Constructive
thoughts
two weeks after September 11
(A)
PressInfo #
129
September
25, 2001
By
Jan
Oberg,
TFF director and Jorgen
Johansen,
TFF associate
PressInfo 129 and 130 is our contribution
to questions we find essential now: Can something
positive come out of the terrible events in New York
and Washington on September 11? Can the innocent
victims of many nationalities and walks of life be
honoured by hard thinking about a more peaceful world?
Can this particular violence teach us something about
the civilisational necessity to reduce violence before
it is too late?
We shall be happy if you find any inspiration
here and we invite your constructive thoughts to
tff@transnational.org.
Two weeks have passed. We mourn the tragedy in New
York and Washington. Innocent lives were taken by mad men
who could not find intelligent, non-violent ways to make
their point. No civilised goals can ever be promoted by
such methods. No ideology and no religion in the world
can justify them.
There are those who argue that, at this very moment,
the discussion should only be about "Who" (guilt) and
"How" (technique) and not about "Why" (causes). Some
consider it inappropriate to ask whether, over the years,
the United States foreign policy establishment and other
Western governments have contributed in some ways to a
tragedy like this and, if so, what role it may have
played in the minds of the madmen.
Some consider such discussions insensitive in a time
of deep national mourning, and some add that it is
'anti-American' to raise such issues. Others -- among
them President George W. Bush -- argue that "either you
are with us, or you are with the terrorists." But this is
a false dichotomy that serves only to polarise people and
cultures and quell a much-needed debate.
We must both mourn
and get to the root causes
However understandable such arguments may be given the
shock and grief, we do not agree with them. We believe
that it is possible to respect the suffering and mourning
while simultaneously discussing the causes and - -
logically flowing from that - - move forward by asking
what must now be done. We tend to believe that all these
people will have died in vain if we do not even try to
learn from the events. To prevent a spiral of escalating
violence from this event, as well as reducing or ridding
the world of terrorism requires an understanding of its
underlying causes.
In short, the United States and the rest of the world
share the need for mourning, diagnosis, prognosis and
healing. But we do not share any need whatsoever for an
all-out, long-term, multi-dimensional "war against
terrorism" that cannot but increase the general level of
polarisation and hatred, as well as direct, structural
and civilisational violence throughout human
civilisation.
And what is potentially at stake is nothing less than
human civilisation.
We do not share the argument that the United States
has only itself to blame for this terrible event
because:
a) it is a simplification, not true and unfair;
b) it endorses the violence of the terrorists;
c) it will stall dialogues with many Americans and
other nationals whose compatriots were killed, and
d) it ignores the fact that those who committed the
crime on September 11 are responsible for their acts, for
choosing such horrendous means.
Military action is not the only way to deal with this
terrorist act. Counter-terrorism is also terrorism.
Healing must not be confused with revenge. The cry "Do
something!" must not automatically translate into
planning to kill more innocent people in far-away
countries or ten-fold
"do-unto-them-what-they-did-unto-us." That is not
civilisation, it is high-technology counter-terrorism
with equally low respect for the sacredness of human
beings.
Should it turn out that Western societies and their
leaders cannot come up with politically and morally
superior policies that - - more than the attacks on the
WTC and Pentagon - will mark a world order turning point,
and we could well be descending into uncontrollable
chaos.
Make our feelings
and opinions heard for the people not to have died in
vain
We need to make our voices and proposals for
non-violence heard in as many places as possible, the
voice of protest against all forms of revenge. Under
terrorism lies a conflict and the challenge about any
conflict is to ask: how can we handle it with as little
violence as possible? A doctor can never justify spilling
more blood or causing more pain (violence) to a patient
than is absolutely necessary to treat the disease and
help the patient recover. The same applies to the work
for conflict-resolution.
We, the authors, urge you to write and speak up,
dialogue with everyone you meet, challenge what we are
told, and accept no attempts at limiting the open debate.
If you fear what may happen in the world, like we do, do
not remain silent but share it and tell decision-makers.
And you can do something for instance by signing the
excellent petition at:http://www.9-11peace.org/petition.php3
TFF associate David
Krieger of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
states:
"The US response to the attacks should adhere
to three basic criteria: it should be legal, moral and
thoughtful. It should be legal under both domestic and
international law, sanctioned by the United Nations,
and multilateral in scope. It should be moral in not
taking more innocent lives. And it should be
thoughtful in asking why this has happened and what
can be done to decrease the cycle of violence."
This summarises the constructive approach and within
such a framework so many steps and initiatives can be
taken. It should be pretty clear how it differs from
destructive approaches.
Dialogue aiming at
reconciliation North-South and inside the
West
We want to propose a process of dialogue and, through
that, reconciliation. The Germans have been able to
reconcile with the eighteen states that occupied them in
1945. South Africa is well into a process of
reconciliation with the former apartheid regime.
Reconciliation is one of the possible ways for the US as
well.
Media, schools, civil society organisations and
numerous institutions can promote debates and solidify
the basis of democracy. It must be focussed on human
needs and rights, it must be a people-based and
globalising debate, one that is not shaped by or limited
to military-industrial, elite political, and mainstream
media interests.
