28 December 2012

Contents list


Below is the www.waysofloving.com contents list.  Some of the many weird and wonderful things I didn't use are on the scratchings page.  You can also view all the wonders on the Ways Of Loving map.

Week 1: Cosmic Zoom
Week 2: Danny MacAskill
Week 5: Running
Week 6: Slug sex
Week 7: Baaba Maal
Week 9: Hospitality
Week 11: Ant-counting
Week 12: Krump
Week 13: Žižek
Week 14: Murmuration
Week 15: Northern lights
Week 18: Virtuosity
Week 19: Protest
Week 20: Trains
Week 22: Igloo
Week 23: Ice dance
Week 24: Love in old age
Week 25: Spirals
Week 26: Black holes
Week 27: Moonwalk
Week 28: Bees
Week 29: Swimming
Week 30: Opposable thumbs
Week 31: Symphony
Week 32: Samuel Plimsoll
Week 33: Metaphor
Week 35: Lindy hop
Week 37: The bicycle
Week 38: James Holman
Week 42: Soil
Week 43: Smiles
Week 45: Being in love
Week 46: Maps
Week 48: Bird migrations
Week 49: Hunting
Week 50: Love and wonder
Week 51: Growing food

_________________


23 December 2012

Week 52: 'I think of love as something strong that organises itself in politics'

Wonder spawned in: 1968
Wondered into being by: Martin Luther King Jr.
Wonderspan: 5 minutes
To experience this wonder at its best: Make sure you can hear the sound and click 'full screen' icon.

So your brother is a garbage collector in Memphis, Tennessee, on 99 cents an hour.  He says it’s not right that when it rains, he’s sent home with no work, while his white workmates who drive the trucks are paid for doing nothing.  So today he’s on the picket line.

This is just the latest.  Your people have endured every privation you can think of.  You’ve been kept out of shops by signs on the door comparing you with apes, refused work because of the colour of your skin, told you haven’t the right to vote or go to university, and kept from eating at the same café counter as the white folks.  And when your people resisted, you were beaten by mobs, people disappeared, the law stood idly by or worse – they turned water hoses against you and your children, or set the dogs on you.

Your brother was on strike yesterday, too, and in the afternoon the police taunted him and hit him in the head.  He didn’t retaliate, though, and he’s gone back to the picket line today.

You and your brother heard Dr. King talk about his dream: ‘with this faith… we will be free one day’.  You have read Dr. King’s open letter, written on scraps of newspaper from a cell in Birmingham jail: ‘We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, … I have earnestly opposed violent tension, but there is a type of constructive, nonviolent tension which is necessary for growth.’  You have seen your people rise up in Atlanta, Georgia, to put this into practice, claiming back their dignity and not letting the brutality of the state bow their heads.

Times sure are changing.  It’s 1968.  The segregated schools are gone or going.  Those ‘No Negroes’ signs are now illegal.  More black people are voting now, some are going to university.  Black and white can all eat at the lunch counters.  You can now wait with the white folks in the station waiting room and when the bus comes, take whichever seat you like, although you still get the abuse whatever you do.  Times are changing, not because your people waited for those in power to hand you freedom, but because your movement arranged boycotts, sit-ins, public education campaigns, rallies, radio and TV interviews and legal action.  You made it happen.

Dr. King has a dream, you do and your brother does too.  He’s proud to be a part of it by being on strike today and you are proud of your brother, especially today, for Martin Luther King himself is coming to town to speak.

The Mason Temple is packed, you've never seen it so full.  Your whole family is here and you have to stand at the back.  You can’t see from where you are that Dr. King is physically and mentally exhausted.  You don’t know that he’s supposed to be in Washington but insisted on supporting the Memphis garbage collectors, though his aides told him it wasn’t important enough.  You don’t realise, either, that yesterday there was a credible threat against Dr. King’s life – a bomb scare.  And no-one knows yet that tomorrow they will finally get to him, though Dr. King knows the time is coming.  You know he knows.  ‘We got to see it through,’ he says, 'I may not get there with you':

The next day Martin Luther King was assassinated by gunshot while he stood on the balcony of his motel, the Lorraine.  The killer was apparently James Earl Ray, a life-long petty criminal and escaped convict.  The FBI was accused of a conspiracy.  The evidence for this is patchy but they had a motive; when King won the Nobel Prize for Peace (at the age of just 35), the FBI called him a ‘vicious’ fraud and ‘an evil, abnormal beast’.

