Frontlines
A
sermon offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church Of Lafayette,
Indiana
On
March 16, 2003
By
Rev. Hilary Landau Krivchenia
A
young friend called me this week and, in her quiet voice, asked if I
was scared about the possibility of war.
Of course, I told her. Although
not nearly as scared as I might be if I were on the front lines with
the troops or waiting in some poor Iraqi village for distant powers
to decide my fate. If
you’re scared, she asked, what do you do? Whatever I can. I
answered.
Also,
this week the US troops in the desert built and then practiced
destroying a replica of the border between Kuwait and Iraq.
Lt. Col. Steven E. Landis, executive officer of the Third
Division's First Brigade said: "If it's not carefully
controlled, we'll get all tangled up."
I can’t pretend -- seems like things are already pretty
tangled up. My heart is
with those troops – those young people waiting and playing deadly
military games – so far from home.
I think about the young people who have been sent to the
other side of our conflicted world to fight out what their leaders
cannot settle. When
people say we should support our troops – it’s always seemed
that the best support of troops – of those on the front line –
is to work for a peaceful settlement so that they do not die for
lack of our vision and effort.
Those of us who’re at home, I think owe it to those on the
front line to empathize with their responsibility, their position,
and their fear.
When
I have questions about my own fear – I turn to people of wisdom
and experience – who’ve been close to the front line.
People who’ve known more than the fear of fear.
For two reasons: one, to see what the deep resources of the
human spirit are in the face of fear and, two, because no matter how
far away the danger seems – between empathy and risk – we’re
all on the front line. I
want to know how people retrieve humanity from war -- from the fear
that infects – because we need, ourselves, to retrieve this
quality to move humanity forward.
This
summer I worked a bit with a Vietnamese Buddhist nun who practices
long silences, mindful walking, and deep compassion.
She’s 65 years of age with inexhaustible energy.
I believe if there were just fifty more of her the world
might find peace. She’s
spent her life on front lines, harnessing her brilliance and
creativity to the work of peace and the care of the poor.
I
got to know her when I handed her a note to give to her dear friend
Thich Nhat Hanh. I was almost shaking with energy, excitement, and a little
tension – there was no guarantee that she would pass this on or
how might it be interpreted. Brother
Phap Ung, a young monk, had told me to pass the note to her, and
said that she would read my heart in it.
Sure, I thought. I
went ahead and gave her the short letter.
She looked briefly and deeply at me.
I’d heard her sing but I didn’t really know her –
didn’t really know the eyes that would look over my words.
Since then I’ve gotten to know Sister Chan Khong – a tiny
bit better – she is a survivor, a creator, a healer – she
teaches me about the power of resisting despair and moving toward
the front line.
Born
in 1938, she grew up in the city of Ben Tre in a loving family --
her ancestors were farmers in the lush Mekong Delta in Vietnam.
Her name at birth was Cao Ngoc Phuong.
She witnessed the cruelty of Communists as well as French
Catholics and nationalists. Vietnam
for many years was a country where allegiances were demanded –
first by one side and then another.
Her family was Buddhist by tradition – you know Buddhism is
called the middle path – and for a divided and exploited country
like Vietnam – the middle way was the only way that made sense to
Cao. Her heart was set
on alleviating suffering in very concrete ways.
Her Buddhist teacher didn’t understand her intense desire
to help the poor -- the real path of a Buddhist should be one of
inner discipline and discovering that life was illusion, he said.
Then she might merit rebirth as a man….
Cao Ngoc Phuong didn’t need to wait for some other
lifetime, she wasn’t sure that the Buddha had intended people to
contemplate the air, and she didn’t believe that life was an
illusion: she could see that starvation was real, murder was cruel,
loss cut deep, and war was evil.
And she was ready to risk all to make a difference.
In 1959 she met Thich Nhat Hanh – or Thay – which means
esteemed teacher. Both were creating in their own lives and
communities a new form of Buddhism – engaged Buddhism.
