One of the casualties of this culture of violence, injustice and war is the
loss of our imagination. People across the country can not even imagine a
world without war, poverty or nuclear weapons. But that is our job. We are
like our ancestors, the Abolitionists, who came along and announced an
astonishing, breathtaking new vision, a world without slavery, the equality
of everyone on earth. We are their heirs, New Abolitionists, announcing a
new world without war, poverty or nuclear weapons, a new world of
nonviolence.
You may have heard the true story of some church activists who met in a
church basement in East Berlin in the dismal days of the early 1980s around
the ridiculous topic, "What Will It Be Like 1000 Years From Now When the
Berlin Wall Finally Comes Down--And--What Do We Have To Do Now To Help That
Great Day Happen?" They were dismissed as idealistic fools. But their
meeting was exciting and energized them, so they decided to meet again, and
more people showed up, and they kept meeting, and soon, people were meeting
in church basements across East Germany, and within a few years, in November
1989, we watched in astonishment on TV as hundreds of thousands of people
marched every day throughout East Germany and the unthinkable happened, the
newly imaginable happened, the Berlin Wall came down peacefully.
Everyone thought it was a miracle, but the miracle was the grassroots
movement that had been built and grew over time. My take on all this is that
we have to do our thing down here, organizing and building a national,
global, grassroots movement around such an impossible dream, envisioning the
previously unimaginable and daring to announce it boldly, even give our
lives for it. Meanwhile, God is doing Her thing up there, working to bring
about some big changes that we can't quite imagine, such as, in this case,
the emergence of Gorbachev and Perestroika. Gorbachev and Perestroika--and
the God of peace--need us to be doing our thing down here, building that
grassroots movement of nonviolence so that when that new sign of hope breaks
through, there is a movement that moves to make the peaceful transformation
a reality.
Recently, I attended a small luncheon in Santa Fe in honor of my friend
historian Howard Zinn, and he said that every major movement for social
change in the United States felt hopeless. I found this very consoling! He
said, from the beginning, through the middle, and right up to the very end,
they were all hopeless, hopeless, hopeless, and then, all of a sudden, there
was an astonishing breakthrough. The key to making it all happen, he said,
was that people kept their vision alive. Ordinary people continued to do
small acts for peace and justice every day, and over time, those little
things added up into something big. They never gave up. He said that
historically, the one thing those in power fear the most is a movement that
won't go away. So our job is not to give up, not to go away. We have to keep
on pursuing that vision of a new world of peace, justice and nonviolence, to
be hopeful in our hopelessness and trust that the God of peace is doing her
thing while we do ours.
For me, the key to such a hopeful movement, a new network of spiritual
progressives, the end of the war on Iraq, the disarmament of the United
States, the transformation of our world, even our journey to the God of
peace is--nonviolence.
Everything comes down to violence or nonviolence. I think violence is the
great heresy, the great idolatry, the great mortal sin of our times which is
destroying us as a people and a nation and a race.
Likewise, as Dr. King, Mahatma Gandhi and Dorothy Day instruct, nonviolence
is the great hope of our times, the great wisdom of our various religious
traditions, the ultimate message of the best spiritual teachers, literally,
the only option left for the whole human race, not to mention our movements
for peace and justice. So I say, we have to become people of active,
creative nonviolence, everyone of us, everywhere, to become teachers and
champions and heralds and apostles of creative nonviolence.
How do we keep building such a diverse, inclusive active movement for peace
and justice? We have to keep reflecting on that question, learning from
history, experimenting with nonviolent action, but here are some thoughts.
First, we have to practice nonviolence in every level of our personal lives.
We need to be nonviolent to ourselves, our spouses, our children, our
parents, our neighbors, everyone in our local communities, everyone in our
religious communities, everyone everywhere. That means looking deep within
to renounce every trace of violence within us, to pursue a deep, interior
inner nonviolence.
Second, if we really are a spiritual movement for peace and justice, we need
to really seek the God of peace and justice, regardless of whether others
are pursuing God sincerely or not. We need to be single-minded in our search
for the God of love, the God of peace, the God of compassion, the God of
nonviolence. That means becoming contemplatives, mystics, a whole new
generation of peace and justice saints, people who work to end war and
injustice and who take quality time in solitude every day for prayer, who
develop an intimate relationship with the God of peace, so that we become
more and more true servants of the God of peace and justice, so that our
movements are truly led by a higher power for peace that will benefit all of
creation.