(There was a slightly longer clip on YouTube but the multinational corporation EMI had it taken down saying it was their own intellectual property: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aL4FOvIf7G8
But a grainy version of the whole speech with a brief introduction is here: http://vimeo.com/3816635 )

Letter from Birmingham Jail
Dr. King’s letter from Birmingham jail was an open reply to a criticism from six white clergy denouncing the movement’s acts of civil disobedience in the city.  It was written on scraps of newspaper and smuggled out because he was denied anything to write with.  He was but one of 3,000 or so protesters jailed for nonviolence resistance in Birmingham.  ‘We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the hateful words and actions of the bad people but for the appalling silence of the good people,’ he wrote, and:
‘Perhaps it is easy for those who have never felt the stinging darts of segregation to say, "Wait." But when you have seen vicious mobs lynch your mothers and fathers at will and drown your sisters and brothers at whim; when you have seen hate filled policemen curse, kick and even kill your black brothers and sisters; when you see the vast majority of your twenty million Negro brothers smothering in an airtight cage of poverty in the midst of an affluent society; when you suddenly find your tongue twisted and your speech stammering as you seek to explain to your six year old daughter why she can't go to the public amusement park that has just been advertised on television, and see tears welling up in her eyes when she is told that Funtown is closed to colored children, and see ominous clouds of inferiority beginning to form in her little mental sky, and see her beginning to distort her personality by developing an unconscious bitterness toward white people; when you have to concoct an answer for a five year old son who is asking: "Daddy, why do white people treat colored people so mean?"; when you take a cross county drive and find it necessary to sleep night after night in the uncomfortable corners of your automobile because no motel will accept you; when you are humiliated day in and day out by nagging signs reading "white" and "colored"; when your first name becomes "nigger," your middle name becomes "boy" (however old you are) and your last name becomes "John," and your wife and mother are never given the respected title "Mrs."; when you are harried by day and haunted by night by the fact that you are a Negro, living constantly at tiptoe stance, never quite knowing what to expect next, and are plagued with inner fears and outer resentments; when you are forever fighting a degenerating sense of "nobodiness"--then you will understand why we find it difficult to wait.’

‘Nonviolence’ – what is it?

I don’t know anyone who actually thinks ‘nonviolence’ is a suitable word for what it is supposed to mean.  It looks like it means ‘not violent’ but that is only part of it and not the main part at that.  'Nonviolence' is an attempt to translate a Hindu word coined by Gandhi, satyagraha, meaning something like the power (agraha) of truthfulness (satya).  One way of interpreting satyagraha is as the power of holding faith with the dignity of life – your own and others’ – when it is threatened.  For the truthfulness which makes a claim on the nonviolence activist is not just any old truth, but to the dignity of being.  Satyagrahis are people who try to do this.  While satyagraha implies a commitment not to be violent, in the first place it suggests a certain kind of commitment to social change and, most importantly, to the means of change through a kind of faithfulness to one’s self and to others.  Gandhi turned this insight into a movement based on nonviolent civil disobedience to British rule and oppression of India.

So nonviolence doesn’t mean just ‘not violent’, which lets your oppressor walk all over you.  Rather, it’s a form of active resistance.  It’s neither politics without love, which is violence, nor love without politics, which is sentimentality – it is a loving kind of politics, a political kind of loving.  In the terms of the Civil Rights movement, nonviolence meant being willing to ‘put your body on the line’.  Martin Luther King expressed it like this: ‘I think of love as something strong that organises itself in politics and direct action.’  It put him and thousands of others in jail and it got him and Gandhi assassinated – it’s hardly a soft option.

