The
following messages were received in response to my comments in the last
postcard about the tragedies of 11 September 2001.
I wrote:
Dear friends of life,
I don't know how the civilized world is going to limit the
destructiveness of the fundamentalist zealots found in every faith, but it
seems to me that controlling the most extreme forms of violent religious
expression must become a political and social priority from this moment on. Freedom of religion can
no longer mean that any of us has the right to limit the freedom of others
to practice whatever religion they happen to have chosen or been born
into... even when it is the "wrong" faith. We all have a right
to make our own mistakes. Forcing others to conform to our particular view
of religious "truth" must be wiped from the face of the earth...
and soon.
Many friends have sent me published commentaries and personal thoughts
on the current disaster facing the world. I'd like to share some of them
(without attribution as I haven't asked permission).
FB, somewhere in East Africa

Dear Fred, it has been a very difficult and painful week with images
that keep coming to mind. One of the best things I have read is from the
Dalai Lama. You may have already seen it but if not here is a copy.
Good
Travels, MM in Santa Barbara

Dear friends around the world,
The events of this day cause every thinking person to stop their daily
lives, whatever is going on in them and to ponder deeply the larger
questions of life. We search again for not only the meaning of life, but
the purpose of our individual and collective experience as we have created
it-and we look earnestly for ways in which we might recreate ourselves
anew as a human species, so that we will never treat each other this way
again.
The hour has come for us to demonstrate at the highest level our most
extraordinary thought about Who We Really Are.
There are two possible responses to what has occurred today. The first
comes from love, the second from fear.
If we come from fear we may panic and do things-as individuals and as
nations-that could only cause further damage. If we come from love we will
find refuge and strength, even as we provide it to others.
This is the moment of your ministry. This is the time of teaching. What
you teach at this time, through your every word and action right now will
remain as indelible lessons in the hearts and minds of those whose lives
you touch, both now, and for years to come.
We will set the course for tomorrow, today. At this hour. In this
moment. Let us seek not to pinpoint blame, but to pinpoint cause.
Unless we take this time to look at the cause of our experience, we
will never remove ourselves from the experiences it creates... Instead, we
will forever live in fear of retribution from those within the human
family who feel aggrieved, and, likewise, seek retribution from them.
To us the reasons are clear. We have not learned the most basic human
lessons. We have not remembered the most basic human truths. We have not
understood the most basic spiritual wisdom. In short, we have not been
listening to God, and because we have not, we watch ourselves do ungodly
things.
The message we hear from all sources of truth is clear: We are all one.
That is a message the human race has largely ignored. Forgetting this
truth is the only cause of hatred and war, and the way to remember is
simple: Love, this and every moment.
If we could love even those who have attacked us, and seek to
understand why they have done so, what then would be our response? Yet if
we meet negativity with negativity, rage with rage, attack with attack,
what then will be the outcome?
These are the questions that are placed before the human race today.
They are the questions we have failed to answer for thousands of years.
Failure to answer them now could eliminate the need to answer them at all.
If we want the beauty of the world that we have co-created to be
experienced by our children and our children's children, we will have to
become spiritual activists right here, right now, and cause that to
happen. We must choose to be at cause in the matter.
So, talk with God today. Ask God for help, for counsel and advice for
insight and for strength and for inner peace and for deep wisdom. Ask God
on this day to show us how to show up in the world in a way that will
cause the world itself to change. And join all those people around the
world who are praying right now, adding your Light to the Light that
dispels all fear.
That is the challenge that is placed before every thinking person
today. Today the human soul asks the question: What can I do to preserve
the beauty and the wonder of our world and to eliminate the anger and
hatred-and the disparity that inevitably causes it - in that part of the
world which I touch?
Please seek to answer that question today, with all the magnificence
that is You. What can you to TODAY...at this very moment?
A central teaching in most spiritual traditions is: What you wish to
experience, provide for another.
Look to see, now, what it is you wish to experience-in your own life,
and in the world. Then see if there is another for whom you may be the
source of that.
If you wish to experience peace, provide peace for another.
If you wish to know that you are safe, cause another to know that they
are safe.
If you wish to better understand seemingly incomprehensible things,
help another to better understand.
If you wish to heal your own sadness of anger, seek to heal the sadness
or anger of another.
Those others are waiting for you now. They are looking to you for
guidance, for help, for courage, for strength, for understanding and love.
My religion is very simple. My religion is kindness.
Dalai Lama
Forwarded by MM in Santa Barbara
PS: Another reader noted the attribution is only partially correct. FB