Buddhism in and for the world.
In
a wartime setting, they spoke of peace, helped the people, and
educated the world to the evils of the war.
Some deep well refreshed her then to move through
deserts of danger and still refreshes her now.
While attending school and then college, studying biology,
teaching at University, and studying Buddhism, she immersed herself
in social service – at great risk.
From gathering rice, to raising money for farming tools,
establishing poor people in small businesses, to building schools,
rebuilding villages, setting up farms, advocating for peace, and
burying the dead she became a non-violent force to be reckoned with.
Enough peace to become a Buddhist Nun, shave her hair, and
earn the name Chan Khong. She
moved through a world at war but she was cultivating peace.
Remember that hermit who attained peace alone on the side of
a mountain? It was a
story that I heard Thay tell two summers ago.
The hermit is alone and so peaceful until a prankster monk
shows up to test his practice.
He moves the hermits bowl this way.
The hermit remains calm.
He moves the hermit’s cushions around.
The hermit tries to remain calm.
He takes the hermit’s bowl, turns it over, and the hermit
finally looses his temper – are you trying to drive me crazy?!
The prankster monk laughs.
Thay laughs as he tells this story – for he and his old
friends – especially Cao have remained centered as all around them
was destroyed. They
have honed their practice and stilled themselves.
And not always succeeded in finding that still point – but
worked diligently so that they could be of effective help – even
when the dangers were great. In
spite of real things to fear, they practice to put fear in its
place.
In
Learning True Love Sister Chan Khong tells a story of being
out after curfew with some of Thay’s books in her bike bags.
She was stopped by police: “when he began to leaf through a
copy of Don’t Forget Those Who Suffer I became frightened.
In my mind, I invoked the name of the bodhisattva of compassion and
fearlessness and regained my serenity. I saw that my only motivation was to wake people from
forgetfulness and help them realize the suffering of the people in
the war zone. I was
able to smile. The
policeman smiled back and read the first line of the book. “Little
sister,” he said, “this is a love story isn’t it?
It’s okay, you can go.”
Fear
constricts the heart, narrows the mind.
It obscures the capacity to reason.
Forgive me for quoting a Frenchman, Camus, who said, “A man with whom one cannot reason is to
be feared.” Fear makes our choices seem more limited than they
truly are. It stifles
creativity – so needed in our troubled world.
Is it fear of creativity that makes so many cultures feed
fear? A monster in the heart of the cosmos that we nourish on our
own courage and life force.
Like
my friend on the phone, we all live with a certain level of fear.
Some founded and some unfounded – perhaps even manufactured
to keep people on the anxious edge – anyone checked the terrorism
alert color this week? Had
an inoculation against killer bees?
Noticed the power of the insurance industry?
It is a sort of sleight of hand – if we look over here with
fear – we may become immobilized enough to overlook the real
dangers over there. We
can be rendered passive and ineffective.
Barry Glassner wrote: “Immense money and power await those
who tap into our moral insecurities and supply us with symbolic
substitutes.” Power.
It
is hard to avoid the anxieties – but this is part of what I mean
when I say that we are all on the front line.
There is, in fact, a battle being waged – it is within us
– but there, at least, we have real power – the power to make
peace.
It’s
a truism that we can’t make peace in the world if we don’t first
establish it in our hearts. It
can’t stop there, but it begins there.
The tempter Mara is all our false hungers and crippling
fears. Mara came to
distract the Buddha from enlightenment. Mara is the temptation to fall into fear and not to see
beyond it to life. Mara
entices us to build a bomb shelter spending thousands of dollars
when we might just work to reduce the madness and injustice in the
world that make war possible in the first place.
Mara gets us to arm ourselves against our neighbors and kill
innocents in our fear. Mara makes us believe that there is a war to end all wars –
or that a constant state of war will make us safer than pursuing a
course of peace. Mara
makes us believe that evil is one man, one scapegoat, maybe two,
maybe a small dangerous network, maybe a nation.