As a method of social change, nonviolence lays bare a conflict that is already present and then, often, escalates it to create  a crisis point at which change becomes possible.  The authorities of Birmingham, Alabama, unjustly banned the Civil Rights marchers, who decided to march anyway.  This raised the temperature of the conflict because it put the ball back in the authorities’ court.  They reacted with attack dogs, water cannon, and by putting over 3,000 people in jail.  Still the marchers kept marching and did not retaliate with violence.  The result was TV coverage showing state power used in violence against innocent people.  This shocked the nation and the world.  The outrage put pressure on the intransigence of reactionary politicians and gave progressive ones the support they needed to introduce Civil Rights legislation in the next two years.  So, in that case, the determined, concerted, and well-planned nonviolent action of ordinary people brought lasting political change.

Unfortunately the word ‘nonviolence’ still looks like it just means ‘not violent’, when it means so much more than that but until we think of a better word we’ll keep calling these mass expressions of faithfulness ‘nonviolence movements’.  These are at work all over the world – at the gates of British nuclear weapons bases, at tar sands extraction sites in Canada, in the fields of India to resist corporate take-over of the land, and in most other corners of the world.  Every nonviolence movement inspires every other and teaches something new about this very practical, political way of loving.

(By the way, the boat I live on is named ‘Promise’ after the bit in Martin Luther King’s Mountaintop Speech where he says ‘I’ve seen the Promised Land.’)

Extra…

Here is some footage from Gandhi’s Salt March in 1930.  The Salt March or Salt Satyagraha was an act of nonviolent resistance against an oppressive salt tax levied against the Indian poor by the British Raj.  The marchers walked 241 miles through Gujarat to the sea and began to harvest their own, tax-free salt.  This gave hope to millions of Indians who began resisting their British rulers in other nonviolent ways.  It’s a bit too simple just to say that the British panicked, used violence, then gave up, but that pretty much was the outcome.  Eventually they gave up India entirely.  That didn’t happen just because of the Salt March or other nonviolence movements, but these were instrumental to say the least in achieving independence.  In turn, Gandhi’s methods inspired activists in other countries, not least Martin Luther King.  Here is some original footage from the Salt March – the parts don’t quite mesh together but they’re well worth a watch.

The most significant thing about the Civil Rights movement and the struggle for Indian independence was not their (largely) nonviolent character, important thought that was.  What mattered more was that these were a social movements of ordinary people with no unusual power, role or position, who effectively challenged the edifice of state-sanctioned injustice and helped to build a more life-affirming society.  In the following short film the Dongria Kondh people are resisting the multinational mining company Vedanta Resources, which plans to open a huge open-cast mine on the community’s sacred mountain: http://www.survivalinternational.org/films/mine  (Thanks to Sunniva T for suggesting this one.)

P V Rajagopal talks about his work applying Gandhian insights to grassroots social change movements in India to support rural poor people and their right to work the land and resist its takeover by multinational corporations: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHHwNCW5XOU

And what about you and me?  What movement are we part of?
  
Bye-bye!

We’ve reached the end of our year of wonders for Monday morning!  We’ve had 52 ways of loving, from Eva Szasz’s Cosmic Zoom to Martin Luther King’s mountaintop speech.  Thank you for following the blog all this way.  Thanks especially if you suggested your own Monday wonders.  I did get stuck a few times and one or two of your suggestions saved me from despair late on Sunday night.  I’m sorry that I couldn’t include all your suggestions but in a few days I’ll include an entry listing all the bits that didn’t make it.

All the entries are still available at www.waysofloving.com and on the wonder map so you can always go round again if you like.

It’s not a bad thing that it’s coming to an end, though.  YouTube seems plastered with ads now anyway.  The real wonders are out there and not on our screens… but you know that.

__________________

16 December 2012

Week 51: 'An understanding ... of the human place in the order of creation.'

Wonder spawned in: Throughout history
Wondered into being by: Ordinary folks as usual
Wonderspan: 10 minutes
To experience this wonder at its best: Make sure you can hear the sound and click 'full screen' icon.


