A World Out of Touch With
Itself: Where the Violence Comes
From
Rabbi Michael Lerner
Editor, TIKKUN Magazine
There is never any justification for acts
of terror against innocent civilians--not in Israel and not in the U.S.--
it is the quintessential act of dehumanization and not recognizing the
sanctity of others, and a visible symbol of a world increasingly
irrational and out of control.
It's understandable why many of us, after
grieving and consoling the mourners, feel anger. Unfortunately, demagogues
in the White House and Congress have manipulated our legitimate
outrage and channeled it into a new militarism and a revival of the
deepest held belief of the conservative world-view: that the world is
mostly a dangerous place and our lives must be based around protecting
ourselves from the threatening others. In this case, terrorism provides a
perfect base for this worldview--it can come from anywhere, we don't
really know who is the enemy, and so everyone can be suspect and everyone
can be a target of our fear-induced rage. With this as a foundation, the
Bush team has been able to turn this terrible and outrageous attack into a
justification for massive military spending, a new war and the inevitable
trappings: repression of civil liberties, denigration of "evil
others," and a new climate of fear and intimidation against anyone
who doesn't join this misuse of patriotism toward distorted ends.
Of course, the people who did this attack
are evil and they are a real threat to the human race. If they could, they
would use nuclear weapons or chemical/biological weapons. The perpetrators
deserve to be punished, and I personally would be happy if all the people
involved in this act were to be imprisoned for the rest of their lives.
But that is quite different from talk about "eliminating
countries" which we heard from Colin Powell in the days after the
attack. Punishing the perpetrators is different from making war against
whole populations.
The narrow focus on the perpetrators allows
us to avoid dealing with the underlying issues. When violence becomes so
prevalent throughout the planet, it's too easy to simply talk of
"deranged minds." We need to ask ourselves, "What is it in
the way that we are living, organizing our societies, and treating each
other that makes violence seem plausible to so many people?" And why
is it that our immediate response to violence is to use violence
ourselves--thus re-enforcing the cycle of violence in the world?
We in the spiritual world will see the root
problem here as a growing global incapacity to recognize the spirit of God
in each other - -what we call the sanctity of each human being. But even if you reject religious language, you can see that
the willingness of people to hurt each other to advance their own
interests has become a global problem, and its only the dramatic level of
this particular attack which distinguishes it from the violence and
insensitivity to each other that is part of our daily lives.
We may tell ourselves that the current
violence has "nothing to do" with the way that we've learned to
close our ears when told that one out of every three people on this planet
does not have enough food, and that one billion are literally starving. We
may reassure ourselves that the hoarding of the world's resources by the
richest society in world history, and our frantic attempts to accelerate
globalization with its attendant inequalities of wealth, has nothing to do
with the resentment that others feel toward us. We may tell ourselves that
the suffering of refugees and the oppressed have nothing to do with us --
that that's a different story that is going on somewhere else.
But we live in one world, increasingly interconnected with
everyone, and the forces that lead people to feel outrage; anger and
desperation eventually impact on our own daily lives.
The same inability to feel the pain of
others is the pathology that shapes the minds of these terrorists. Raise children in circumstances where no one is there to take
care of them, or where they must live by begging or selling their bodies
in prostitution, put them in refugee camps and tell them that that they
have "no right of return" to their homes, treat them as though
they are less valuable and deserving of respect because they are part of
some despised national or ethnic group, surround them with a media that
extols the rich and makes everyone who is not economically successful and
physically trim and conventionally "beautiful" feel bad about
themselves, offer them jobs whose sole goal is to enrich the "bottom
line" of someone else, and teach them that "looking out for
number one" is the only thing anyone "really" cares about
and that anyone who believes in love and social justice are merely naive
idealists who are destined to always remain powerless, and you will
produce a world-wide population of people feeling depressed, angry, unable
to care about others, and in various ways dysfunctional.
