It is a story well known. Jonah: the reluctant prophet. Called by God, an Israelite to preach love to his nation’s rival Assyria, a country rancid with violence, crime, brutality, and disorder. Racist and resistant to the divine impetus—why should those psychopathic monsters be given a second chance, be seen as equal persons?—Jonah flees in the very opposite direction of the Assyrian capital Ninevah (located in modern-day Iraq): he embarks on a journey toward “Tarshish” (which was probably Spain; and if it wasn’t, most biblical commentators agree it was definitely in the opposite direction of Ninevah. Think of the emphasis implied in Jonah paddling straight across the Mediterranean to the Straits of Gibralter and perhaps beyond those gates. Imagine him thinking of retiring to a nice seaside cottage on the Azores, or settling down along the Portuguese coast, or of finding a Morrocan village to recline and hear the sunrise of Edvard Grieg’s famed “Morning.”)
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