Food.  In every bite is the sun’s light, Earth’s evolution, the labour of other people, and particles your body will soon make its own.  In food culminate all the things that make life and communion possible – cosmos, Earth, people – it really is something to say Grace for.  If we want to evaluate how well we love ourselves, others and the Earth, there is no better barometer than how we grow and eat food.  With food, fundamental questions about how we live our lives and organise our societies are literally in your face.

British households throw away more than seven million tons of food and drink each year, worth £12 billion.  Why does it matter?  Here are a few more facts, starting with one I’ve mentioned before; the industrial food system:
  • Has destroyed a third of the Earth’s topsoil in less than half a century;
  • Consumes more than 2,000 litres of water to produce a piece of steak and more than 1,200 litres to produce a loaf of bread;
  • Consumes 10 calories of energy for every 1 calorie of food it produces;
  • Generates yields that are no higher than smaller-scale biodiverse alternatives and creates fewer jobs;
  • Will collapse worldwide within a few decades due to its heavy dependence on fossil fuels.
That has barely begun to explain why change is necessary, but it's enough to be getting on with.  Some people are grappling with the problem in creative, practical way and what they are doing is amazing and exciting.  We'll be looking at one or two of these ways of loving today.

I've gathered four short film clips; please pick one for your Monday morning wonder.  Each film shows how changing the way we grow and eat food is not only socially and ecologically urgent, but involves us in questions of passion -- that is, of what we think life and society are all about.  All the films show that the Earth can produce such benign abundance when we work with and not against it.  This is a wonder, yet so is how these individuals and groups talk about what their commitment means to them; it’s about the whole of life, they say.  Be inspired!


1. Vandana Shiva

Here, physicist-turned-farmer Vandana Shiva talks about the work of Navdanya farm – a place ‘hospitable to every species and every culture’.  She has found that biodiverse systems are twice to five times as productive as industrialised monocrop systems (including those depending on genetically modified organisms – ‘mutilated seeds’).


2. Wendell Berry

Poet and farmer Wendell Berry talks about how working with the land teaches certain attitudes to work and food.  We need ‘a proper humility’, he says, in order to understand the kind of relationship to the Earth that will support human life in the long term: one that allows nature rather than fights it.  His uncommon eloquence and depth of spirit make him (for me) a modern-day prophet.  Every line is like a planted seed, the listener’s mind and heart like a waiting hillside for this ‘good farmer’.


3. Rebecca Hosking

Here is Rebecca Hosking and Tim Green’s film showing her quest to change her own farm.  It’s one of the best documentaries I’ve ever seen: beautifully made, straightforward, grounded, sad, moving, still hopeful.  Here are the first ten minutes:
Or if you prefer to skip straight to the bit that talks about how a farm, configured differently, might feed 10 people per acre – twice as many people as conventional methods in Britain - then this link takes you to a point later in the programme:


4. Overtown

Overtown in Miami is one of the oldest and poorest communities in the United States.  The community has planted a permaculture garden on old waste land beneath the freeway.  These guys are from the school of ‘Just Do It’.  ‘We had to bring the dirt,’ they say, without asking for permission because the authorities would have said no.  This film by Kevin Brown, Francine Cavanaugh and Adams Wood is a bit grainy but I find it really inspiring:
There’s a bit more about Overtown here: http://overtowner.com/


A few easy ways to join in:

Here are a few things I've been trying to do - all fairly simple, none particularly radical:

Cut down waste: http://england.lovefoodhatewaste.com  For most items apart from fish and some meat, ‘best before’ dates can be roundly ignored.

Cut down on meat and dairy products - if not veggie, then treat meat as a treat, not every night of the week.
Cut down on heavily processed food (it typically tastes awful anyway).
When buying:
  • avoid supermarkets if possible (they're not on our side, nor on the Earth's); small shops are not always  much better but they are better
  • choose locally grown food if possible (and never anything air-freighted)
  • buy only seasonal produce as far as possible (try a veg box scheme, put a seasonal produce calendar on your kitchen wall)
  • avoid heavily packaged goods
  • prefer organic and fairtrade goods (yep, they’re more expensive, but usually only by a few pence - some people can't afford them, many can)
  • notice when you’re thinking of buying New Zealand butter / South African wine / Moon cheese etc. and refrain!
Try growing your own organic food – you don’t need much space.