Mara makes us think that if we eliminate that one – or one
after another we can be safe. But
there is no perfect safety – and the tragedy is to awaken one day
and find that we have become – without knowing – monsters
ourselves.
Mara
fools us into thinking that we’re smart enough to fight a just war
but not smart enough to wage a just peace.
Thomas Merton said that “At the root of all war is fear,
not so much the fear men have of one another, as the fear they have
of everything: they do not even trust themselves.”
The more fear a person feels the more dangerous that person
may be. Those who fear
the most imagine the worst of other persons.
Fear
of the unpredictability of life.
Mara
makes us think that our allies are our opponents instead of voices
in a dialogue. Mara
makes us think that all opponents are enemies instead of our
teachers or the impoverished – whether of money or sanity, mercy,
and love.
It
should be the task of religion to help us become stronger than our
fears – not to manufacture them so that we will throw our money
into the collection plate and hope that its enough to save our
souls. Not to build
false fortresses to construct false hopes.
Religion ought to give people the resources to rise above
fear and find the kind of strength and loving courage of a Thomas
Merton, a Thich Nhat Hanh, a Martin Luther King, a Rosa Parks,
Nelson Mandela, Chan Khong. It
should be the task of religion to debunk, to scare off the devils
and monsters so that we can face the other beasts of our own making.
It is my wish that our religion can address our fears for two
reasons – one small reason is that every minute of our lives is
precious and, while I know that fear intrudes, it is my hope that we
can hearten one another and lighten our path in the world.
The other reason is that this religion celebrates life at the
very core – pure and simple – and removes the demons from their
niches. It is time now
for us to move into our own hearts and unseat the demons, set upon
us by generations of fearful thinking.
It’s
easy to know to grab a child out of the street. But most of the challenges we face are more complex than
that. They require that
reflection that Camus spoke of.
They require clarity and inner balance.
They require that we see a situation and act in compassion.
A tough job. I
was struck a number of times by situations of great suffering that
Sister Chan Khong described – situations that filled her with
grief and with fear for those she loved and for the country that she
loved. But early in her
life she discovered that if she acted in haste – she would
sometimes do harm rather than good.
So again and again she writes: “We went out on the hills
for walking meditation. In
time that enabled me to know what steps to take next.”
Whether it was the rescue of boat people, release of
political prisoners, or the creation of retreat centers to teach
peace making from within – hours of reflection precede the
decisions that she makes later.
What it is it that happens in such meditation?
We gain insight, courage, move beyond our own agenda and find
love. Our own William
Ellery Channing said: “We look forward to the time when the power to love
will replace the love of power.
Then will our world know the blessings of peace.”
Almost two hundred years later, the time must be now – and
the place must be here. (The
heart.)
I wish I had the composure and practice of some monks or nuns
– but I can only share with you bits I have gathered, that seem
borne out by reality. Peace
is first achieved here. I
don’t mean like it’s fine if the world goes up in flames, long
as I can find my fiddle. I
don’t mean that if I just refrain from killing someone directly
that’s one less murder to contend with.
I mean that if I can slow down my fearfully beating heart and
calm myself I will be able to be a servant of relief.
I mean that I can find, with enough practice, the path to be
with other people without inflicting pain by thoughtless words or
disrespectful deeds. I
mean that at the same time that we find peace in our hearts we
become able to make paths to a greater peace in the world.
“We live in terror because persuasion is no longer
possible; because man can no longer tap that part of nature, as real
as his historical part, which he recaptures in contemplating the
beauties of nature and of human faces; because we live in a world of
abstraction, of bureaus and machines, of absolute ideas and of crude
messianism. We
suffocate among people who think they are absolutely right, whether
in their machines or in their ideas.”
First, it is necessary to slow down.
That’s not easy in itself – life is so busy – but I’m
reminded of story of the monk who was asked how he can meditate for
one hour a day and get so much done and he replies – it is not
easy – when I have even more to do I meditate for two hours first.
