Moving Humanity
Toward a Great Future
by Frank K. Kelly*, September 2000
The sight of 152 national leaders streaming into
the United Nations headquarters for a Millennium Summit meeting
filled me with rejoicing. The leaders were called together by
the Secretary General to develop plans for action to move toward
lasting peace and a sustainable future for every one on Earth.
They endorsed an eight-page plan to deal with the world community’s
hardest problems – and the UN staff has responded to the
Summit mandate.
That gathering was particularly encouraging for
me because it came close to being what I had envisioned thirty-three
years ago in articles for the Center Magazine and the Saturday
Review. Those articles focused on the signs I saw then of the
coming transformation of humanity – when people everywhere
would act to meet the needs of every member of the human family.
I saw the creative powers of human beings being released in a
glorious surge of new achievements.
In the Center Magazine I proposed that the Secretary
General should be authorized by the UN to present annual reports
on the state of humanity – reports based on information
drawn from all of the nations and broadcast around the world each
year. I contended that the reports should emphasize the noblest
deeds and wisest statements of human beings in every field. These
reports should salute Heroes of Humanity – men and women
who were highly creative and compassionate, who served one another
and helped one another, who broke the bonds that kept others from
developing their abilities, who displayed the deepest respect
for the inherent dignity of each human person.
The Millennium Summit was certainly based on the
transforming principles that I expected to see. Secretary General
Kofi Annan asked the leaders there to take every possible step
to enable the people of every country to move upward in health
and prosperity – and to make a strong effort to reduce the
number of people living in dire poverty by 50 percent by the year
2015. His goals were clearly similar to those of an American President
– Harry Truman – who declared in an inaugural address
in 1949: “Only by helping the least fortunate of its members
to help themselves can the human family achieve the decent, satisfying
life that is the right of all people.”
The gathering of the world’s political leaders
of the UN in the year 2000 must be followed year-by-year by reports
to humanity from the Secretary General. Year after year, the people
of this planet must be reminded of what wonderful, mysterious,
amazing beings they actually are. There must be continuing celebrations
of human greatness.
I do not believe that political leaders –
even the best ones among them – can adequately represent
the brilliance, the beauty, and enormous diversities of human
beings. Future Summit Meetings and future reports must involve
singers and dancers, choirs of voices, painters and sculptors,
novelists and historians and poets, musicians and composers, mystics
and spiritual servants, meditators and mediators, theologians,
retreat masters, and scientists, homebuilders and architects,
craftsmen and teachers, administrators and free wheelers –
people from every field. Every celebration should proclaim and
reflect the inexhaustible energies of love.
The Millennium Summit revived for many people the
torrent of hope with which we began the New Year. On the first
day of the year 2000 there were television broadcasts from places
we had never seen before -- showing people welcoming the New Era
with songs and dances, with outbursts of exuberant joy. We felt
the kinship of belonging to one human family – but the wave
of linkage subsided as the patterns of previous centuries took
over again. The new perspectives which we had glimpsed through
global communications were not absorbed into our thinking and
acting.
But the gathering of leaders at the UN brought
back our awareness of the fact that we do live in a Time of Transformation.
With all their capacities and their limitations, the leaders made
informal contacts with one another that they had never experienced
before. When Fidel Castro came close to Bill Clinton and shook
Clinton’s hand before anyone could stop him, there was a
moment of change that would not be forgotten. And the President
heard comments from other leaders who milled around him and approached
him as a person. He responded to them and he had a personal impact
on each one of them.
The effects of the Millennium Summit will be felt
in countless ways. The UN has already gained new vitality from
it – new attention from the media, new understanding from
people who had largely ignored it. The leaders who mingled there,
who talked in the halls and encountered one another unexpectedly,
will feel wider responsibilities to the world community as well
as to their own nations.
Yet this Time of Transformation goes far beyond
the repercussions of a conference of presidents and prime ministers
– it has started dialogues in the homes of people everywhere
– and around the Earth through the Internet. It calls for
a continuous recognition of the creative events occurring in all
countries. It demands a wider awareness of the fast currents of
change that are carrying us into new circles of conflict and compassion,
new embraces, new surges of evolution, tall feelings of Hope that
great things are coming.
In July of this year, fifty passionate advocates
of long-range thinking and constructive action took part in a
three-day Peace Retreat sponsored by the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
and La Casa de Maria, a conference and retreat center in Santa
Barbara, with the purpose of connecting their lives to one another
and becoming more effective in benefiting humanity and a threatened
world. Much attention was given to the ideas of Joanna Macy, a
Buddhist philosopher and activist, who believes that many signs
indicate a Great Turning in human attitudes. She asserts that
many people are turning away from the destructive habits of an
industrial society toward a Life Sustaining Society – toward
cooperative actions to save the Earth. She believes that this
movement “is gaining momentum today through the choices
of countless individuals and groups.”