Enjoy cooking!  Try never again going to McDonalds/Subway/Pret a Manger etc.


Extra:
Thanks to Fritha L for suggesting growing food in unusual spaces for a Monday wonder.

___________________
www.waysofloving.com

10 December 2012

Week 50: 'Love is concrete.'


Whether you’ve followed this blog through 2012 or just dipped in from time to time, thank you.  Are you wondering, as I have been, about whether there’s any more to it than a way of colouring in Monday morning?  There doesn’t have to be, but I did start it for a reason: to ask whether the experience of wonder matters.  Are wonders and wonderings ways of taking care of one another and the world – ways, in another word, of loving?

‘Loving’?  A friend once told me that of the people who are working for some kind of positive change in the world, some tend to talk about love as a motive; others, truth.  ‘I’m for truth,’ she said.  I decided then that I’d better be for truth, too.  Love seemed an airy-fairy word, which works ok on a warm day when everyone’s being ‘nice’ but blows over with the first cold front.  Truthfulness sounded edgier, forceful, authentic in all conditions.  After all, injustice is not born of a lack of love, but of a lie: Palestinians are not calling for our loving good wishes but for what rightfully belongs to them.

Earnestly 'being for truth' worked well for a while but it’s a little chilly.  It's hard to kick back and relax when everything has to be 'authentically' this or 'genuinely' that.  ‘I love you’ doesn’t quite translate as ‘My feelings for you are authentic’.  So I was having a rethink when I was introduced to the work of Isabel Carter Heyward, who talks about love in a way no-one could call namby-pambical:
‘Love, like truth and beauty, is concrete.  Love is not fundamentally a sweet feeling; not, at heart, a matter of sentiment, attachment, or being “drawn toward”.  Love is active, effective, a matter of making reciprocal and mutually beneficial relation with one's friends and enemies.’
Elsewhere, Carter Heyward talks of love as practical commitment to a ‘right relationship’.  Whether with a lover, a friend, a stranger, an oppressed group, society, or our ecology, love is committed to the integrity and flourishing of the relationship.  It is loving, in this sense, to make rhythms from packets of pasta at Tesco’s, ride a bike rather than drive a car, to marvel at how bodies move, give yourself to the freedom of a dance.  In their right relationship, a sperm and an egg love their way to becoming a baby.  And the man who stood in front of a tank in Beijing gave himself in that moment to a way of loving, which the Chinese government so couldn’t bear that they took him away forever.  So this kind of love is also a form of truthfulness or faithfulness.

If these are all expressions of ‘loving’, what is ‘a wonder’ and how do we know one?  The word’s ancient linguistic origins are completely unknown but we get a clue from the evolution of another word: ‘miracle’.  This comes from Latin mirari, ‘to wonder at, marvel, be astonished’ which, in turn, was born from the Proto-Indo-European root smei, ‘smile’.  This bit of linguistic jiggery-pokery suggests that a wonder is something miraculous, which we recognise not thanks to a GSCE in miracology, but in simply finding that we are smiling in astonishment.  Just as it is only our own laughing that can tell us when a joke is funny, so when we feel astonished – and smile – we know we are in the presence of a ‘wonder’.

So does experiencing ‘a wonder’ inspire ‘loving’?  That would be marvellous.  It would make a smashing final scene in an old black and white film, in soft focus with some rousing music, maybe Rachmaninov:  ‘Darling, do you think wonder inspires love?’ ‘Oh yes, I… I think I do, darling.’ ‘Oh… darling.’ Aaaaand CUT!

Let’s pare this down a bit.  All sorts of evil deeds have been committed because someone believed they had encountered ‘a wonder’; Hitler admired the Aryan race (or the idea of one) as a beautiful and pristine expression of humanity’s greatness.  Nor do acts of love depend on a sense of wonder; we don’t need a feeling for wonder to recognise that war is horrific rather than heroic and to resist militarism.

