Truth and Reconciliation
AGE: Secondary |
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THEME: Truth and Reconciliation |
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AIM: |
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| To show how facing the truth allows God, working through the Holy Spirit, to use past sins and failures to build his vision of the future. | ||||||||
PREPARATION: |
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PRESENTATION: |
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Those were the words of Nelson Mandela at his acceptance speech when he became the first black South African to become President of the state. In it, he was setting the scene for putting an end to the decades of racial hatred that had been the lot of South Africa.
In 1984 Desmond Tutu became the first black South African to become Archbishop of Cape Town. Whilst most other black leaders were in prison, Archbishop Tutu was to become the outspoken critic of apartheid both within and outside South Africa. Passionate about justice, he rooted his work in prayer and meditation and this was worked out in every aspect of his life. He led acts of civil disobedience against the state's unjust laws. When asked why he broke the law, he replied...
When Mandela was elected as President, he set up the Trust and Reconciliation Commission and put his friend Desmond Tutu in charge of it. Its aim was to encourage both victims and perpetrators of apartheid to come forward and tell their stories. The hope was that this would bring the evil into the open, so that it might be forgiven and dispersed, and the ground prepared for the creation of a society where all could begin to live at peace with one another and respect each other. Many victims of apartheid came forward and told their stories. The families of those who had been killed told of their grief and anger. A few of those who had been the perpetrators of the injustice and violence admitted what they had done.
Truth and reconciliation also apply to us in this country. We need to work at building a rainbow nation, where all feel at peace with each other. Where we have faced up to our prejudices about each other, admitted them and then put them away from us. A nation where we allow each other the freedom to grow and develop and allow each to make their contribution. |
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REFLECTION: |
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Remember that a rainbow is seen in all its beauty because of the light shining through droplets of rain. Without the light, the colours would not be seen. Similarly, if the potential to show the colours was not present in the water, the light could not release it. Think of God as the light. The colours represent the glorious variety of human beings with all their differences. The light of God shining on them severally produces the beauty of... 'A rainbow nation at peace with itself and the world.' God, you are a God of variety and difference. You have made us all to be different. We see you in each other. You have a multitude of faces, of races, of skills, of feelings and emotions. On our own we are not able to provide or to be all that we need if life is to be full and exciting. But in your wisdom you have given us each other, so that together we may live life to the full. (Amen) |