The men and women in the sessions at La Casa cited
these goals: “To provide people the opportunity to experience
and share with others their innermost responses to the present
condition of our world; to reframe their pain for the world as
evidence of their interconnectedness in the web of life and hence
their power to take part in its healing; to provide people with
concepts – from system science, deep ecology, or spiritual
traditions – which illumine this power along with exercises
which reveal its play in their own lives . . . to enable people
to embrace the Great Turning as a challenge which they are fully
capable of meeting in a variety of ways, and as a privilege in
which they can take joy . . .”
The soaring presence of joy permeated the gathering
in Santa Barbara. We danced and we sang, we looked at one another
face-to-face, finding deep realities in each other’s eyes;
we imagined what the people of the next century might ask us if
we were confronted by representatives of future generations. We
went far forward in time and in our sharing of our thoughts and
emotions. We laughed together and some of us cried. We felt the
potential greatness of the human species.
That experience in the beautiful surroundings of
La Casa de Maria in Santa Barbara reinforced my conviction that
Summit Meetings for Humanity should be held annually or possibly
more often. It made me determined again to uphold a Right of Celebration
as a human right essential for a full understanding of the immortal
power in the depths of human beings.
Walter Wriston, author of “The Twilight of
Sovereignty,” has given us a vivid description of the increasing
impact of the global communications system which now provides
unlimited channels for education and illumination: “Instead
of merely invalidating George Orwell’s vision of Big Brother
watching the citizen, information technology has allowed the reverse
to happen. The average citizen is able to watch Big Brother. Individuals
anywhere in the world with a computer and a modem can access thousands
of databases internationally. And these individuals, who communicate
with each other electronically regardless of race, gender, or
color, are spreading the spirit of personal expression –
of freedom – to the four corners of the earth.”
Noting that we are now living in what can be called
“a global village,” Wriston observed: “In a
global village, denying people human rights or democratic freedoms
no longer means denying them an abstraction they have never experienced,
but rather it means denying them the established customs of the
village. Once people are convinced that these things are possible
in the village, an enormous burden falls upon those who would
withhold them.”
This is the Age of Open Doors – and the doors
cannot be closed against anyone. More than fifty years ago, the
UN General Assembly endorsed a revolutionary statement drafted
by a committee headed by an American woman, Eleanor Roosevelt
– the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The Assembly
called upon all member countries and people everywhere “to
cause it to be disseminated, displayed, read and expounded principally
in schools and other educational institutions, without distinction
based on the political status of countries or terrorists.”
The Declaration is now part of the human heritage – an essential
element in the aspirations of people all over the planet.
The Declaration proclaims a bedrock fact: “Recognition
of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights
of all members of the human family is the Foundation of freedom,
justice and peace in the world.” Every Summit Meeting for
Humanity in all the years to come should begin with a reading
of the thirty specific articles in that Declaration. It encourages
us to become intensely aware of our own marvelous gifts –
the package that came to us in the process of becoming human.
It sanctions the pleasure of trying new thoughts, of taking new
steps on new paths, and tossing our fears behind us. In the light
of it, we welcome the hunger to know and to grow that we see in
all the glorious beings around us.
Many scientists now acknowledge that human beings
embody the creative power of the universe in a special way. We
are connected with the divine power which shaped the stars and
brought all things into existence. We are limited only by the
range of our imagination – our visions of what can be done.
Herman Hesse, a great novelist, described our situation
most beautifully. He wrote:
“What then can give rise to a true spirit
of peace on earth? Not commandments and not practical experience.
Like all human progress, the love of peace must come from knowledge.
It is the knowledge of the living substance in
us, in each of us, in you and me. . . . the secret godliness that
each of us bears within us. It is the knowledge that, starting
from this innermost point, we can at all times transcend all pairs
of opposites, transforming white into black, evil into good, night
into day.
The Indians call it Atman; the Chinese, Tao; the
Christians call it grace.
When the supreme knowledge is present (as in Jesus,
Buddha, Plato, or Lao-Tzu) a threshold is crossed, beyond which
miracles begin. There war and enmity cease. We can read of it
in the New Testament and in the discourses of Gautama. Anyone
who is so inclined can laugh at it and call it ‘introverted
rubbish,’ but to one who has experienced it his enemy becomes
his brother, death becomes birth, disgrace honor, calamity good
fortune . . .
Each thing on earth discloses itself two-fold,
as ‘of this world’ and not of this world. But ‘this
world’ means what is outside us. Everything that is outside
us can become enemy, danger, fear, and death. The light dawns
with the experience that this entire ‘outward world’
is not only an object of our perception but at the same time the
creation of our soul, with the transformation of all outward into
inward things, of the world into the self.”
As humanity moves from one summit to another, as
the deep connections of the human family shift from the outward
world to the world within us, as we know one another fully at
last, the inner knowledge enfolds all of us. A glorious age is
around us and in us, and we will take it all into ourselves.
*Frank
K. Kelly is Vice President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
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