THE BELOVED COMMUNITY
‘Let us
foster a united community, free from discrimination-a city that may be called a
‘beloved community’ which provides
equal justice for all.”
The Rev.
Maurice McCrackin (1905-1997)
It is truly and just that we should celebrate Mac’s
beloved community, a community here today and a community yet to be formed, for
Mac’s beloved community was and is a community of all beings. Mac’s concern was for everyone and
everything, including the animals. Mac
excluded none of the oppressed from his compassionate love and neither should
we. Of course Mac did not know very much about the theories of feminism, or
animal rights or deep ecology because these are relatively new issues and yet
he instinctively knew these ideas are all interconnected with all the other
justice and human rights issues. For
example, he became a vegetarian when he was told how the animals suffer under
modern factory farming practices and how eating “meat”, i.e., the bodies of
dead animals, impacts on the earth and on the feeding of the poor. And he rode a bus all night to Washington,
DC, to participate in a National Organization for Women-sponsored demonstration
for women’s rights. And we all know how
often Mac picketed and protested for the poor and the homeless and how often he
was jailed for peace.
What does this mean for us? It means that we must concern ourselves with
all beings too. We must talk with one
another to understand each other’s concerns.
We must look for the interconnection between all the issues. When we do
look for that interconnection we will find that it is the suffering or
oppression of some one or some thing, whether it be the poor, women, animals,
prisoners, the homeless, third world people, people of a different color, the
physically disabled, the mentally ill, children or the earth. The important truth is that all beings are
interdependent and interrelated. Our
actions, following on our thought patterns, have an effect on everything else.
If we are serious about forming Mac’s beloved
community we need to examine the thought patterns leading to our actions. The problem, often unconscious, is a vicious
circle starting with our own psyche’s tendency to a dualistic thinking pattern.
This is coupled with a desire for privilege and a willingness to dominate
others, whom we then classify as inferior, in order to gain that
privilege. Eventually such conduct
becomes institutionalized in our culture, reinforced by our customs and
codified in our laws.
The term, dualistic thinking, refers to a tendency
which is almost natural, to divide reality into opposing pairs such as good or
evil, white or black, male or female, human or animal, man or nature, rich or
poor, European culture or Native American culture, first world or third world,
etc. The pairs are thought of as
mutually exclusive and as the opposite of each other, with the first mentioned
pair member considered “higher” or of more value than the other member of the
pair. Engaging in this kind of
dualistic or hierarchical thinking tends to be used as an excuse for the
members of the so-called “higher” or “more valuable” group to dominate the
members of the so-called “lower” or “less valuable” group. So, for example, the
rich feel justified in dominating the poor, man feels that it is OK to destroy
nature, humans think that animals don’t matter and men traditionally think they
are superior to women.
This way of thinking starts in our own minds but it
becomes institutionalized in the culture which is generates and the laws which
we make to enforce it. Thus
individuals, institutions, governments and multi-national corporations think
they act with impunity when they violate the rights and well being of everyone
and everything. This is the vicious
circle which prevents the beloved community from becoming reality. We must become aware of this dualistic,
divisive thinking and we must reject it because it becomes the basis for the
discrimination that causes oppression and suffering. Instead, we must see the interconnections and the
interrelatedness of all beings, instead of a separation into higher or lower or
good or evil.
So laws which give privilege to one group over
another must be changed to give equal rights to all. The cultural conditioning must be challenged and shown for what
it is, the cause of oppression and
suffering to some of the beings of the world, even allowing for the
destruction of the earth itself. To
begin to break the vicious circle we must become aware of our own thinking and
attitudes and have the discipline and courage to change. We are all guilty. We all belong to one class or another that dominates or exploits
some other class, causing pain and oppression in the other class. For example, some of us are white, some of
us are men, most of us here are of first world and European cultures, and all
of us are in the human category. We
must change and be willing to give up the privileges that derive from the
domination of others. Then we can
identify with the other, be sympathetic, and empathize with the other.
Compassion, which we can feel and cultivate, will well up in our heart. Then we
can reach down into our heart and with that compassion we will be able to lift
up all the suffering and oppressed.
Finally, we will be able to love all beings, everyone and everything,
and so bring about Mac’s beloved community.
Elizabeth
Farians, Ph.D., Recipient of the 1998 McCrackin Peace and Justice Award
(Remarks
given at the first “Rev. McCrackin Day, June 27, 1998)
Elizabeth Jane Farians
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