumed status.
People, groups
and
institutions,
through bad
faith,
premeditation
and moral fraud,
organize to
impose ideas and
systems that
seduce, control
and enslave.
People, groups
and institutions
come together to
perpetuate the
hegemony of
power and
fortune,
guaranteeing the
maintenance of
their particular
interests, with
the sacrifice of
millions of
beings.
Like Christ, who
defended the
causes of
justice, love
and truth, those
who fight for
the poor and
oppressed, sick
and hungry,
simple and
naive, against
the inclemency
of the
dominators, are
persecuted,
imprisoned,
tortured and
even killed. The
same happened
with those that
made the path of
Humanity
smoother
preparing it for
a better future,
such as
Socrates, Joan
of Arc, Giordano
Bruno, Galileo
Galilei and
others. Formerly
they died on the
cross, by
fire...
Nowadays, there
is more
astuteness, but
the hatred is
practically the
same.
Until when will
this happen? We
do not know.
However, it will
not always be
so. Let it last
as long as it
lasts, no matter
what it costs,
but Man will
rise one day and
stand up not
only as an
intelligent, but
also as a human,
sensitive and
spiritualized
Being, The fight
is far from
over, but the
forces of good
will definitely
win. To doubt
this is not to
believe in God,
and not to
believe in God
is unhappiness.
As we walk in
this direction,
let us be sure
that the justice
of God acts and
those
responsible for
obstructing
progress and the
advancement of
ideas, to the
detriment of
societies, will
answer
accordingly.
Those
responsible for
the shedding of
blood and tears
will answer for
their deeds in
the severe and
relentless Court
of Conscience.
"Blessed are
those who are
persecuted for
the sake of
righteousness."
(Mt 5:10.)
The tormentors
passed, pass,
and will pass.
The benefactors
of Humanity do
not.
Bibliographical
sources:
educacao.uol.com.br/biografias
pensador.uol.com.br/biografia
planetasustentavel.abril.com.br
Wikipedia, the
free
encyclopedia,
Apartheid.
Allan Kardec,
Posthumous Works,
"My Mission",
Lake, 17th
edition, no
date, trans.
Bezerra de
Menezes.
Freitas Nobre,
Police
persecution
against
Euripedes
Barsanulfo,
Edicel publisher.
Jorge Rizzini,
Euripides
Barsanulfo,
the Apostle of
Charity. Correio
Fraterno
publisher.
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