Slowing down helps our heart find again a more natural rhythm
and feel again the pulse of nature, hidden just underneath clocks
and watches. That helps
us, as Camus said, “tap that part of our nature, which we
recapture in contemplating the beauties of nature and of human
faces” that helps us to reclaim our souls from the world of
bureaus and machines, absolute ideas….”
Slowing down it is possible to feel the pulse again instead
of simply having it race. Feeling the heartbeat and slowing to organic time.
Sometimes just breathing and focusing are not quite enough.
Sometimes the sight of nature is really needed – to
distract me from the hamster wheel of anxiety.
But meditation calms over time by allowing you to turn and
face the battleground within and without entering the fray and
fighting the battles again. Letting
you reach for compassion and understanding until the pain begins to
take its proper perspective.
We
calm fear by acknowledging it.
Thay wrote: “Meditation
is being aware of what is going on - in our bodies, feelings, our
minds, and in the world. Each day many children die of hunger.
Superpowers have warheads, enough to destroy our planet many
times. Yet the sunrise is beautiful, and the rose that bloomed this
morning along the wall is a miracle. Life is both dreadful and
wonderful. To practice
meditation is to be in touch with both aspects."
The
thing is that rather than feeding the fear – or sorrow or anger
– we move toward the larger picture – there, there, my little
fear, see the great universe in which we dwell.
It can hold us both and you can find release while I seek a
better path. I hold the tangle in my heart or the world in my
awareness and gradually the individual strands begin to show and I
can slowly slide them apart rather than cutting them out like my
heart was stuck with gum.
Peace
requires this cultivation of the self – not instead of action –
but in concert with action. I
always appreciated the irony in protest signs like smash the state
– or kill the fascist pigs. It
always seemed that a protest anger and violence should be offered in
a genuine spirit of love. Recently
I enjoyed a sign that asked “Who would Jesus bomb?
Jawaharlal
Nehru said, Peace is not a relationship of nations. It is a
condition of mind brought about by a serenity of soul. Peace is not
merely the absence of war. It is also a state of mind. Lasting peace
can come only to peaceful people.
It
was when I saw that more clearly that I really met Sister Chan Khong.
A daughter of a war torn country.
A teacher who has experienced suffering and chooses to live
in a community with their hearts and minds set upon the easing of
suffering. A woman who
grew up on the frontline and choose to keep her heart both on that
front line and at peace.
We
are all on the front line – that may seem more obvious in the
global conflict that confronts us – but it has been building –
study enough intelligent history and you will see the footprints
that carried us here – as a planet.
No one is out of harm’s way – at the very least our minds
are besieged. But more
than that our energies are drained away by small acts of violence
– by the television that drains us, the movies that exploit our
fears, the increasing pace of so-called life, the small disputes
that take place in the workplace, the school, the meeting room.
Peace is every step that we take in conscious commitment to
peace – with concrete goals ahead – like writing this service
for this morning, or providing shelter for the poor, or listening to
someone else’s story and learning to understand our varying
hearts. Giving hands and feet to our principles – to make our
principles and our faith a healing force in the world.
Discovering compassion and letting that lead to action.
Thay
says: “you need a strategy. You
need a lot of intelligence, deep looking, also a lot of compassion
and love. In the context of social change, we have to practice
together. We have to unite our insights -- to bring our compassion
and insight together in order to succeed.”
Yes,
We have to unite our insights.
We have to bring our compassion and insight together in order
to succeed. We are
stronger in community – together we can practice the art and craft
of making peace. Simple
but not easy.
It
begins with going to the front line – within each of us – that
place where temper flares, where fear thunders, anxiety paces,
hunger distracts, and each is a gateway to peace.
Gandhi said to be the change you hope to see – what did we
think he meant? Always
activists in the world? But
more than that – if you want leaders who advocate peace – you
must be that peace. If
you want to teach the people the power of kindness – you must
exercise it. If you
hope not to get tangled in the barbed wire and blockades, you must
work to un-build those barriers – first in your own heart. There’s no better time.
