Calming The Fearful Mind

http://www.countercurrents.org/swanson270908.htm

By David Swanson
27 September, 2008
Countercurrents.org

Thich Nhat Hanh, a Vietnamese Buddhist monk who in 1964 was nominated 
for the Nobel Peace Prize by Martin Luther King, Jr., has published a 
new book of advice to Americans and to U.S. Congress members called 
"Calming the Fearful Mind: A Zen Response to Terrorism."

Hanh's words of wisdom strike me as potentially of great value for a 
variety of types of conflict resolution, but of somewhat limited -- 
if still significant -- value for Congress or for U.S. foreign policy.

"If Congress doesn't engage in Right Action," claims Hanh, "it is 
because it doesn't have Right Understanding about the suffering 
within our own country and in the world."

To interpret this in a way that makes any sense at all, I think, 
requires finding it to be at best misleading. I've seen countless 
Congress members express deep and personal understanding of the 
suffering they are inflicting, even bringing themselves to tears, 
while proceeding to inflict more of it, justifying the contradiction 
in their minds by the supposedly greater good of staying in office by 
pleasing party, donors, and media, or the greater good of trying to 
advance their party by obeying its leadership's plan. Congress 
members could always be made more aware of the death and devastation 
they authorize, but they are not completely unaware of it or 
incorrectly informed about it. Primarily what they lack is a 
willingness to risk their careers in order to briefly do the right 
thing. If that's what Hanh means by "Right Understanding" he should 
probably have said so.

Hanh claims that the reasons the U.S. government cannot make peace 
with its enemies abroad are fear, anger, and despair. No doubt there 
are plenty of those emotions involved. Bush did express a desire to 
attack Saddam Hussein as retaliation for an attempted assassination 
of Bush's father. But nowhere does Hanh mention greed, wealth, power, 
or political calculation in this equation. Does Hanh imagine that the 
oil companies funding U.S. political campaigns would be appeased or 
the war-mad voters would put down their flags and yellow ribbons if 
Bush listened deeply and talked lovingly with Maliki? I don't mean 
that to sound absurd just because it's so hard to imagine such 
behavior from Bush. Such a thing IS possible. What I do think is 
absurd is the idea that U.S. presidents and Congress members are 
acting on their own beliefs and emotions as opposed to having their 
strings pulled. Maybe Hanh believes that proper breathing, mindful 
walking, and open communication can cut all the strings, but he does 
not describe such a process in his book.

That being said, I would indeed like to see Congress members meet 
with and communicate with each other in the ways that Hanh proposes, 
and I would love to see more liberals and conservatives learn these 
communications skills. Even those of us who don't think we are very 
often afraid or angry could learn much better ways to listen to and 
communicate with others who are. Our goal with a book like this 
should not just be to try to get right-wingers and racists to read 
it, but to really read and think about it ourselves. It may sound 
absurd to ask Congress members to sit in a circle and take turns 
picking up a flower in the middle in order to have a turn to speak, 
but deep and compassionate listening is no joke, and engaging in it 
in our communities is no small step toward influencing those in power 
in Washington to attempt it as well.

Hanh proposes a national conversation of a sort that would require a 
completely different communications system in place of the corporate 
media, but which would do a great deal of good if it could be 
created. I think Hanh is mistaken, however, to promote religion as a 
useful part of the process. One week after the September 11, 2001, 
attacks, Hanh published these words in the New York Times:

"Many people in America consider Jesus Christ as their Lord, their 
spiritual ancestor, and their teacher. We should heed his teachings … "

Hanh wrote these words in order to try to manipulate people into 
exactly the wisest behavior: restraint, nonviolence, and 
understanding. But he played on Americans' desire to obey a "lord," 
and the lords Americans eagerly chose to obey at that time were 
George Bush and Rudolph Giuliani.

It was by refusing to obey any authority that Hanh arrived at the 
wisdom he is trying to share, albeit in Buddhist and 
universal-spiritualist packaging.

"I lived in Vietnam during the war there," Hanh writes, "and I saw a 
lot of injustice. Many thousands of people were killed, including 
many of my friends and students. It made me very angry. One time I 
learned that the city of Ben Tre, a city of 30,000 people*, was 
bombarded by American aircraft because some guerrillas had come to 
the city and tried to shoot down American planes. The guerrillas did 
not succeed and afterward they left. In retaliation the U.S. bombed 
the entire city. The military officer responsible for this attack 
later declared that he had to destroy the city of Ben Tre in order to 
save it. I was very angry, but at the time I was already practicing 
Buddhism. I didn't say or do anything, because I knew that saying or 
doing things while I was angry would create a lot of destruction. I 
paid attention to just breathing in and out. I sat down by myself, 
closed my eyes, and I recognized my anger, embraced it, and looked 
deeply into the nature of my suffering. Then compassion arose in me.

"Because I practiced looking deeply, I was able to understand the 
nature of the suffering in Vietnam. I saw that both Vietnamese and 
Americans suffered during the war. The young American men sent to 
Vietnam to kill and be killed suffered deeply, and their suffering 
continues today. Their families and both nations continue to suffer. 
I could see that the cause of our suffering in Vietnam was not the 
American soldiers. The cause was an unwise American policy based on 
misunderstanding and fear.

"Hatred and anger left my heart. I was able to see that our real 
enemy is not man, is not another human being. Our real enemy is our 
ignorance, discrimination, fear, craving, and violence."

If a Vietnamese can see Americans that way, surely Americans can see 
the 9-11 attackers with equal calm and courage.

*Elsewhere in the book, Hanh says 300,000 [sic] houses, but I suspect 
30,000 people is the more accurate description.

.


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