Hm, so if a feeling for wonder is neither sufficient nor necessary for ‘loving’, can we get by pretty well without it?  Sure we can.  We can get by with never seeing a mountain, too, or never tasting a tomato grown in real soil, or never wondering what life in Japan is like.  There’s no reason to do any of these things, except that by things like these, life expands.  A life that doesn’t expand (one way or another) but rather atrophies and shrivels, tends to be poor in love, including for itself.

Wonder, as an attitude, is hospitality for the universe; it lets the cosmos in like a blind drawn up in the morning and smiles at what crosses its threshold, finding it astonishing and giving thanks for it.  Or perhaps wonder is not a host but a wanderer, who sets out into the day like Walt Whitman to meet the world and ask what the grass really is.  I don’t know; I am never sure whether wonder is something I’m doing or something happening to me.

Right now the leaves are falling in the winter breeze and I notice them shiver on their twigs; the water wrinkles in gusts.  Watching this, the first feeling I fill with is not love, but belonging; I can feel my own self ripple in the gusts and shiver on my branch; I am folded into the universe and participate in it.  But then, to belong is to love.  If love is the rightness of a relationship, then watching these last of autumn's acts, I am stirred by wonder into a kind of loving.  Sometimes, just to notice is a way of loving.

I feel stirred in the same way watching Eva Szasz's film Cosmic Zoom, listening to Ricardo Gallen play Bach, or hearing Hannah Hauxwell say that when she eventually leaves her home in the hills for a house in town, most of all she’ll miss the moonlight on the water.  I even feel moved in the same way when Peter Mugridge talks about his love of trains: ‘Some people like fast cars; I like trains.’

In each of these the presence of life can be felt, for all these are ways of loving.  These are human stories where life is allowed to be itself.  A friend once said that life is like mushrooms; it doesn’t need our help, it just needs us not to get in its way so it can do its thing and grow and grow.  I suppose we could say life just needs us not to build Oxford Street on top of it.

By ‘life’ I mean a kind of aliveness to the world; holding an attitude of curiosity; wondering.  In this body-and-soul aliveness is an openness to humanity, a feeling for being related to others, even to all things.  We admire someone whose smile exudes warmth, or who faces down adversity with resourcefulness, or who can strive hard and still consider the people around them, or who applies their intelligence to a passion for justice.  Perhaps this is because we can sense the life in them, which reminds us in turn that we are alive, too.  In other words, it’s possible to be more or less alive and the more alive we are, the more humane we become.  I don’t know whether this is always true, but that it may be true even sometimes is a wonder.

It is interesting to wonder whether aliveness, when allowed to express itself, leads to ways of loving.  Ann Druyan and Carl Sagan wanted their science education work to inspire in the public a passionate curiosity in the cosmos.  Humbled as we would be, they hoped, by the ‘great story of the universe’, we would then see the grandstanding of the Cold War for the anthropocentric presumption it was.  More than this, we would feel spurred on to express ourselves politically.  If that had been true, all scientists would also be activists, so we can't draw a straight line between someone's passionate spirit of enquiry and an active interest in political affairs, or indeed any other kind of loving.

All the same, I think Ann Druyan and Carl Sagan were onto something.  Although Carl Sagan (not sure about Ann Druyan) was quite sceptical of religion, his hope would make sense to many religious people.  For people of faith, choices are guided, and more than merely an expression of their personal appetite for this or that.  One way of understanding a faith commitment is in being guided by experience of a truth deeper and wider than one's own life as an individual.  The question of what leads our choices and how well they are guided really matters, especially given the problems we are now inflicting on each other and the Earth.

Our society’s ideology is mistrustful of anything that might impinge on individual choices.  Among the extolled virtues of both capitalism and democracy is the freedom to choose, upon which stands their most powerful critique of communist dictatorships.  In the ideology of the Eastern Bloc, individual freedoms were always trumped by the prescribed needs of the collective (unless you numbered among the elite and could exempt yourself from your own ideological rhetoric).  The results were often profoundly oppressive (although not always so).