On the Bombings, by Noam Chomsky
The terrorist attacks were major atrocities. In scale they may not
reach the level of many others, for example, Clinton's bombing of the
Sudan with no credible pretext, destroying half its pharmaceutical
supplies and killing unknown numbers of people (no one knows, because the
US blocked an inquiry at the UN and no one cares to pursue it). Not to
speak of much worse cases, which easily come to mind.
But that this was a horrendous crime is not in doubt. The primary
victims, as usual, were working people: janitors, secretaries, firemen,
etc. It is likely to prove to be a crushing blow to Palestinians and other
poor and oppressed people. It is also likely to lead to harsh security
controls, with many possible ramifications for undermining civil liberties
and internal freedom.
The events reveal, dramatically, the foolishness of the project of
"missile defense." As has been obvious all along, and pointed
out repeatedly by strategic analysts, if anyone wants to cause immense
damage in the US, including weapons of mass destruction, they are highly
unlikely to launch a missile attack, thus guaranteeing their immediate
destruction. There are innumerable easier ways that are basically
unstoppable. But today's events will, very likely, be exploited to
increase the pressure to develop these systems and put them into place.
"Defense" is a thin cover for plans for militarization of space,
and with good PR, even the flimsiest arguments will carry some weight
among a frightened public.
In short, the crime is a gift to the hard jingoist right, those who
hope to use force to control their domains. That is even putting aside the
likely US actions, and what they will trigger -- possibly more attacks
like this one, or worse. The prospects ahead are even more ominous than
they appeared to be before the latest atrocities.
As to how to react, we have a choice. We can express justified horror;
we can seek to understand what may have led to the crimes, which means
making an effort to enter the minds of the likely perpetrators.
If we choose the latter course, we can do no better, I think, than to
listen to the words of Robert Fisk, whose direct knowledge and insight
into affairs of the region is unmatched after many years of distinguished
reporting. Describing, "The wickedness and awesome cruelty of a
crushed and humiliated people," he writes, "this is not the war
of democracy versus terror that the world will be asked to believe in the
coming days. It is also about American missiles [given to Israel] smashing
into Palestinian homes and US helicopters firing missiles into a Lebanese
ambulance in 1996 and American shells crashing into a village called Qana
and about a Lebanese militia -- paid and uniformed by America's Israeli
ally -- hacking and raping and murdering their way through refugee
camps." And much more.
Again, we have a choice: we may try to understand, or refuse to do so;
contributing to the likelihood that much worse lies ahead.
-- Noam Chomsky from TC in Santa Barbara

And from BM (Santa Barbara) a web site offering other published perspectives
on the current crisis.

And an exchange with another friend:
... Of course, nothing can save us from our craziness. I'm reminded of
the classic experiment with a small group of breeding rats introduced into
an ideal, but limited habitat. Eventually they produced so many of
themselves they began fighting and eventually turned to cannibalism!
You've got to wonder how long it will be before we start eating one
another.
Love, Fred 9/2/01
How prophetic! I trust you did hear the news about today's 4 airplane
hijackings and suicidal crashes into New York City's World Trade Center
and into the Pentagon. Somehow it doesn't seem surprising to me; the
inevitability of the "rest of the world" getting mad enough to
attack the USA has been apparent to me for decades.
What makes me mad is the media hype/support of the government 'hawks'
who are raising the hue and cry to 'punish' those responsible! It is so
stupid as to be laughable that such a great preponderance of people here
and around the world can't see the problem with killing other people to
'right the wrong' of killings that have happened... And the media just
love the resulting feeding frenzy.
So I shake my head and return to the work of creating and maintaining
peace in my own spirit, and send best wishes for the same for you and
others.
Shalom, JT Washington State

My Dear American Friends,
I have been out of town for more than 10 days. I apologize for trying
to get in touch with you this late. During these days I did not have much
access to the Internet but have been watching CNN continuously in great
shock. We are all so saddened and distressed about the attack.
Whatever has happened in the US is beyond anyone's imagination. In
light of the sad events that occurred I wish to extend my condolences to
the American public and those affected in the US atrocities.
I am deeply sharing your feelings. I do hope that you, your friends and
family members are all safe and ok. Please drop me a few lines some time
at your convenience.
I believe that this is a matter of humanity, not a matter of
nationality or religion. For a better world we need to fight together and
humanity will win.
SY, a Muslim friend in Istanbul, Turkey

FRED: LA Times says South Africa has 27,000 murders each year. They
even beat us. I'm reading the Koran in Italian. Very interesting. Bin
Laden gave another interview recently in which he pretty clearly
explicates the point he has been making all along, which we have been
ignoring all along, rightly or wrongly, which is: "Americans, get out
of the Middle East, and especially out of Israel and the Moslem
countries." It all seems pretty simple and obvious to me: if the oil
were not there, we would not be there, and they would not be here. At
bottom, as Plato says, "All wars are about money." That seems a
reasonable explanation to me, from my life's experience. In spite of all
the tragedy, I see this whole event having some positive effects. People,
world wide, are really communicating more, and are exhibiting more love
and compassion, along with the hatred, for each other than I observed
prior to Sept. 11. Have fun, EG in Santa Barbara

Dear Fred, I have just made up an African fable, about a lion that was
bitten on the ass by a wasp. He whirled, and struck out, and snapped but
he could not find the wasp. He therefore declared war on all of the wasps
in the world. I hope that my country is not a lion, at least, not that
dumb of a lion, but I have real fears. I worry that we can be either an
empire or a republic, and that we can have either safety or freedom, and I
really don't believe that it is possible for us to have all four. I Love
You, and My Country.
AS in Washington State

There were other thoughtful messages following the New York-Washington
tragedies, but these gave me special jolts of understanding and provoked
me to ponder in uncommon ways.
Hope some of them will add to your own understanding of the interesting
times in which we live.
Peace,
Fred
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