HARRISONBURG, Va. - News of the death of Tom Fox, 54, a Christian
Peacemaking Team worker held hostage in Iraq, dealt an especially
difficult blow on those who knew him at Eastern Mennonite
University.
U.S. forces in Iraq recovered the body of kidnapped Christian Peacemaker
Teams activist Tom Fox, CPT confirmed on Mar. 10.
Fox, a Quaker from Clearbrook, Va., was found by Iraqi police with his
hands bound and with gunshot wounds to the head and chest the evening of
Mar. 9, according to the Associated Press. When police saw the body was
that of a Westerner, U.S. military authorities were called to the scene,
reports said.
Fox had studied one semester in EMU's Center for Justice and Peacebuilding
graduate program before going to Iraq as a CPT peace worker. He was
kidnapped in Baghdad Nov. 26 along with fellow CPTers Norman Kember, 74, a
Briton, and Canadians James Loney, 41, and Harmeet Singh Sooden, 32. The
four were seized at gunpoint by a group calling itself the Swords of
Righteousness Brigade and have been shown in videos released by the group,
which has demanded the release of all detainees in U.S. and Iraqi prisons.
The most recent video, a silent 25-second clip that aired on Aljazeera
Mar. 7, showed all of the hostages except Fox.
Lisa Schirch, associate professor of conflict studies in EMU's Center for
Justice and Peacemaking, had Fox in her "strategic nonviolence" course at
EMU.
"May we all hold every human being in Iraq in our prayers as the trauma,
anger, fear and sadness rages on and on," Dr. Schirch said in response to
Fox's death. "And may we all find a way to renew our own personal efforts
to transform those energies into something more positive.
"Let us remember Tom for the bravery and hopefulness that came with his
determination to be in Iraq to monitor human rights and provide a
different kind of American presence there - one that sought to be in
solidarity with the suffering," Schirch added.
EMU President Loren Swartzentruber, in Florida during EMU's spring break
for development contacts, issued a statement to the campus community:
"Tom's death, while serving with Christian Peacemaker Teams, reminds us of
the tragic deaths of people of all nationalities through senseless
violence around the world. I agree completely with a statement from Carol
Rose, co-director of Christian Peacemaker Teams, quoted in the news - 'In
response to Tom's passing, we ask that everyone set aside inclinations to
vilify or demonize others, no matter what they have done.'"
"Please pray for Tom's family, co-workers, friends and for CJP faculty
member Lisa Schirch and others on our campus who knew him personally," the
president said.
Ruth Zimmerman, co-director of EMU's Center for Justice and Peacebuilding,
said that "we all have a responsibility to break the cycle of violence and
vengeance that has caused the deaths of tens of thousands in Iraq, including
Tom Fox.
"The answer is not more violence, more vengeance," Zimmerman said. "The
answer is more people with the courage and faith of Tom Fox to stand up
and say, 'Love, forgiveness, and restorative justice are the answers, not
violent retribution.'"
Fox is the first to be killed in "the line of duty" of the 2,000 peace
workers that have received training through EMU's Center for Justice and
Peacebuilding, but many others have been threatened and some have been
beaten, said Zimmerman.
EMU alumni have been following Fox's fate with close attention and much
prayer. Zimmerman said she is "especially proud of EMU's Muslim alumni and
visiting professors who have bravely spoken on behalf of the hostages."
Khadija Ossoble Ali, a Somali Muslim who earned a masters degree in
conflict transformation at EMU in 2000, responded to news of Fox's death
with this e-mailed comment to her fellow alumni: "He was the hope for a
better future for all of us who have been kept hostage by a small minority
in the name of religion.
"May we all pray for Tom, for his bravery and courageous work and may god
bless him and give us the strength to succeed and transform our despair to
a more peaceful coexistence as human beings."
EMU held prayer vigils for the four kidnapped CTP workers on campus Nov.
30, 2005 and Jan. 30, 2006. Fox was scheduled to speak at EMU in February
this year.
Note: Additional campus responses are likely to be planned at EMU after
classes resume Monday, Mar. 13.
- Bonnie Price Lofton, CJP development director, contributed to this
report.
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Jim Bishop
Public Information Officer
Eastern Mennonite University
Harrisonburg VA 22802
Phone: 540-432-4211
Fax: 540-432-4448
www.emu.edu