TIKKUN is Hebrew for mend, repair and transform the world.
TIKKUN is also a Magazine and an international community of people of many faiths calling for social justice and political freedom in the context of new structures of work, caring communities, and democratic social and economic arrangements. They seek to influence public discourse in order to inspire compassion, generosity, non-violence and recognition of the spiritual dimensions of life.
I met David Rovics at the first TIKKUN Conference for Spiritual Progressives and what follows is my reflection of some of my experiences there in July 2005, which I attended 3 weeks after my first trip to Israel Palestine.
Everything that follows actually happened-but as I was writing fiction in 2005-I wrote it all down in this chapter through the fictional character Jack Hunt in KEEP HOPE ALIVE
Chapter 12: THE REVOLUTION HAS BEGUN...
"The Revolution starts now, when you rise above your fear and tear the walls round you down." -Steve Earle
On
Wednesday, 20 July 2005, in Berkeley, California, Jack intuitively
sensed opportunity blowing in the wind as he rounded the corner from
Durant and Telegraph on his way to UC Berkeley's MLK student union
building for TIKKUN's first annual conference on spiritual activism. As
he crossed Bancroft Way, a young, beatifically-smiling latte-skinned
youth handed him an electric green slip of paper announcing:
"Compassionate Caregivers: Medical Cannabis. Two locations, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven days a week."
Jack
mused, "Now that my third anti-inflammatory has been pulled, I can't do
narcotics in moderation, and I am not ready for joint replacement; I
wonder if maybe this is an invitation from You to move out here?"
Jack
soon forgot all about the aches in his joints--in particular, his
knees, which had been crushed in an auto accident when he was
twenty-three and then again at twenty-six. The MLK student union
building was jammed with people from all faiths, and those who were
spiritual, but not religious, who were imagining a new bottom line for
America and her true place in the global village. Jack glided up the
stairs to the second floor and deeply inhaled the energy emanating from
over thirteen hundred American citizens who had gathered in the Pauley
Ballroom in support of a new bottom line based on love, compassion,
caring, ethical and ecological sensitivity, and behavior; and motivated
by generosity, kindness, cooperation, nonviolence, and peace.
Jack
imagined a society that honored all human beings as embodiments of the
sacred, a society that enhanced one's capacities to respond to the
earth and the universe with awe, wonder, and radical amazement. He
imagined the Kingdom of God, where men would turn their swords into
plowshares and not make war anymore.
The
invocation was offered by Father Louis Vitale, a Franciscan who
reminded Jack of one of the least of the seven dwarves, until he spoke
and revealed himself to be a man of profound wisdom, enrobed in
well-worn burlap:
"The
Holy One has called on us. In all of earth's sixty-five-million-year
history, we are living in the most dangerous of times. The fact that a
bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and two hundred thousand lives were
vaporized within twenty minutes has not prevented man from dreaming up
more ways to fill space with weapons of mass destruction. We were not
created for militarism, but to turn our swords into plowshares. We have
arrived here today by no accident. We have been summoned by the
universe to claim the highest common ground. As the Dali Lama said, the
radicalism of our age is to be compassionate human beings. We have been
called to bring love and compassion back into the equation and assist
others to connect with the deepest parts of themselves. Now is the time
to realize, as never before, that when any of us suffer, we all suffer.
All life is interconnected, interdependent, and greatly loved by the
creator, the sustainer of the universe. We are called by love, for
love, and to love."
Professor
Nagler, M.C. and scholar, stoked the fire of hope within Jack. "We are
not facing a spiritual crisis, but a spiritual opportunity. We offer
the power of moral ideas to a country with a lot of religion yet which
suffers from a great lack of spirituality and imagination. As William
Blake said, "Imagination is evidence of The Divine.' And spirituality
is how we grow in sensitivity to ourselves, the other, and to God.
Einstein wrote, "Human beings are limited in time and space. We
experience ourselves in an optical delusion. We see ourselves as
separate from others. Our task must be to free ourselves from our
prison of self. Only through compassion can we begin to embrace all of
Creation.' The bumper sticker got it right; we are spiritual beings
having a human experience."
George
Lakoff, the author of Don't Think of an Elephant , affirmed what Jack
already knew, that a nurturing parent raises a child as best they can
to be responsible to self and others. A nurturing parent is not
permissive or overindulgent, but models cooperation and honesty, and
understands that everything is grace, an unconditional gift from God
that one is free to accept or reject. Lakoff spoke about God as father,
mother, all-knowing, all-good, all--powerful, and the source of the free
gift of grace that will open one up to God in the world. Jack thought
of Father Matthew Fox's recent publication, A New Reformation.
During
Pentecost week, in 2005, Father Fox traveled to Wittenburg and nailed a
new ninety-five theses to the church door, where Luther had nailed his
five hundred years before. Father Fox wrote Jack's heart about an
interfaith collaboration and community that intuits God as
mother-father God of divine wisdom, and understands that the earth
itself is to be tended; its health is just as much a moral imperative
for us all as our human relationships. Jack had long ago rejected the
concept of a punitive father God and understood that nature is God's
primary temple, and war the greatest abomination.
Jack's
mind wandered to the leper kisser, Francis of Assisi, and Jack thought,
Frankie, you sang of sister moon and brother sun, and stood up to the
dry rot and rigid religious sclerosis of the church in the twelfth
century. I feel your presence here today in my bones, as much as in my
soul. Jack went deeper into the silence and in his mind, saw himself at
nine with Father Tony, the diminutive ancient Spanish priest, who had
held his hand all during his mother's funeral and chanted softly
without ceasing, "Jesus called God Abba, and that means both daddy and
mommy. So, God is both mommy and daddy, and now your mommy is a part of
God. God is mommy and daddy: daddy and mommy divine."
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