Any psychiatrist knows that in times of catastrophe
and the death of loved ones, the best remedy is talking,
telling one's story, and sharing emotions to slowly
recognise and learn to live with what has happened. In
this light it is deeply troubling that political,
military and media elites have already hijacked and
monopolised the story, the explanations and, implicitly,
devised the only right way to deal with the situation and
the mourning: a huge counter-strike.
American citizens and groups could start a process of
reconciliation with those many individuals and
organisations around the world who have suffered under
the destructive aspects of US military, political and
economical influences for so many decades. The initiative
could be taken by liberal religious groups in the United
States, the peace movement, the women's movement, parts
of the trade unions, some of the political organisations,
the war-veterans and human rights groups.
This is the North-South dimension, so to speak. The
same actors and their counterparts and
sister-organisations within the West (NATO countries in
particular) could build alliances and non-violence
networks that rapidly gain strength to struggle for
constructive alternatives to US military revenge and for
addressing the root causes of terrorism.
Let it be a completely open process, let it take time,
invite more and more to join as the process moves
forward, invite facilitators to help in difficult moments
and expand the group from the American side as time goes
by. Let editorial groups from many parts of the involved
countries (including the United States of course) collect
and publicise results of such a globalised reconciliation
process.
Much can be done quickly via the Internet, of course.
But we must protect the Internet and other elements of
modern dialogue and globalising democracy against any
clamp-down by people who believe that democracy must be
curtailed during the 'war on terrorism.' We need the
opposite: to strengthen and deepen democracy since
terrorism is also a sign that people do not feel they
have access to democratic processes.
New history books
and truth and reconciliation commissions: increase
awareness about "the others"
Let the voices of citizens in the receiving end of the
US empire voice their opinions at truth and
reconciliation commission tables rather than through
violence in the streets. The United States is a global
power, the only super power; it has a global reach that
is unique in human history. It seems that many in that
country as well as the rest of the West have little
opportunity to learn how the non-Western world - - 70 per
cent of the human family - - look at the West and how
they are affected by the consequences of its
policies.
This lack of other-awareness has to do with a certain
media structure; for instance, our newspapers have
foreign policy pages but no global pages; and in spite of
globalisation, media coverage of international affairs
have shrunk the last decade or so.
Global understanding leaves a lot to be desired. Most
citizens in the West know little about global military
affairs, about intelligence agencies and their covert
operations. They know little about the global economic
facts that make it possible for them to buy and consume
the way they do. We may be happy to eat exotic fruits and
buy cheap shirts, but show little interest in the people
who live and die in the regions from where these everyday
products reach us. Likewise, it is time to recognise that
there are connections between their lives (and suffering)
and our lives in the rich parts of the world.
We in the West hear, see and learn much less about the
rest of the world than the rest of the world hears, sees
and learns about us. Globalisation must imply a better
balance; it must promote a sense of world citizenship
rather than strengthen national identities.
After all, there is only one global society, one
community. We must share it with those like us and those
different from us. Or perish at some point in the
future.
After having ventured into a broad global dialogue and
understanding process, UNESCO could be asked to publicise
a series of history books in which the global military,
political, cultural and economic impact of the United
States (and other Western nations) is documented. Good
sides as well as bad sides, of course, as told by locals,
by witnesses and victims.
Authors should work in groups with representatives
from several countries in each. These books should be
made available at a low price for all who want to know.
They should be made available over the Internet. Schools
and libraries world-wide should be provided with copies
free of charge. Later, CDs, videos and theatre plays
should be produced based on these books and reaching the
many who cannot read and write.
Elements will be revealed in such a process that many
Americans (and other Westerners) will find difficult to
digest. The point, however, is not to point fingers or
apportion guilt - - which has to do with the past - but
to enable us all to take stock of the very serious state
of the world and orient our feelings, creativity and
policies to a better future.
In addition, a process like this would definitely
reduce the hate, the feeling of marginalisation and the
despair on which terrorism (also) thrives and gains
support. Keeping on living in fear of terrorism will, all
said and done, be much more painful than such a global
awareness and reconciliation process.
Inter-religious
dialogues and education in religion and peace
everywhere
Religious people of all denominations must now rise to
the occasion. There is a very serious threat that this
conflict, whether intended or not, will turn into a "war
of religions" or a "clash of civilisation" -- the latter
phrase based on a pretty bad book but banal enough for
some to function as a political recipe and, thus,
self-fulfilling prophesy. We should see to it that
Christian and Muslim leaders meet and undertake dialogue
with each other, speaking and acting out against all
violence.
We need serious Christian people distancing themselves
from Christian fundamentalism and the same for Muslims.
Then, gradually invite others, non-Western in particular,
and learn from them - Buddhists, Hindus, Gandhians, etc.
- to create a world-wide spiritual movement against
militarism and war and for reconciliation and peaceful
co-existence.
And it is high time Western schools devote more time
to non-Western philosophies, cultures and religions than
they have done. That's what globalisation ought to be
about! And there must be a new emphasis on education in
conflict-resolution and non-violence with a touch of
spirituality and knowledge on how various cultures deal
with non-violence.
We have come to the end of an epoch where the West
just taught others with a missionary zeal. Now is the
time for mutual learning to secure co-existence,
tolerance and survival for all.
Continued in
PressInfo 130
25 September 2001
© TFF 2001
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