But our version of capitalism skews the freedom to choose, assimilating it as far as it can into an economic system built on consumer choices.  You can have this car or that one, this career or that one, this wife or that one, and so on.  It’s as if we’re in a vast sweet shop and we can choose anything as long as it’s fancily packaged sugary fat of one kind or another.  Even charity gets packaged up as a consumer choice.  What’s more, you can have your metaphorical Mars Bar immediately, there is no cost apart from to your own pocket, and there’s no theoretical limit to the amount you can amass.  Apart from the light brake of taxation and the framework of a liberal law, our version of capitalism has no rules.  Its principal axiom is: if you are able to, then you are entitled to.  After 9/11, when George W Bush told everyone to keep shopping in order to preserve the US economy, the mantra became: if you are able to, then you should.

As has been said many times in many ways, problems crop up when we expect to obtain something without having to wait and work; when we assume the only cost of a thing is financial and not social, ecological or cultural; and when nothing is around to remind us that it is possible to have too much, just as it is possible to have too little.  So the choices the great sweet shop offers are an illusion; for all its tinsel and bling, it’s also quite boring.  It is also an illusion of democracy when we imagine that we the people get to decide how we are governed; the system serves up a few narrow options every five years, that’s all, and mainstream politics stays pretty much the same.

I want to suggest that this is why a feeling for wonder is important; it can help enrich our choices, forging them into ways of loving, and it can do this whether our worldview is mainly scientific, religious, both or neither.  I'll try to illustrate this...

I met someone at a wedding who likes to go shooting.  I wondered what that’s like.  It’s out of this world to feel the power of the gun, she said, and much more exciting it is to hit a real bird than clay.  I can believe that, but this was the week I had been researching the Monday wonder on bird migration and flight.  As my conversation partner spoke I fell into a reverie of a bird in flight, each of its feathers rippling as it felt out the air beneath it.  I could almost feel the swept line of the feather’s leading edge, the flexing lightness of its hollow stem, and wondered that this structure embodies more knowledge of air’s movement than does the scientific research of two centuries.  I imagined the feather ever closer up: the vein and the rachis, the barbules and millions of hooklets.  And then I watched the shot rip through the lot, and the still-flapping bird fall to earth.

My thought was not one of sentimental pity for a bird, nor a moral question of right and wrong – I would probably kill a bird, too, if it were my only meal.  My distracting and rather inconvenient reverie led to something else: a feeling for the dignity of the bird’s being, of which killing it for fun seemed a particularly wanton violation.  (Rural economies now rely more heavily on this kind of thing, but we have to ask about the justice of poorer people in the countryside depending upon the sporting habits of wealthy, mostly urban people).

A few weeks ago this blog was marvelling at soil.  There are all manner of ecological, economic and social reasons to conclude that topsoil loss has been the most ignored form of serious human damage to the Earth.  These are cause enough to preserve the soil we have remaining, but a sense of soil as wonder could  deepen and enrich that commitment.  That is, when we know soil as a complex living community which takes millennia to form and embodies in its unity a reflexive natural intelligence, it’s difficult to go back to thinking of it just as raw material for plants.

This feeling for the dignity of being – the peculiarly human ability to witness the universal in the particular, find integrity there and cherish it – can inspire choices which we could describe as ‘good’.  The attitude, perhaps, is one of honouring something as an end in itself, not just as a means to one.  Soil again provides an example.  It is our parent in Nature, to which we owe our being.  If we truly honour our mother and father, it is not for economic or practical reasons, nor is it due to the insistence of some moral calculus or social norm, nor is it just because they may be good people.  The special kind of honour due to loving parents is that through them we have come to belong to the world.  The same goes for soil.

The Kalahari bushman honours the kudu he has killed by wiping its saliva on his face and offering a prayer.  Anthony Pisano honours the stranger by welcoming him or her into his New York home.  P V Rajagopal, whom I hope we might meet on this blog before it finishes, offers a prayer to the land, the forest and the water before each meeting of nonviolence activists in India; this honours the things on which their lives and wellbeing depend.  Baaba Maal honours the elders of Kirina for welcoming him under the mango tree and carrying the wisdom of their community's history: ‘Everything did start from here.’

