Introduction to
GOOD MANNERS, CIVILITY
By Nick Gier:
The Palouse Pundit
Editor’s Note: Nick
Gier taught religion and philosophy at the University of Idaho for 31 years. He
is the author of four books, 8 book chapters, and 38 articles. He is
currently writing a book on the origins of religious violence,and draft chapters can be read at www.class.uidaho.edu/ngier/orv.htm.
His other columns and personal webpage can be found at www.NickGier.com .
GOOD MANNERS, CIVILITY
By Nick Gier
June
2008
In 1997 I had the
privilege of attending the National Seminar on Civic Virtue, an 8-week course
at Santa Clara University. As I opened
one of the assigned texts, I found an article by Judith Martin, better known as
Miss Manners. "What she doing here
among all these serious philosophers?" I exclaimed to myself.
As
I read her contribution, I was ashamed of my initial reaction. I was impressed by her intellectual acumen,
and I was also convinced by her argument. Miss Manners is right in her claim
that there is a basic moral continuum from common courtesies all the way to the
enforcement of international law.
Even more profound
was Miss Manners' observation that, while the law is the guide for permissible
behavior within a nation, we must rely on shame as the sanction for bad manners
among people and as well as among nations.
Those who say that
etiquette is a dispensable frill maintain that the modern world has too many
problems to bother with good manners. At
the top of list of these issues, however, must certainly be people of faith hurling
insults at each other and calling for the other's demise.
Are not simple good
manners the initial answer here? What is more effective than simply sitting
down, sorting things out in a civil manner, apologizing when necessary, and
shaking hands to seal the reconciliation?
Diplomacy, whether personal or national, is etiquette par excellence.
While it may not succeed in every instance, it is still the best form of
conflict resolution.
When Mahoud Ahmadinejad was invited to
speak at Columbia University on September 24, 2007, its president Lee Bollinger
broke the rules of etiquette when he excoriated the Iranian leader in his
introductory remarks. Bollinger should not have invited him if he could not
treat him with civility. A delegation of Columbia University faculty have
toured Iran, offered an apology for Lee's behavior, and have established
exchange programs with some Iranian universities.
In early March of
2008 five Muslim leaders and five Catholic officials sat down for talks about
how to bridge the gaps between them, now grown wider since Pope Benedict used
anti-Muslim references in a speech he gave at a Regensburg University on
September 12, 2006.
On October 13,
2007, 138 Muslims clerics and scholars from 43 countries issued a statement
urging Jews, Christians, and Muslims to affirm the two central commandments of
their common Abrahamic faith: the love of God and the love of neighbor. Speaking to the magnitude and urgency of the
issues, the signatories said that the "future of the world depends on
peace between Christians and Muslims."
Led by the Yale
University Center for Faith and Culture, 300 Christian leaders responded to the
Muslim statement on November 18, 2007.
Admitting that Jews and Christians "have not always shaken hands in
friendship," and that "many Christians have been guilty of sinning
against our Muslim neighbors," the signatories said that they "were
deeply encouraged and challenged" by the Muslim's "historic open
letter."
Recently, in a post
on a local list serve a member of a conservative church called me a Judas and
then a coward for not committing suicide as Judas did. For five years this person had regularly
insulted me on this list, but this charge was really beyond the pale. The
church elders demanded that he apologize for the offense and he did so
graciously.
As I accepted his
apology, and thought if I had insulted their church in any way. I went through my various writings and found
one sentence that I deeply regret. I
have now apologized for calling these Christians the "Moscow
Taliban," and two elders e-mailed me and warmly accepted my
repentance. Notice how basic etiquette
works wonders in subtle but powerful ways at the local and international
levels.
In the 2007 Moscow
City Council election a member from the same church above picketed in the
center of town with a sign calling three candidates "bigots,"
presumably because he thought their position on a housing ordinance was
"anti-Christian." In this
instance there was no apology and the pastor, while disagreeing with the mode
of protest, still supported the charge of bigotry.
The
rituals of apologies and handshakes don't of course always work. After a bully beat me up in the 6th
grade, the principal made us say that we were sorry and forced our hands into
an awkward embrace. There were at least
two things that bothered me about this attempt at reconciliation. I wondered why I had to apologize for just
standing there, and then afterwards, I noted anxiously that the bully chose to
attack other innocent victims. I blame the principal for not doing a more effective
job in pacifying the aggressor.
Unfortunately, the
world has its share of shameless bullies, and the use of economic sanctions
hurt the tyrants' citizens more than it does them. Even broadly supported international military
coalitions had limited effect on Saddam Hussein and the Taliban, and the
unilateral invasion of Iraq has been an unmitigated disaster.
In the fall of 2001, Pakistan was the only country that recognized the
Taliban, and their diplomats came to the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad every
night to drink tea. No one, not even Western reporters, dared approach them.
One night Greg Mortenson, a mountaineer
turned school and clinic builder and author of Three Cups of Tea, joined the Taliban for tea, a civilizing
ceremony that is part of many cultures.
Conversing in their language, Mortenson learned that the Taliban
ambassador Mullah Zaeef was in favor of releasing Osama bin Laden to the
Americans. He also learned that the top Taliban
leader Mullah Omar wanted to have a meeting with George Bush, and he had tried
to contact the White House twice by satellite phone. The Taliban claim that Bush declined.
Just think, however, what three cops of tea with the Taliban or with
Ahmadinejad might have accomplished.