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Previous | Next Award winning author Rudy Wiebe talks about peace
 Abbotsford, B.C.
Two-time Governor General award winner and member of the Order of Canada, Rudy Wiebe participated in this years 10th Fraser Valley Arts and Peace Festival, holding several readings and a workshop.
This was Wiebes third appearance at the festival and he says it is important to him to be a part of the event because he feels strongly that arts and peace go well together.

I liked it when the Arts and Peace festival was set up as an alternative experience to the military hardware on display at the (Abbotsford International) Airshow, he says, describing a tour he participated in, in which he saw a Hercules aircraft. Its a wonderful machine, you know, and I know what they can do with this up in the Arctic, helping human beings do good things. But here we (were told) you can drive three tanks in there, you know, to blow people up! The same machine can help and hurt . . . its these ironies in life that artists can express so well.

As he shared in his workshop, Wiebe has had many ironies in his own life starting with the publication of his first novel, Peace Shall Destroy Many (McLelland and Stewart, 1962). The novel, which began as his masters thesis in creative writing, chronicles the life of a Mennonite community in Saskatchewan during WW2. Character Thom Wiens struggles to come to terms with his communities peace stance at a time of war. Wiebe had initially intended to write about Shakespeare and war (like a good Mennonite, you know) but his professor encouraged him to think in more original terms.

You may be the only person who can write about Mennonites he told me, Wiebe reminisced and so he did, adding that he was also inspired by Goethe who insisted that a writer write about the people one knows, where one lives. Every people has a story and if youre a good writer you can make it live for other people.

Just before it was published, Wiebe began work as the first editor for the MB Herald. At his interview he informed the committee that Peace Shall Destroy Many was about to be published and offered them a manuscript to read. They declined. The book was met with diverse reactions. The public liked it, the church didnt. Although many in the church acknowledged that it was an often honest depiction of the church, they felt that it did the church a disservice to discuss it in a public forum. One church leader wrote to Wiebe and said it felt like washing dirty laundry in the front yard of a neighbour. He insisted that the book painted an entirely negative view of the church and added that the next church conference might have some uncomfortable moments for Wiebe. Wiebe says he should have been ready for the reaction but he wasnt. Reflecting back on it he feels that although there were many reasons for the strong, negative reaction to the book, one cannot underestimate the barrier of language. Church leadership at the time still spoke primarily German and even the attitude towards fiction was an uneasy one. While the book has many positive things to say about the church, Wiebe says its form and the subtleties of language could have prevented many from appreciating the ironies of the novel.

The reaction to the book led to his resignation at the Herald. Ironically, while one branch of the church was rejecting Wiebe because of Peace Shall Destroy Many, another branch opened their arms to him for the same reason.

Goshen College, in Indiana, invited Wiebe to teach Creative Writing. The move turned out to be one of the most enriching experiences of his life deepening his faith and encouraging him to grow as a person and writer.

Twenty years, several more books and awards later, Wiebe is still actively committed to peacemaking and is a charter member of Lendrum Mennonite Brethren Church in Alberta. He is often asked questions about pacifism and jokes about the ridiculous questions that are put his way in interviews.

What would you do if a guy with a machine gun was attacking your family? Well, theres not much you can do, is there? he laughs recalling the question of a radio interviewer. But then Wiebe grows serious.

All we can do is talk, and if we are beyond talk, we suffer. You flee and then you suffer because of the flight. And how many people have suffered? Why do we have 30 million refugees in the world? Its not the right way to think!

Wiebe feels strongly that we have an opportunity to regain that particular vision of Anabaptism now that Canada is participating in the war in Afghanistan.

Our country is at war. I hate that language, he says passionately, because you then think that all the normal rules of living are out the window. It allows us to kill people. Christians of all people should understand this its (not a matter of) save yourself, but care for the community.

As a writer and a Christian, Wiebe feels that his is a unique voice (every writer has a unique voice) because most writers in Canada are not Christian thinkers; they have somehow rejected faith or see it as something they have moved beyond.

Ive never grown beyond it! he said. The older I get it makes me respond in the deepest way, to the problems I experience in life. I do respond deeply through a New Testament way of looking at the world and I cant get rid of it I dont want to. Id be silly to deny Jesus teaching. Its the most important way to understand what the world is about. MCC News Release
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Last modified July 19, 2002.

© 2002 Mennonite Brethren Herald. Published by the Canadian Conference of MB Churches. Masthead and usage information.
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