Andrew takes a look at mob behaviour and bullying. Why do
people engage in the behaviour? Have we learned nothing since the time
of Jesus?
A short but graphic reminder of the realistic violence
in Mel Gibson's film Use controller to start (2 seconds playing time)
Nearly two thousand years after the event, the Australian motion picture
actor and director, Mel Gibson attempted
to recreate with graphic savagery, the trial and execution of Jesus Christ
in his epic film, The Passion of the Christ
(2003). Audiences sat stunned and horrified
at the images of an innocent and good man being framed on fabricated charges,
then brutally tortured and eventually executed as a common criminal. Believers
and non-believers were freshly moved by an historical event that for many
had been previously lost in the droll delivery of a Sunday School teacher
or in the disinterested and well-worn Easter sermon of an aged parson.
Here was the New Testament message enfleshed on celluloid film, avidly
read in subtitles, while Aramaic confronted the listener's ears and various
bloody scenes sprayed across their eyes.
For many who saw the film a question remained: What
would happen to Christ if instead of being born in Palestine of the Ancient
World, he had been born in a 21st Century western nation? Surely
this horrific event could not be replicated in our time and in our context.
Researchers
in the United States have now begun examining a new workplace phenomenon.
In Mobbing: Emotional Abuse in the American
Workplace (1999), they concluded
that: "Mobbing is an emotional assault.
It begins when an individual becomes the target of disrespectful and harmful
behaviour. Through innuendo, rumours, and public discrediting, a hostile
environment is created in which one individual gathers others to willingly,
or unwillingly, participate in continuous malevolent actions to force
a person out of the workplace. These actions escalate into abusive and
terrorising behaviour. The victim feels increasingly helpless when the
organization does not put a stop to the behaviour or may even plan or
condone it." (Davenport, N., et. al,
1999, p. 38)
No longer are we in the West able to destroy others lives overtly on
the basis of colour and creed, legislation prevents such actions. However,
as the river which is dammed seeks yet another tributary by which to run
its course, so it would seem primitive desires of bigotry have found more
politically correct avenues by which to fulfil their purpose, than in
First Century Palestine.
In the case of "mobbing", such great pressure is brought to
bear on an individual, to the point that they break physically or mentally,
and thus by their own volition, leave a workplace, without the victim
being able to pin-point the actual forces or peoples who made their life
a misery. Terms such as, 'personality clashes' and 'not fitting in', are
applied euphemistically to what in essence is a policy of bullying.
"Mobbing" takes its drive from the unseen rationale of the
conspirators. Professional jealousy, greed, a feeling of being threatened,
a belief that an individual stands as an obstacle to their designs, such
factors create the climate for those who deal in "mobbing" to
initially select their victim and finally destroy them. We may no longer
use the iron stakes of a Roman legionnaire to pin our prisoners to the
ground; or the cat-o-nine tails of a Centurion to flog them; nor a cross
to crucify our victims, yet we can at least have our victims fall on their
swords; and then who is to blame? Then we can issue the epitaph: "Poor
Charles, he just wasn't up to the pace, I do hope all goes well in the
future; he does have a family you know!" As Sophie Toomey (The
Weekend Australian Career One, July 16-17, p. 1), wrote
in her article, "Bullying alive and kicking":
"If your image of bullying at work is a
young rough and tumble guy and a bizarre initiation ritual, think again.
A huge amount of workplace bullying takes place in plush inner city offices
with tools of abuse including demoralising emails and outrageous unachievable
deadlines".
Although two thousand years have passed since the contrived guilty verdict
was effected on Christ, such films as The Passion
of the Christ, point toward a too endemic part of the human
character for us to convince ourselves as 'that' being 'then' and in 'that'
context, and not 'now' in 'ours'. To this day, individuals remain jealous
of those, whose only crime is that they do good and do it well; to this
day lies and gossip said in secret and in whispers are fed from person
to person in the hope of discrediting the innocent; to this day, those
in power who have the authority to act justly and to right the wrongs,
fail to act, and wash their hands, on the basis that it is better for
one innocent man or woman to perish than for an entire staff or department
to suffer.
Had Christ been born in our society in our time, He would most certainly
have been "mobbed". His teachings would have confounded the
Pharisees of our era, so that a means of silencing Him would have needed
to be found; His popularity would have threatened other religious leaders,
so a policy of discrediting Him would have had to have been implemented;
cowardly Chief Executive Officers, would have been convinced of the expedience
of his sacking or dismissal, rather than keep such a person in their employ.
In short, we would have found ways by which to re-enact The Passion for
our own time.
So if this is the reality for Christ, who is God, then what hope is there
for people who are called to be His followers. The
Gospel of St. Matthew provides the Christian with both
a warning and consolation, when Christ instructs His listeners: "Blessed
are you when people abuse you and persecute you and speak all kinds of
calumny against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your
reward will be great in heaven; this is how they persecuted the prophets
before you". (Matthew 5: 11 - 12,
The New Jerusalem Bible)
Every age with its martyrdom of innumerable Saints has seen the re-enactment
of The Passion of the Christ. Our Eastern Father among the Saints, John
Chrysostom, speaks to us from amidst his own "mobbing":
"To commit a murder, besides the not having
the person in your power, there are many measures and precautions to take.
A favorable opportunity must be waited for, and a place must be selected
before we can put so damnable a design into execution. More than this,
the pistols may miss fire, blows may not be sufficient, and all wounds
are not mortal. But to deprive a man of his reputation and honor, one
word is sufficient. By finding out the most sensitive part of his honor,
you may tarnish his reputation by telling it to all who know him, arid
easily take away his character for honor and integrity. To do this, however,
no time is required, for scarcely have you complacently cherished the
wish to calumniate him, than the sin is effected".
Christ the keeper of all of the Commandments of Moses was executed by
those who may have kept most of them, but in deed and word, not the Eighth:
"You shall not give false witness against
your neighbour". (Exodus 20: 16, The
New Jerusalem Bible) Too often we forget or dismiss the importance
of this Commandment, as it is far easier to attend to the Sabbath, or
to be chaste, or not to steal, then to keep one's tongue, keep one's peace,
and to be charitable to one's neighbour.
One of the greatest Christian figures of the 20th Century, Mother
Theresa of Calcutta, herself no stranger to "mobbing"
in her prayer the Final Analysis, gives us courage in the tribulations
that we face in our various social contexts, when we become the victims
of lies, deceit, scheming and innuendo: "People
are often unreasonable, irrational, and self-centered; forgive them anyway.
If you are kind, people may accuse you of selfish, ulterior motives; be
kind anyway. If you are honest and sincere, people may deceive you; be
honest and sincere anyway. What you spend years creating, others may destroy
overnight; create anyway. If you find serenity and happiness, some may
be jealous; be happy anyway. The good you do today will often be forgotten;
do good anyway. Give the best you have, and it may never be enough; give
your best anyway. In the final analysis, it is between you and God; it
was never between you and them anyway".

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Andrew
Thomas Kania is Director of Spirituality of Aquinas College,
Manning. Prior to this appointment Dr. Kania was a lecturer for
the School of Religious Education at the University of Notre Dame
Australia as well as for the Catholic Institute of Western Australia
at Edith Cowan and Curtin Universities. Dr. Kania belongs to the
Ukrainian Church and is interested in ecumenical issues as well
as contemporary problems facing religious educators.
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©2007
Dr Andrew Thomas Kania
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