I see this in Israel, where Israelis have
taken to dismissing the entire Palestinian people as
"terrorists" but never ask themselves: "What have we done
to make this seem to Palestinians to be a reasonable path of action
today." Of course there were always some hateful people and some
religious fundamentalists who want to act in hurtful ways against Israel,
no matter what the circumstances. Yet, in the situation of 1993-96 when
Israel under Yitzhak Rabin was pursuing a path of negotiations and peace,
the fundamentalists had little following and there were few acts of
violence. On the other hand, when Israel failed to withdraw from the West
Bank, and instead expanded the number of its settlers, the fundamentalists
and haters had a far easier time convincing many decent Palestinians that
there might be no other alternative.
Similarly, if the U.S. turns its back on
global agreements to preserve the environment, unilaterally cancels its
treaties to not build a missile defense, accelerates the processes by
which a global economy has made some people in the third world richer but
many poorer, shows that it cares nothing for the fate of refugees who have
been homeless for decades, and otherwise turns its back on ethical norms,
it becomes far easier for the haters and the fundamentalists to recruit
people who are willing to kill themselves in strikes against what they
perceive to be an evil American empire represented by the Pentagon and the
World Trade Center.
Most Americans will feel puzzled by any
reference to this "larger picture." It seems baffling to imagine
that somehow we are part of a world system which is slowly destroying the
life support system of the planet, and quickly transferring the wealth of
the world into our own pockets.
We don't feel personally responsible when
an American corporation runs a sweatshop in the Philippines or crushes
efforts of workers to organize in Singapore. We don't see ourselves
implicated when the U.S. refuses to consider the plight of Palestinian
refugees or uses the excuse of fighting drugs to support repression in
Colombia or other parts of Central America. We don't even see the
symbolism when terrorists attack America's military center and our trade
center -- we talk of them as buildings, though others see them as centers
of the forces that are causing the world so much pain.
We have narrowed our own attention to
"getting through" or "doing well" in our own personal
lives, and who has time to focus on all the rest of this?
Most of us are leading perfectly reasonable lives within the
options that we have available to us--so why should others be angry at us,
much less strike out against us? And
the truth is, our anger is also understandable: the striking out by others
in acts of terror against us is just as irrational as the world-system
that it seeks to confront. Yet our acts of counter-terror will also be
counter-productive. We should have learned from the current phase of the
Israel-Palestinian struggle, responding to terror with more violence,
rather than asking ourselves what we could do to change the conditions
that generated it in the first place, will only ensure more violence
against us in the future.
Luckily, most people don't act out in
violent ways--they tend to act out more against themselves, drowning
themselves in alcohol or drugs or personal despair. Others turn toward
fundamentalist religions or ultra-nationalist extremism. Still others find
themselves acting out against people that they love, acting angry or
hurtful toward children or relationship partners.
This is a world out of touch with itself,
filled with people who have forgotten how to recognize and respond to the
sacred in each other because we are so used to looking at others from the
standpoint of what they can do for us, how we can use them toward our own
ends. The alternatives are stark: either start caring about the fate of
everyone on this planet or be prepared for a slippery slope toward
violence that will eventually dominate our daily lives.
None of this should be read as somehow
mitigating our anger at the terrorists. Let's not be naïve about the
perpetrators of this terror. The
brains and money behind this operation isn't a group of refugees living
penniless in Palestinian refugee camps. Many of the core terrorists are
evil people, as are some of the fundamentalists and ultra-nationalists who
demean and are willing to destroy others. But these evil people are often
marginalized when societal dynamics are moving toward peace and hope (e.g.
in Israel while Yitzhak Rabin was Prime Minister) and they become much
more influential and able to recruit people to give their lives to their
cause when ordinary and otherwise decent people despair of peace and
justice (as when Israel from `1996 to 2000 dramatically increased the
number of settlers).
So here is what would marginalize those who
hate the United States. Imagine
if the Bin Ladins and other haters of the world had to recruit people
against America at a time when:
1.
America was using its economic resources to end world hunger and
redistribute the wealth of the planet so that everyone had enough.
2.
America was the leading voice championing an ethos of generosity and
caring for others-leading the world in ecological responsibility, social
justice, openhearted treatment of minorities, and rewarding people and
corporations for social responsibility.
3.
America was restructuring its own internal life so that all social
practices and institutions were being judged "productive or efficient
or rational" not only because they maximized profit, but also to the
extent that they maximized love and caring, ethical/spiritual/ecological
sensitivity, and an approach to the universe based on awe and wonder at
the grandeur of creation (what I call an Emancipatory Spirituality).
