A Reflection 
on Evil & Silence
Pax Scotia Aug-Sept 2024 Issue 49
Pax Scotia
Issue 49
Sixteen years ago I visited Kenya in the immediate aftermath 
of post-election ethnic violence. I had spent several 
summers in the same town and knew many people well. It 
was painful to see how viciously neighbours – including 
parishioners - had turned against each other. I visited 
friends who had fled for their lives. I had previously 
received hospitality in their homes but now they were 
forced to shelter in tents in a refugee camp.
This was long before the advent of social media, but I 
learnt that several radio stations served the various tribes 
in their own languages. Culturally this was a good thing, yet 
it had been misused. A prolonged and determined 
campaign of bigotry had flourished on these radio stations 
which allowed lies, insults and exaggerations to partly 
prepare the way for the violence. Loyalty to tribal vows 
silenced good people who neither challenged this sinister 
direction of travel nor warned their neighbours and friends.
In the same year I visited Bavaria and went to Dachau, the 
first Concentration Camp built by the Nazis. I learnt that 
initially Dachau was intended to be a place where through 
cruelty, intimidation and sometimes death those who 
thought differently or spoke out against the Nazis were ‘reeducated’. Early protestors were quickly incarcerated in 
Dachau and the majority remained silent. However, sin is a 
slippery slope and Dachau inevitably became a place of 
mass murder. 
Six months later I visited Auschwitz. There it was 
impossible to ignore the depths that human depravity can 
reach. I was struck that the undeniable evil which 
permeated Dachau had further deteriorated to even greater 
depths of evil - the extermination of 6 million Jews and so 
many others. I recognised the truth revealed by the Book of 
Genesis, not least in Adam and Eve, that sin/evil, when not 
effectively challenged, quickly grows and spreads. 
A combined culture of evil and silence can only go in one 
direction.
Closer to home we have recently witnessed the unscrupulous 
manipulation of a horrific crime to orchestrate hatred and 
violence against Muslims, asylum seekers, migrants and the 
police. This is what happens when blatant lies and the 
manipulation of half-truths run amok. It has happened too 
often before, and it is happening right now. Nor must we 
ignore that while this particular form of bigotry, lies and 
violence can be found in the Far Right, it can actually exist 
anywhere.
As Christians, and indeed as human beings, we must be 
vigilant regarding our own ideas and choice of language. We 
must also be courageous in challenging any kind of bigotry 
whenever and wherever we encounter it: within myself, or 
among family, friends or at work. Evil breeds evil and silence 
permits this. What is sinful/evil language today (verbal or 
written) too easily becomes violent tomorrow. The way of 
Christ is different and that is the path we must choose. 
I pen these words on the Feast of St Maximillian Kolbe. I 
stood in the cell where he was murdered, disturbed at the 
new violence destroying Kenya at that very moment, half a 
world away. I marvelled at how Maximillan’s faith drove him 
to confront evil and triumph over it in love. When I visited 
Kenya two months later, I promised myself that I would 
always challenge bigotry, no matter its form. Although I can 
point to occasions when I have kept that promise 
unfortunately there are many times I have failed. Today, as 
this latest bigotry spreads I again find myself asking if I am 
willing allow Christ to transform me. Time will tell.
Bishop Brian McGee 
Argyll and the Isles
14th August 2024
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