Pharaohs on Both Sides of the Blood-Red Waters: Prophetic Critique on Empire: Resistance Justice and the Power of the Hopeful Sizwe--A Transatlantic Conversation
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About The Book
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After the civil rights and anti-apartheid struggles are we truly living in post-racial post-apartheid societies where the word struggle is now out of place? Do we now truly realize that as President Obama said the situation for the Palestinian people is intolerable? This book argues that this is not so and asks What has Soweto to do with Ferguson New York with Cape Town Baltimore with Ramallah? With South Africa the United States and Palestine as the most immediate points of reference it seeks to explore the global wave of renewed struggles and nonviolent revolutions led largely by young people and the challenges these pose to prophetic theology and the church. It invites the reader to engage in a trans-Atlantic conversation on freedom justice peace and dignity. These struggles for justice reflect the proposal the book discusses: there are pharaohs on both sides of the blood-red waters. Central to this conversation are the issues of faith and struggles for justice; the call for reconciliation--its possibilities and risks; the challenges of and from youth leadership; prophetic resistance; and the resilient audacious hope without which no struggle has a future. The book argues that these revolutions will only succeed if they are claimed embraced and driven by the people. Allan Boesak breaks the awful silence of prophetic Christianity in our contemporary times.Boesak recognizes the kindred struggles intersecting our world but returns again and again to the South African context revisiting and re-constructing the resources required for a prophetic theology for this contextual moment. The book offers a careful analysis of the prophetic theological trajectory gathering what remains useful and forging what is needed to do prophetic theology in and for our globalized world. -- Gerald O. West University of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa Boesaks keen analyses and persuasive arguments invite readers to take seriously contemporary cries for freedom and the braided significance of world-wide longing for justice. Allan Boesak says there comes a time in freedom struggles when we must acknowledge the transformative power of religion. Many scholars who study transatlantic hegemony possess an impulse to cut corners and in turn they are inattentive conceptually timid and lack vital engagement in assessing the power of Sizwe the soul-force in liberation movements. --Katie G. Cannon Union Presbyterian Seminary Richmond Virginia . . . a primer on hope born in struggle that is incisive. This book is grounded historically autobiographically and prophetically. Every page is a theological history of how people stay in the struggle for human dignity and freedom undergirded by faith in God and in people. It is a major work for our times. --Valerie Bridgeman Methodist Theological School Ohio Allan Boesak South African theologian and human rights activist is the first holder of the Desmond Tutu Chair for Peace Justice and Reconciliation Studies at Christian Theological Seminary and Butler University Indianapolis. He is also the Deans Research Associate at the Theological Faculty Pretoria University. His previous books include Dare We Speak of Hope? (2014).