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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 naļve 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:
America was using its economic resources to end world hunger and
redistribute the wealth of the planet so that everyone had enough.
America was the leading voice championing an ethos of generosity
and caring for others-leading the world in ecological responsibility, social
justice, open-hearted treatment of minorities, and rewarding people and
corporations for social responsibility..
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).
We are trying to develop this kind of "New Bottom Line" in TIKKUN. To build
support for this approach we are now starting what we call "The TIKKUN
COMMUNITY"--both as a vehicle to raise money for the magazine, and as
a way of taking some steps to acknowledge the reality that we have been
functioning not only as a magazine, but as a kind of movement. The
TIKKUN COMMUNITY will be a cadre of people who agree with certain
basic principles. The founding statement can be found in this very issue of
TIKKUN Magazine (Nov.Dec, 2001) and on our website. We hope you'll
join us. If you want to, contact me at RabbiLerner@tikkun.org.
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 naļve 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
lalla-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 how 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.