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The Ritual of Christmas Mass Killings by the LRA
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong ponders the evil of Uganda’s
horrific rebel group, the Lord's Resistance Army, which
ritual of mass killings every Christmas has awakened the
world to its malevolence expected this Christmas
Much feared for its horrendous killings of innocent
people across east and central Africa, the northern
Uganda based rebel group, the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA),
as Christmas approaches, is preparing to carry out its
annual rituals of mass human sacrifices.
What philosophical and theological gist drive the LRA’s
exercises so much so that every Christmas they undertake
mass ritualistic killings? The LRA is a bizzare mixture
of sectarian Christian religion, occultism, African juju
spiritual practices, tribalism, witchcraft and
militarism. It was formed in 1987 and since then has
emerged as one Africa’s longest and brutal rebel groups.
The LRA leader Joseph Kony superstitiously believes he
is the “spokesperson” of God and a spiritual channel for
the Holy Spirit that manifest itself in diverse ways in
him.
The LRA has the strong impression of itself that is
based in apocalyptic Christianity. Confusingly, it
blends all these believes with Western mystecism and
African traditional occultism (or juju). In its twisted
visions, the LRA aims to establish “a theocratic state
based on the Ten Commandments and Acholi tradition” in
Uganda. The LRA’s unspeakably devilish conducts come
from its befuddled state of mind, fed constantly by
gloomy visions and messages allegedly from God, the Holy
Spirit or their many juju mediums. Students of evil will
describe the LRA as stupid and shallow, an aspect of
evil that aren’t normally considered when we discuss
evil.
As the African enlightenment gains momentum, those who
believe evil spirits influenced them to commit crime are
seen today as unintelligent and small-minded. Human
agency and not evil spirits causes crime. The LRA’s
criminal enterprises, of deaths, killings, abductions,
mutilations, sexual enslavement of women and children,
and forcing children to participate in hostilities and
jamborees of human sacrifices, make it stupid, and
pychiatrically disordered.
Lance Morrow (formerly of the USA-based Time magazine
and former Professor of Journalism at Boston
University), author of Evil: An Investigation (2003),
explained how Hannah Arendt’s study of the Nazi big-wig
Adolf Eichmann trial resulted in her coining the eminent
phrase “the banality of evil.” According to Morrow,
Arendt wasn’t satisfied with the term and later wrote in
a letter to an acquiantance that, “It is indeed my
opinion now that evil is never ‘radical,’ that it is
only extreme, and that it possesses neither depth nor
any demonic dimension. It can overgrow and lay waste the
whole world precisely because it spreads like a fungus
on the surface.”
For the past 23 years the LRA’s evil have spread like
fungus; from Uganda to Sudan, the Democratic Republic of
the Congo, and the Central African Republic, and now
control an area estimatedly the size of United Kingdom.
Scientifcally, the LRA’s evil isn’t caused by any demons
or visions from Satan but the groups’ human nature. All
their mixed bag of prophesies, occultisms, juju, the
Bible and witchcrafts are all secondary. Everything has
got to do with the LRA’s human normality. Morrow will
says “the normality of evil.” Morrow quotes W.H. Auden
as saying, “Evil is unspectacular and always human,/And
shares our bed and eats at our own table.”
It is this state of believes that has prompted aids
agencies, nervous by LRA’s mass human sacrifices
annually, appealing to the world to some sorts of force
the rebel group not to undertake their annual Christmas
mass murders in 2010. How will a group that says it
draws its inspiration from the Christian Holy Bible
entertain such evil thoughts? They call themselves the
Lord’s Resistance Army, what in the name of the Lord are
they resisting that necessitates mass killings,
especially at Christmas? What actually will they achieve
by undertaking mass killings every Christmas? Does the
LRA know they are evil? How do they feel when they kill?
How can a group be so primitive, scary and atavistic?
Such questions reveal the elusiveness of evil, how it is
difficult to comprehend it, and an intellectually
unmanageable issue. Regardless of these difficulties in
attempting to grasp the LRA’s evil, evil is still there.
The BBC, quoting aid agencies, reports that “On
Christmas Day 2008 and over the following three weeks,
LRA beat to death more than 800 people in north-eastern
Democratic Republic of Congo and Southern Sudan,
abducting hundreds more.” This isn’t the mystery of evil
but the actual physical manifestations of evil, where
rationale and daylight evaporate, and replaced by the
LRA’s darkness. This is how evil exist; this is how evil
works.
Whether in African cosmology or Judeo-Christian
tradition, both of which the LRA draws its deformed
values from, the group’s evil operations are stalled in
extremely mysterious interpretations of both
cosmologies. In African cosmology and Judeo-Christian
tradition there are no injunctions for mass ritualistic
killings, especially at Christmas. In this sense, the
LRA resonate from the gloomy side of African cosmology
and the Judeo-Christian tradition that see far-reaching
evil embodied in fearlessly diabolical figures.
The Lord’s Resistance Army is the embodiment of
diabolically valiant body, where Satan is comfortable at
home roasting human meat for diner and washing it down
with human blood, especially at Christmas where there
are mass killings and human meat and blood are aplenty.
In its long-running evil customs, the LRA has greatly
acquired the vicious esteem of Milton's audaciously
defiant Lucifer.
Nevertheless, despite being pursued simultaneously by
Uganda People’s Defence Force, Sudan People's Liberation
Army, Military of Democratic Republic of Congo and
United Nations Mission in the Democratic Republic of
Congo (MONUC), the LRA, grounded in fiendish
apparitions, has emerged as menacingly powerful in
Africa that has embolden it to ostensibly undertake
annual rituals of mass killings every Christmas.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, December
19, 2010
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