Recycling a post from a couple years back today.
“Let us take the risks of peace upon our lives, not impose the risks of war upon the world.” Quaker Proverb
Peaceful
action, in my opinion, has little to do with how forceful or how
tranquil the action itself is. Rather, the relevant inquiry is to examine the
perspective from which the action arises. Even an action of great
force can come from a equanimity of mind. When there is a true embrace of
our shared humanity, I believe that even quite fierce or outwardly
violent actions have the potential to move us toward peace. Internal
state is where peace starts, and I believe that it's only through actions arising from
an internal state of peace that we can bring the peace we have
cultivated inside ourselves to the world around us.
On a
wide scale, I believe humans have fallen into quite a different pattern. Our
actions, large and small, aggressive and docile, are much more often
fueled by a state of blameful separation and anger. The problem is that whether
these actions succeed or fail in the short run, when we step back, we
can start to notice that actions to taken with this blameful intention are in vain. The beast we think we are fighting just
keeps getting stronger; it just keeps reappearing and morphing into more
ruthless forms.
When Gandhi said “an eye for an eye makes the
whole world blind,” I don't see this as just a line of idealistic poetry. He
was stating an observation about how certain kinds of actions work in
the world. When we act in the hope for vengeance, in a belief that
elimination and punishment will heal our wounds and make us safe, we
become blind.
I notice a strong resistance to
understand what offends us, and I think it is because we’re afraid that understanding
would be like condoning or empowering what we think is wrong. So
instead, we quite often choose to hate that which offends us. We choose
the course of doing whatever it takes to eliminate, block, or oppose that which offends
us. And in this course of action, we miss seeing an obvious pattern at
work.
I believe that the opposite of our conditioned instincts is true. It is
our resistance to understand, and the resulting hatred and loss of
integrity that IS condoning and empowering the behavior that
offends us. We're sending a clear message about what we think of as an
empowered voice of opposition, and it actually invites the other side to continue speaking to us in the same language.
“Nonviolence is
the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. It is mightier than the
mightiest weapon of destruction devised by the ingenuity of man.”
Gandhi
Entertain the possibility that this isn’t merely a lofty
metaphor, but a statement of actual truth. Gandhi’s movement to free
India shows how this principle can actually work to break the chain of
violence and injustice. Gandhi was so unique in his approach to
opposition. He never lost faith in the British; he firmly held that if
they really knew what they were doing and saw it clearly, they would
leave India. And as we all learned, he was right, and in my humble
opinion, this faith in his enemy was one of the most unique and powerful
waves of change the world has ever seen.
2 comments:
This is a really beautiful post, and I couldn't agree more. I'm happy to see that most of the protests have been mostly peaceful. Happy to find your blog. ~ Diane
Thanks so much, Diane! Glad you found my blog too.
It has been good that the protests have been peaceful, and I do think that these crazy times are bringing some good things out of people.
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