Third, if we go deeper into nonviolence and the search for God, Gandhi says,
we will come to a greater awareness of truth and discover the common ground
of our shared humanity--that every human being on the planet is equal, that
we are all children of the God of peace. And so we will treat everyone with
respect and dignity. We will never hurt or kill anyone, much less remain
silent while thousands die from hunger and war, and nuclear weapons,
corporate greed and global warming threaten us all. From now on, we see
every human being on the planet as our very sister and brother, regardless
of race, gender, class, religion, age, sexual orientation, ability,
nationality, language, height, weight or any other distinction.
Fourth, as people of nonviolence who uphold the unity of the human family,
we practice universal love--an unconditional, all-inclusive,
all-encompassing, non-retaliatory, sacrificial, welcoming, compassionate
love toward everyone everywhere for the rest of our lives.
Fifth, because we seek God and practice nonviolent love, we respect all
religious traditions. We are committed to listening and learning from one
another about our common search for the God of peace so that we might become
more nonviolent, more compassionate, more human. As Gandhi discovered, we
recognize that nonviolence is the common ground of all religious traditions,
and that we need every religious tradition to help us become a new people, a
new nation, a new world of nonviolence. We need to keep on reaching out to
one another across religious lines and build a new interfaith movement based
on friendship, something which we have never really done before in our
history.
Sixth, we take sides, just as the God of peace, justice and nonviolence
takes side. We side with peace. We side with justice. We side with
nonviolence. And because God sides with the poor and oppressed and
disenfranchised in order to embrace and liberate us all, we too side with
the poor and oppressed and disenfranchised. As the Latin American churches
are teaching us, we make a preferential option for the poor and oppressed.
Like Dorothy Day of the Catholic Worker, we side with the poor, walk with
the poor, march with the poor, serve the poor, befriend the poor, learn from
the poor, defend the poor, and in our downward mobility, eventually become
one with the poor. We try to break through class and racial lines, live
simply, tithe our time and our treasure, and give ourselves more and more to
their bottom line struggles. In the process, we will become more human, more
compassionate, and recognize our need for the God of peace and justice.
As we keep break down these barriers, bridge these divides and reach out to
join hands with one another, we can stand up together and speak out
together. We can denounce every form of violence and injustice and announce
a great new vision of peace and justice.
Together we will be able to say unpopular things like: End the war and
occupation on Iraq; bring the troops home now; make reparations to the
people of Iraq; let the United Nations resolve the crisis nonviolently; end
the occupation of Palestinians; support nonviolent Israeli and Palestinian
peacemakers, the Jewish vision of shalom and human rights for Palestinians;
end all U.S. military aid and warmaking in Colombia; stop all surveillance
on peace and justice activists; close all U.S. terrorist training camps,
beginning with Fort Benning's notorious "School of Assassins," and close the
C.I.A., the N.S.A., the F.B.I., and the Pentagon--close them all!; leave the
World Trade Organization; lift the entire Third World debt; distribute free
medicine to everyone with HIV/AIDS; abolish the death penalty; welcome every
immigrant and undocumented person; rebuild New Orleans and its levees and
take care of its victims; house the homeless; grant universal healthcare;
fund nonviolence education in every school on the planet; stop rigging our
elections; undertake treaties for nuclear disarmament; join the World Court;
obey international law; sign the Kyoto accord; fund alternatives to fossil
fuels; stop global warming; end the Star Wars program; disarm Los Alamos;
cut the entire military budget; abolish every one of our nuclear weapons and
weapons of mass destruction; and then redirect those hundreds of billions of
dollars toward the hard work for a lasting peace by feeding every starving
child and refugee on the planet this week in a massive new Global Marshall
Plan. Together, we can announce and welcome a new world of nonviolence, with
peace and social justice for everyone on the planet. Amen!
Rev. John Dear is a Catholic priest, peace activist, and the author of 20
books including most recently, "You Will Be My Witnesses" (Orbis) and "The
Questions of Jesus" (Doubleday). He speaks on peace and justice to tens of
thousands of people each year in churches and universities across the
country, and works with Pax Christi New Mexico on a campaign to disarm Los
Alamos, the birthplace of the bomb. For more info, see: www.johndear.org. To learn about the new Network for Spiritual Progressives, go to:
www.spiritualprogressives.org and www.tikkun.org
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