When the fear rises – that’s the time.
When the bullets whistle that’s the time. When you walk in this door that’s the time to practice
peace and justice. It’s
very hard and very easy – I imagine the cleverness of the Buddha
fooling Mara into letting him spread his yellow cloak over the land
of Viet – and imagine that we spread that cloak over our hearts
and throughout our land. It
isn’t just the cloak of the Buddha – it’s the sunlight of
peace. There’s the
magic of practice and hard work.
Of knowing that we’re made of the same stuff that made the
generals – but also made the nuns and monks.
We have the cloak within us if we practice unfurling it.
It quiets the noise of bullets and makes a path for help.
It feeds the soul and imparts courage to the fearful heart.
For within that heart is also the heart of peace.
The breath of love. It
begins with our every earthly breath and may extend to every breath
on earth.
So
I ask you to practice with me.
Hear the traffic noises outside, the children downstairs, be
aware of all you have to do today, of all the people around you and
know that these are facts with us in every moment.
We are all on the front line and carry peace to every place
in which we choose to breathe and bring peace.
Breathe in, becoming aware of your in-breath.
Breath out and be aware of your out-breath.
Breathe in noise and breath out quiet – just the gentle
sound of your breath. We
are united by this breathing. The
person next to you is breathing, struggling with thoughts, with
feelings. Perhaps you,
too, struggle. Perhaps you
are sad – breathe into your sadness and hold it tenderly as a
lost child. And when
you breathe out hold tenderly the lost children all around you.
With every breath, you can become more connected to those
people around you. With
every shared breath let your awareness move through the walls of
this church and breathe your awareness of the world around you,
around us. Love and
struggle, peace and challenge, fear and groundedness, noise and
quiet. Breathe in
peace, breathe out love, and transform fear, struggle, noise, and
challenge. Here, on the
frontline, you are the hands and feet of our principles, you are the
heart of this faith, you walk on your own feet but you do not stand
alone -- together -- we are the robe of peace, we are the breath and
the path. We are the
beloved community.
Albert Camus
c.1936
“What
with the general fear of a war now being prepared by all nations and
the specific fear of murderous ideologies, who can deny that we live
in a state of terror? We live in terror because persuasion is no
longer possible; because man has been wholly submerged in History;
because he can no longer tap that part of his nature, as real as the
historical part, which he recaptures in contemplating the beauty of
nature and of human faces; because we live in a world of
abstractions, of bureaus and machines, of absolute ideas and of
crude messianism. We suffocate among people who think they are
absolutely right, whether in their machines or in their ideas.”
Open wider the
Road by Thich Nhat Hanh
For the ordination of Cao Ngoc Phuong, Sister Chan
Khong
Her hair is the color of precious wood,
Now transformed into incense,
It’s beauty reaches into eternity.
How wonderful is impermanence.
Her true mind decides to practice the way.
Hearing the sound of the rising tide,
She makes one more step in that direction.
The wind is singing on Gritakuta Mountain.
All attachments are released.
Her song radiates the wonderful teachings.
The way is immense and everlasting.
In the past
Her fragrant hair soaked in herbal leaves,
Drying every afternoon in sunlight.
This morning,
This morning the compassionate water of Avilokita
purifies
and makes her
Awakened
mind more beautifully appear.
Her hands have learned to love and care
Hsaring wiyth joy a humble and simple life.
With patience, for more than twenty years,
Her love for suffering people remains faithful.
The road has opened even wider
Worries and anxieties are removed.
Her heart is moving people in 10,000 directions.
Smiling to the Fear by
Thich Nhat Hanh
I
smile to the star that still shines in the sky,
To the sun that slowly rises out of the night
To the day that begins, to the enchanting birds,
I smile to world, and the world smiles to me.