Think it's naive and impossible to move
American in that direction? Well,
here are two reasons why, even if it's a long shot, it's an approach that
deserves your support:
a. It's
even more naïve to imagine that bombings, missile defense systems, more
spies or baggage searches can stop people willing to lose their lives to
wreak havoc and capable of airplane hijacking, chemical assaults (like
anthrax), etc.
b. The
response of people to the World Trade Building collapse was an outpouring
of loving energy and generosity, sometimes even risking their own lives,
and showing the capacity and desire we all have to care about each other.
If we could legitimate people allowing that part of themselves to come
out, without having to wait for a disaster, we could empower a part of
every human being which our social order marginalizes. Americans have a
deep goodness-and that needs to be affirmed.
Indeed, the goodness that poured forth from
so many Americans should not be allowed to be overshadowed by the
subsequent shift toward militarism and anger. That same caring energy
could have been given a more positive outlet--if we didn't live in a
society which normally teaches us that our "natural" instinct is
toward aggression and that the best we can hope for is a world which gives
us protection.
The central struggle going on in the world
today is this one: between hope and fear, love or paranoia, generosity or
trying to shore up one's own portion. In my book Spirit Matters I show why
there is no possibility in sustaining a world built on fear. Our only hope
is to revert to a consciousness of generosity and love. That's not to go
to a lala-land where there are no forces like those who destroyed the Word
Trade Center. But it is to refuse to allow that to become the shaping
paradigm of the 21st century. Much better to make the shaping paradigm the
story of the police and firemen who risked (and in many cases lost) their
lives in order to save other human beings who they didn't even know. Let
the paradigm be the generosity and kindness of people when they are given
a social sanction to be caring instead of self-protective. We cannot let
war; hatred and fear become the power in this new century that it was in
the last century.
And it's up to us. We can't expect the Left
to be able to organize a successful movement, because they will define it
in the most narrow terms. They will talk about the rights of the oppressed
and make everyone believe that they don't really care about the terrible
loss of life and the terrible fear that everyone now has to endure about
our own safety. Their justified anger at the way capitalist globalization
has hurt people around the world will make them play down the
outrageousness of this particular attack--and hence be disconnected to the
righteous indignation that most the rest of us feel. Rather, we need a
movement that puts forward a positive vision of a world based on
caring--and a commitment to rectify the injustices that the globalization
of selfishness has wreaked on the world—while simultaneously making it
clear that we have no tolerance for reckless acts of violence and terror
such as those which Israel has had to experience this past year or those
which the U.S. faced in September. It's only with that balanced view that
we can say that it is a huge mistake to make war or violence the primary
way we respond to this situation. It's about time we began to say
unequivocally that violence doesn't work--not as an end and not as a
means. The best defense is a world drenched in love, not a world drenched
in armaments.
We should pray for the victims and the
families of those who have been hurt or murdered in these crazy acts. We
should also pray that America does not return to "business as
usual," but rather turns to a period of reflection, coming back into
touch with our common humanity, asking ourselves how our institutions can
best embody our highest values. We may need a global day of atonement and
repentance dedicated to finding a way to turn the direction of our society
at every level, a return to the notion that every human life is sacred,
that "the bottom line" should be the creation of a world of love
and caring, and that the best way to prevent these kinds of acts is not to
turn ourselves into a police state, but turn ourselves into a society in
which social justice, love, and compassion are so prevalent that violence
becomes only a distant memory.
Rabbi Michael Lerner is editor of TIKKUN
Magazine and rabbi of Beyt Tikkun Synagogue in San Francisco. He is the
author of Spirit Matters: Global Healing and the Wisdom of the Soul and
most recently (Sept 2001) editor: Best Contemporary Jewish Writing
www.Tikkun.org
e-mail
RabbiLerner@tikkun.org
Time Magazine printed part of this in their
October 1st issue. A
much-shortened version that has been shorn of God and spirituality appears
in this week's TIME magazine. Here is the fuller spiritual version—and a
yet fuller discussion of the spiritual issues will appear in the November
issue of TIKKUN.
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