« Elitism Watch | Main | The Man With $500 Ferragamo Loafers » 22 Aug 2008 09:27 am Cross In The Dirt UpdateSome loose ends. Chuck Colson's office say they simply don't know where the original source for the Solzhenitsyn story was, and have reviewed notes and manuscript of the book and come up empty. They're still looking into it. But Factcheck.org have uncovered two Billy Graham broadcasts that put the story out there in 1975 and 1976. Here's Billy Graham on September 3, 1975:
Who knows if Solzhenitsyn told this story to Graham personally, or whether it somehow entered the ether another way, or whether a story simply got embellished or transferred from one prisoner to another? It's nowhere in any of Solzhenitsyn's writings, as far as all the scholars know. It's probably invented, or has some kernel of truth only to be turned into a parable perfect for sermons and inspirational books. For Graham's purposes, it's an evangelizing tool. Some subsequent versions of the story in this vein add details such as this:
We're not in the universe of fact-gathering here. It's worth noting, however, that no other story shows up on Google or Nexis with all these elements combined - the prison camp, the prisoner, the cross-in-the-dirt, the moment of redemption - apart from the Graham-Helms-Colson parable and the Mark Salter hagiography. As Factcheck points out, "in a world where there are hundreds of millions of Christians, we see no reason to believe that both the McCain story and the one attributed to Solzhenitsyn can't both be true." Yes, but it's one hell of a coincidence that there's no story with these elements that can be found before Colson's 1983 book, and none after except the Salter/McCain story. The difference between the stories, of course, is that McCain shifts the protagonist from a fellow prisoner to a guard. This is quite striking -
and transforms the nature of the thing. It becomes a story about the
common humanity of oppressor and oppressed, rather than solidarity
among the victims. It combines the truth of McCain's 1973 account of
the humane prison guard who gave him a respite from long-time standing
with the uplift of the Graham parable. Put together, it's a very powerful story. It's also worth pointing out, however, that Christians throughout the ages have used similar drawings in the sand to identify one another, although almost all these stories involve the drawing of a fish, an early Christian symbol. But here's an anecdote from Sudan in 2002, which also contains a drawing of a cross in the sand:
(Cartoon by the great Tom Toles.) TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e554212d698834 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Cross In The Dirt Update' |