I
smile to the child that crosses my way,
I remember also all those who are hungry,
Those who live in misery, all over the planet,
Who have to face a war, who lost their mother.
If
sometimes my smile is moistened by tears,
When I see the great pain that spreads over the world,
I shall still be smiling with tears in my eyes,
Smiling to life, smiling to death.
Thich
Nhat Hanh
Having
learnt and practiced the teachings of Interbeing, I no longer see
anyone as my enemy and in my heart is a feeling of lightness and
immense space. I do not even feel hatred towards people who have
made me or my people suffer because I know how to look at them with
the eyes of understanding and love. You may ask: "Then are you
going to give that band of mad, cruel, fanatical thieves and
murderers freedom to continue to destroy and make misery without
doing anything to stop them?" No! We have to do everything we
can to stop them, we cannot allow them to continue to kill, plunder,
oppress and destroy, but our actions will never be motivated by
hatred. We have to stop them, not allowing them to cause misery. If
necessary we can bind them, put them in prison, but this action has
to be directed by our bodhisattva's heart and while we act like this
we continue to maintain our loving-kindness, wanting them to be able
to have a chance to wake up, and change. Our enemy is not our enemy
or, in other words, the person who hates us is not the person we
hate.
The Robe of the Buddha
Long
ago, the country of Viet was often bothered by the evil doings of
Mara, the monster tempter. One
day the people’s suffering touched the heart of the Buddha.
He went to Mara directly to find a peaceful solution.
"You can have our land," said the Buddha, "to
do with as you wish. But
can you leave one small spot where we can live in tranquility? This
spot can have clear boundaries, -- as long as we stay within them,
you will agree to leave us alone.
In turn, we will not bother any of your new territory."
"How much land do you want?" asked Mara.
"Only a piece large enough to stretch my yellow robe
over," said the Buddha.
Hearing
so easy an offer, Mara accepted and promised not to touch the spot
of land covered by the robe. But
when the Buddha stretched out his robe, it extended miraculously and
covered all of Viet. Houses, farmland, and animals were all under
the protection of the robe. Frightened
by the Buddha's powers, Mara fled into the forest.
The Buddha advised the people to plant a bamboo in front of
each house, and each year to hang from it a yellow cloth to remind
Mara that Viet is Buddha's land and Mara cannot enter.
This
story is about how to find the strength and calm to face life as it
is. Life has hardship
but Mara teases people and makes sorrows deeper and worries worse.
The yellow robe of the Buddha isn’t a real robe – but a
deep calm that helps people face troubles more easily.
It helps when life is troubling, whether the trouble is a
test at school, a quarrel with a friend, or the possibility of war.
These are real challenges but with the wonderful cloth, the
wonderful peace we can spread in our hearts, we can face these
things with less pain.
Imagine:
that the yellow robe of the Buddha is simply a great blanket of love
and warmth that’s settling around you now.
Feel the softness and strength as the fabric cuddles you.
Imagine that whenever the yellow cloth billows around you,
your heart feels calm and peaceful.
You know that you have a deep source of strength inside you
– you don’t have to imagine that – it’s simply true –
somewhere inside you is deep peace.
If you take a deep breath, let yourself calm, you will find
it. Of course, this
takes practice. Maybe
sometimes it’s hard to sleep at night: imagine that over your
ordinary blanket there’s a magic blanket of protection and love
that snuggles and soothes you and makes your bed a safe island of
peace in the night – sunshine in the dark.
That’s a good time to practice.
That blanket is always with you – you can just see it in
your imagination. Next
time you feel troubled – just let your mind return to the yellow
blanket and let its warmth cover you.
The blanket will hold you and bring you peace.
There is no monster stronger than the peace that waits
inside. There is no blanket of peace like the blanket you weave from
your own heart.
And
you can sing this song. I
wear peace like a robe, I wear peace like a robe, I wear peace like
a robe in my soul, I wear peace like a robe, sweet peace like a
robe, I wear peace like a robe in my soul. Let us sing it together.
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