Yellow
Flowers by Krupa Shah
“You, Bedouin of Libya who saved
our lives, though you will dwell forever in my memory yet I shall never be able
to recapture your features. You are Humanity and your face comes into my mind
simply as man incarnate. You, our beloved fellowman, did not know who we might
be, and yet you recognized us without fail. And I, in my turn, shall recognize
you in the faces of all mankind. You came towards me in an aureole of charity
and magnanimity bearing the gift of water. All my friends and all my enemies
marched towards me in your person. It did not seem to me that you were rescuing
me: rather did it seem that you were forgiving me. And I felt I had no enemy
left in all the world.”
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Wind,
Sand and Stars
How are we going to face the
world crisis? It is clear that we must find a common ground in which we all can
agree. That can of course not be in ideology, neither religious, nor political.
It must be in philosophy.
We must learn the art of asking philosophical questions in a
meditative-existential way. We must stop focusing on the content, and return to
the form. When you for example ask the question Who Am I? you turn
yourself towards the form of consciousness and not its content. Therefore, you
must become silent.
In that way you
return to the universal, and eternal, which we all have in common. You stop
heading towards the particular and impermanent. And, through all this, you can
remember your own eternal, and therefore ancient, nature (this art of universal
remembrance is called anamnesis).
For example, all human
consciousness is similar. We all, on whatever part of the earth we live, go
through a great deal of suffering, pain, anxiety, uncertainty, fear. And we
have occasionally, or perhaps often, pleasure. This is the common ground on
which all human beings stand - right? This
is an irrefutable fact. We may try to dodge it, we may try to say it is not,
that I am an individual and so on, but when you look at it objectively,
non-personally, you will find that our consciousness is like the consciousness
of all human beings, universally speaking.
You may be tall, you may be
fair, you may have brown hair; I may be black, or white, or pink, or
whatever - but inwardly we are all having a terrible time. We all have a sense of desperate loneliness. You may have
children, a husband, family, but when you are alone you have this feeling that
you have no relationship with anything. You
feel totally isolated. Most of us have had that feeling. This is the common
ground of all humanity.
And whatever happens in the
field of this consciousness, we are responsible. That is, if I am violent, I am
adding violence to that consciousness that is common to all of us. If I am not
violent, I am not adding to it; I am bringing a totally new factor to that consciousness.
So I am profoundly responsible: either I contribute to that violence, to that confusion,
to that terrible division, or, as I recognize deeply in my heart, in my blood,
in the depths of my being, that I am the rest of the world, I am mankind, I am
the world, the world is not separate from me, then I become totally
responsible.
Obviously!
This
is rational, objective, sane. The other is insanity - to call oneself a Hindu, a Conservative, a Buddhist, a Communist, a Christian, and all the rest of
it - these are just labels.
When one has that feeling,
that reality, the truth that every human being living on this earth is responsible
not only for himself, but for everything that is happening, how will one
translate that in daily life?
Do you have that feeling, not
as an intellectual conclusion, an ideal, and so on? Then it has no reality. But
if the truth is that you are standing on the ground that is common to all mankind,
and you feel totally responsible, then what is your action toward
society, toward the world in which you are actually living?
The world as it is now is full
of violence. Suppose I realize I am totally responsible. What is my action? Shall I join a group of terrorists?
Obviously
not.
Clearly competitiveness between
nations is destroying the world. When I feel responsible for this, naturally I
cease to be competitive.
And the religious world as well as the economic, social world is based on hierarchical principle. Shall I also have this concept of hierarchical outlook? Obviously not, because the one who says, “I know,” is taking a superior position, and has a status. If you want that status, go after it, but you are contributing to the confusion of the world.
And the religious world as well as the economic, social world is based on hierarchical principle. Shall I also have this concept of hierarchical outlook? Obviously not, because the one who says, “I know,” is taking a superior position, and has a status. If you want that status, go after it, but you are contributing to the confusion of the world.
So there are actual,
objective, sane actions when you perceive, when you realize in your heart of hearts,
that you are the rest of mankind, and that we are all standing on the same
ground.
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