These are all ways of loving.  They are ways of seeking out or making a flourishing relationship: humane, life-affirming, life-giving, and which recognises our common relatedness and belonging.  Wonder can inspire such a commitment as this.  Rather, it can disturb us into one – that is, stir up our assumptions of order, rearrange our lives, awaken and refresh our aliveness.

What about the sweet shop?  Wonder, a feeling for the dignity of being, honouring our relatedness and committing to ways of loving together creates a palpable tension with the great sweet shop of capitalism and its tag-along illusion of democracy.  So wonder can culminate in politics; in joy, too, for it's an exciting way to live.  Just look at the RBS activists protesting against tar sands extraction – they’re having a ball.

We are under serious threat of ecological collapse, economic collapse, and the social collapse that is war.  We are violating the Earth, creating behemoth corporations, making billionaires and leaving paupers on the streets and substituting politics for economics.  I think it's fair to say in general that we have little sense of our own history, little feeling for the ecology to which we belong, little sense of common belonging in general.  Most of us don’t really know what we’re eating or how it got there, some young people in cities have never seen the countryside, we watch an average of 3.9 hours of TV per day, few people have much autonomy in their work.

All the same, there are exciting things happening.  Groups, usually small, are trying to live in more creative ways, building communities of place and interest, and giving their time and energy to movements of social change (about which, more in the next two weeks).  I don’t know how significant these movements will become, but I want to belong to them anyway; I’d rather do that than get stuck in the sweet shop!

Whatever we identify as – educators, activists, lovers, learners, friends, parents, artists – cultivating a sense of wonder meets life with life and honours it.  A child will look at the moon and wonder at it, but that child needs adults around who wonder along with them.  A school student needs to know how to analyse and conceptualise Shakespearean plays and crystal formations, but not as much as how to wonder at them.  A young adult choosing how to live, what work to do, what they have to offer to their community, will be helped by a feeling of wonder which grounds them in a sense of what life can be about.  Wonder is a way of loving.

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www.waysofloving.com

2 December 2012

Week 49: 'My land is my dignity.'

Wonder spawned in: Two million years ago
Wondered into being by: Early hominids and, today, the San bushmen of the Kalahari
Wonderspan: 7 minutes
To experience this wonder at its best: Make sure you can hear the sound and click 'full screen'

Two million years ago we evolved the ability to run and this became our earliest form of hunting large animals.  Before we invented spears, slings, arrows, we simply ran after our quarry them until we caught them.  This is still done today by the San bushmen of the Kalahari in Botswana and in this BBC film, which explores the human being as a hunting mammal, we follow the hunt from start to finish:
Extra...

But did you notice that the BBC categorised the film on Youtube under 'Pets & animals'?  Hang on, these are people.

And would you guess from the BBC film that the same people were violently evicted from their land by the Botswana government to make way for diamond mines?  Or that bushmen who tried to return say they were 'beaten, tortured and taken court for hunting'.  It would have been good to know that from the narration, don't you think?

After their eviction, the bushmen struggled in the courts for their legal right of return and after many years' work, eventually won it.  Since then they have been fighting the Botswanan government to allow them to return in practice.  Here's a very good film about their story (apart from the early 'noble savage' reference): www.survivalinternational.org/films/reportersbushmen

So it seems a whole people were evicted from their land - when they were there long before anyone else - so that posh City chaps in London and New York could buy their ladies a fancy type of stone.  Diamonds... It might be better not to bother with them at all and instead give the money to the Kalahari Bushmen's campaign.  You can find out more about that here: www.survivalinternational.org/tribes/bushmen

But isn't this cultural violence a specifically African kind, symptomatic of corrupt governance?  After all, the British government would never do such a thing, right?  Wrong.  Britain did just the same to to the Chagos Islanders in the 1960s so that the US could use the tiny British Indian Ocean Territory atoll of Diego Garcia as a base for its nuclear bombers.  When the islanders won the right to return in the High Court, the government used the Royal Prerogative to get the Queen to overrule the judgement.  The Chagossians are still fighting for their right to return - from Crawley in Sussex.  There's more about that in John Pilger's film here: http://archive.org/details/John_Pilger 
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www.waysofloving.com