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History Is On Our Side
The history of war in both the ancient and modern world makes one wonder if war is an irresistible compulsion for man. Perhaps the pull toward violence or at least occasional bloodletting is a deep need in the human psyche, an evolutionary adaptation we struggle to understand. What is this love of war, of violence, of bloodshed?

Is it ever possible to, as a species, love peace more than war?

To answer this we need only look at the lives of people who dedicated themselves to loving peace. The names we remember and celebrate in history-Gautama Buddha, Jesus Christ, Lao Tzu, and many others-were all proponents of peace. We mostly do not know and certainly do not celebrate the names of the warriors of those times.

In more recent history, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr., Aung San Suu Kyi, and the Dalai Lama are spoken of with the reverence reserved for people whose presence on this troubled earth soothes the spirit. We celebrate their existence because there is an awareness in most of us that recognizes goodness, kindness, and fair play when we see it. In other words, those people who have most inspired us have always offered messages of love and nonviolence.

This speaks to an inherent wisdom that does exist in our hearts, despite our behavior.

We sometimes make the conceptual mistake of thinking that people whose message was love and peace belonged on the whole to former times. We think of those people as legends in a historical context that happened long ago, or we assume that they were from traditional cultures whose values accommodated such quaint views.

But what if those lives were not so much an example of where we have historically been but of where we need to go? Not alpha but omega points. Not how we once were but how we might become? What if humankind is being forced to evolve to these kinds of understandings, or die?

Fortunately, we have many examples in our own time of people to whom we can look for inspiration.

They are those who understood freedom, not in the primitive view of freedom to have whatever one wants or freedom to control territory, but in the understanding of freedom to live a harmless life without the fear of being harmed by others. The people we have admired in history have asked us to be willing to live, as did Gandhi and all who have been inspired by his life, with a dedication to love, service, nonviolence, and to this true understanding of freedom.

They remind us that although we sometimes have to make sacrifices for these values, compromising them is a far worse fate.

They also, by their very existence, let us know that we are not alone.

Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “I know somehow that only when it is dark enough, can you see the stars.”

It is now our time to shine in the darkness, to stand true to our values for their own sake and know that we stand side by side with the countless millions who have loved and will love those values.

History is on our side.

by Catherine Ingram,
Author, Novelist, Retreat leader

www.DharmaDialogues.org

1 Comment »

Other posts related to this theme:

  • Eyes of the World (For the people of Burma)
  • Freedom Is A Complex Meaning
  • Prominent Voices For Freedom
  • We Can Re-invent Civil Disobedience
  • Ubuntu: Humanity in/to Others
  • One Response to “History Is On Our Side”

    1. on 16 Nov 2006 at 6:38 am Kevin Ionno

      Well said. I believe, too, that there is an uneven but discernable, evolutionary path that human consciousness is traveling among the barbarism and greed we see in the world. The outcome is not certain. All we can do is individually climb the ladder, reaching up to grasp the hands of those who have gone before us, and back to help the person behind us.

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