| October 1, 2001 Volume 2 Issue 40 |
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| The
Deeper Wound -- by Deepak Chopra |
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As fate would have
it, I was leaving New York on a jet flight that took
off 45 minutes before the unthinkable happened. By the
time we landed in Detroit, chaos had broken out. When
I grasped the fact that American security had broken
down so tragically, I wouldn't respond at first. My
wife and son were also in the air on separate flights,
one to Los Angeles, one to San Diego. My body went absolutely
rigid with fear. All I could think about was their safety,
and it took several hours before I found out that their
flights had been diverted and both were safe.
Strangely, when the good news came, my body still felt
that it had been hit by a truck. Of its own accord it
seemed to feel a far greater trauma that reached out
to the thousands who would not survive and the tens
of thousands who would survive only to live through
months and years of hell. And I asked myself, why didn't
I feel this way last week? Why didn't my body go stiff
during the bombing of Iraq or Bosnia? Around the world
my horror and worry are experienced every day. Mothers
weep over horrendous loss, civilians are bombed mercilessly,
and refugees are ripped from any sense of home or homeland.
Why did I not feel their anguish enough to call a halt
to it?
As we hear the calls for tightened American security
and a fierce military response to terrorism, it is obvious
that none of us has any answers. However, we feel compelled
to ask some questions. Everything has a cause, so we
have to ask, what was the root cause of this evil?
We must find out not superficially but at the deepest
level. There is no doubt that such evil is alive all
around the world and is even celebrated. Does this evil
grow from the suffering and anguish felt by people we
don't know and therefore ignore? Have they lived in
this condition for a long time?
One assumes that whoever did this attack feels implacable
hatred for America. Why were we selected to be the focus
of suffering around the world? All this hatred and anguish
seems to have religion at its basis. Isn't something
terribly wrong when jihads and wars develop in the name
of God? Isn't God invoked with hatred in Ireland, Sri
Lanka, India, Pakistan, Israel, Palestine, and even
among the intolerant sects of America?
Can any military response make the slightest difference
in the underlying cause? Is there not a deep wound at
the heart of humanity? If there is a deep wound, doesn't
it affect everyone? When generations of suffering respond
with bombs, suicidal attacks, and biological warfare,
who first developed these weapons? Who sells them? Who
gave birth to the satanic technologies now being turned
against us?
If all of us are wounded, will revenge work? Will punishment
in any form toward anyone solve the wound or aggravate
it? Will an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, and
limb for a limb, leave us all blind, toothless and crippled?
Tribal warfare has been going on for two thousand years
and has now been magnified globally. Can tribal warfare
be brought to an end? Is patriotism and nationalism
even relevant anymore, or is this another form of tribalism?
What are you and I as persons going to do about what
is happening? Can we afford to let the deeper wound
fester any longer? Everyone is calling this an attack
on America, but is it not a rift in our collective soul?
Isn't this an attack on civilization from without that
is also from within?
When we have secured our safety once more and cared
for the wounded, after the period of shock and mourning
is over, it will be time for soul searching. I only
hope that these questions are confronted with the deepest
spiritual intent. None of us will feel safe again behind
the shield of military might and stockpiled arsenals.
There can be no safety until the root cause is faced.
In this moment of shock I don't think anyone of us has
the answers. It is imperative that we pray and offer
solace and help to each other. But if you and I are
having a single thought of violence or hatred against
anyone in the world at this moment, we are contributing
to the wounding of the world.
Deepak
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Dance
Trends is Published weekly by Dan Messenger. Copyright ©
2001 Dan Messenger. All rights reserved.
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