September/October 2004 Living Now
Staying the Course
by Mary-Wynne Ashford
I once borrowed five hours of tapes from a popular radio series about current
environmental crises, and listened to them one after another over a weekend. By
Monday, I was paralyzed with despair. Onto the weight of the nuclear arms race,
I had now cemented over-population, ozone depletion, drift-net fishing,
destruction of the rain forests, the Great Lakes dying.
How do you find hope when there is no rational reason for optimism? How do
you deal with evidence that the situation is worsening despite your best
efforts? Does your life make any difference? How do you continue in the face of
despair?
Albert Camus, in his 1947 novel, The Plague, explores the same
questions, using an epidemic of bubonic plague to represent evil and suffering,
specifically the Nazi occupation of France and the collusion of the Vichy
regime. The protagonist, Dr. Rieux, fights against suffering and death, not as a
hero, but as a weary, somewhat detached man, who through his struggle gives his
life meaning. His friend, Jarrou, speaks of having had the plague when he
discovered as a child that his fathers role as a judge was to sentence and
preside over death.
In choosing how to respond to the plague, Camus characters are not
motivated by hope, but by an inner imperative similar to that often described by
those who chose to risk their lives saving Jews from the Holocaust. The rescuers
say that they were faced with someone at the door, and simply did what had to be
done. Viktor Frankl also writes that finding meaning in life is independent of
hope or freedom, as he describes life in a Nazi concentration camp, where daily
tasks of living often represent a refusal to acquiesce.
Joanna Macy writes of visiting a group of monks in Tibet. The monks were
reconstructing their ancient monastery, which had been reduced to rubble by the
Chinese. Her heart fell at the magnitude of the task and its almost foolhardy
nature. When the monks were asked about Chinese policies and the likelihood of
another period of repression, Macy saw that such calculations were conjecture to
the monks. Since you cannot see into the future, you simply proceed to put one
stone on top of another, and another on top of that. If the stones get knocked
down, you begin again, because if you dont nothing will get built.
The planetary crises raise existential and spiritual questions we are usually
able to avoid in our affluent society. I find that the question of how to face
hopelessness is one I cannot answer with consistency and intellectual rigor. On
the one hand, optimism probably represents denial of the facts: The scientific
research offers little evidence that nature can recover from the man-made
destruction wrought in this century. I know, therefore, that I cannot rationally
base my decisions on the hope that we will turn things around. On the other
hand, I find that I cherish the small signs that people are taking action to
promote change, and when I see them, I feel a tiny surge of optimism that I am
unwilling to repress. My compromise is to work without depending on hope that it
will make a difference, while at the same time treasuring the signs that I am
one of many.
In spite of my despair after hearing the radio series, I found myself
continuing my efforts in disarmament, not because it seemed to be the most
urgent problem, or the most terrifying, but because there were things to be done
in disarmament that were clear to me. Whether or not I could really make a
difference, leaving them undone was a resignation to despair. At the very least,
the individual can challenge the silence of assumed consensus. By breaking the
silence, by refusing to collude with evil and insanity, one resists the
darkness.
Breaking the silence is, I think, the most significant thing we do as
individuals. Sometimes even without speaking, one can challenge the silence, as
did the women in Argentina during the military regime. These women, Las
Madres de la Plaza, refused to be intimidated by death squads. They kept
their regular vigil, their presence alone a blatant accusation of murder and
brutality. They also showed that the power of one is acted out in community, not
in solitude. We sustain each other in dark times, sometimes simply by being
present together.
The result of "speaking truth to power," as the Quakers put it, is
often subtle and unpredictable. Men who left their jobs in US military
industries as a result of a crisis of conscience describe individuals who forced
them to confront the meaning of their work on nuclear weapons. One senior
official told of the impact of passing a solitary man who stood every day
outside the entrance to the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, holding a placard
opposing nuclear weapons. The anonymous protester played a significant role in
the officials eventual decision to resign his job.
Sometimes, we look to great individuals like Mother Theresa or Nelson Mandela
to see that one person can effect change. I find it more inspiring to see the
impact of ordinary people who did what they saw had to be done without becoming
great symbols of resistance. I think, for example, of hearing the executive
director of the Manila YWCA speaking at a peace meeting in Honolulu. She was
asked whether the YWCA had had any part in the overthrow of dictator Ferdinand
Marcos and the election of Corazon Aquino.
Well, yes," she admitted, "we did."
"What did you do?" the audience demanded.
"Well, I lay on the road to keep the tanks from coming into the
downtown, and the other women brought food and water."
Whether or not we succeed in pushing the rock up the hill, there is meaning
in the journey, not in the hope that one time well be able to shed the rock
forever and live in a perfect world. In the end, we stay the course in our
everyday actionsshouldering the burden, working in community, speaking truth
to power, and refusing to join forces with the pestilence.
Mary-Wynne Ashford, MD, is the former president of the Nobel Peace
Prize-winning organization International Physicians for the Prevention of
Nuclear War, and teaches at the University of Victoria. This essay appeared in
Canadas Peace Magazine and in the new book by Paul Loeb, The Impossible
Will Take a Little While: A Citizens Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear
(Basic Books, 2004) www.theimpossible.org
Paul Loeb will be speaking in Portland, Oregon on Oct 21st at
the International Conference on Volunteer Administration, www.avaintl.org.
Contact Holly_Denniston@opb.org. He will give a talk at Powell's Bookstore, on
Oct 22 at 7:30 PM (See www.powells.com/calendar.html) and on Oct 25 6:30 PM
at Clark College, Gaiser Hall Student Center, 1800 E. McLoughlin Blvd,
Vancouver, WA, (360-992-2000. Contact: MCoester@clark.edu.