The way forward for the world is
ahimsa. And it begins with you and me.
When something like the Connecticut
killings happen, you stop for a brief while, shocked and numb. You mourn and then
move on. Your own Life demands you attention and then the next big news story
takes over. The candlelight vigils and the debates of gun control abate, while
you return to the job of earning a living. It is not that you don’t relate to
something that happened several thousand miles away, but you feel you are
helpless.
This is precisely where you, me,
all of us, must think differently. We are not helpless. We can do something. Beginning
first with each of us.
That first step is understanding ‘ahimsa’.
In his phenomenally insightful book, ‘Gandhi The Man’, published first in 1973,
spiritual teacher Eknath Easwaran, invites us to consider ‘ahimsa’ in terms of
our world family. He goes deep into Gandhi’s thinking and discovers that both
Gandhi’s personal transformation, from man to Mahatma, and the key to his
political strategy to oust the British from India were built on ‘ahimsa’. Easwaran
writes: "’Ahimsa’ is not the crude thing it has been made to appear,"
Gandhi tells us. "Not to hurt any living thing is no doubt a part of ‘ahimsa’.
But it is its least expression. The principle of ‘ahimsa’ is hurt by every evil
thought, by undue haste, by lying, by hatred, by wishing ill to anybody. It is
also violated by our holding on to what the world needs." So beautiful.
Understanding ‘ahimsa’, therefore means, knowing that we must expunge every
violent thought and emotion when it rises within us.
To do this, take the second step.
Of using ‘ahimsa’ to further the flowering of inner awareness of continuously being
loving – a state that each of us is capable of being in. Osho, the Master, says
we are unable to be in that state forever, though each of us at various times
in our lives will attain that state for a brief while, because we are busy
holding on, possessing__things, opinions, negative emotions and debilitating
memories of past hurts! Says Osho, “The more you possess, the less you can
love. And love is the door. Or, the less you can love, the more you start
possessing.” So, the trick really is to let go of anything which is a violent
thought. For instance, someone betrays you and you want to get even. Every
living moment of your becomes violent because your thoughts are full of anger,
revenge, hurt and suffering. ‘Ahimsa’ gives you the ability to forgive, to let
go and to become love.
The third step is to take your love
and share your love with everyone you connect with. Which goes beyond your immediate
family, your immediate circle of friends, your immediate community. Be love and
loving to everyone you see, meet, speak to __ at work, on the metro, in the
line at the grocers. To everyone, everywhere. When each of us can be this way,
be love and be loving, we will be able to change the world too. From possessing
to letting go. From hatred to love. From anger to peace.
Enforcing gun control laws and
hanging terrorists may only address the problem or perhaps just its symptoms. Only
love, and a world that is loving, can address what causes people, and therefore
the world, to go violent. Speaking to
students at Danbury, Connecticut, a few weeks ago, the venerable Dalai Lama delivered
precisely the same message. “Prayer and meditation without action is not
enough to bring peace to a hurting world. Happiness very much
depends on inner peace. Inner peace very much depends on happiness. And change
in the world begins with each person. “Who should start” to bring peace to the
world? The “individual person” … not religious leaders, not the United Nations,
but each of us,” he said. “Then, from one person to 10 persons, 100 persons,
1,000. So I think any sort of movement among humanity … must start from the
individual.”
Simply, therefore, if the Connecticut
killings shocked you too, then let’s go do something about it. Through
understanding and practicing ‘ahimsa’, let’s nail every violent thought that
may arise in us. Through doing that consistently, let us allow our true loving
self to flower from within. And let that love bathe our world in a new light!
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