CALLED TO CREATE A
CULTURE OF
NON-VIOLENCE IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE LIFE
By Sister Brenda
Walsh, Racine Dominican
Following the recent outbreak of
violence in Tucson, Arizona, leaders and other citizens across the
nation and beyond called for an end to violence in both public and
private life. At the Memorial Service for those who lost their lives
in the Tucson incident, President Obama called on all "to use the
occasion to expand our moral imagination, to listen to each other
more carefully, to sharpen out instincts for empathy and to remind
ourselves of all the ways our hopes and dreams can bond us together
and create a more peaceful world." The people participating were
experiencing pain, frustration, sorrow and anger after the senseless
attack.
After that event, many people started
thinking about solutions that could create a culture of non-violence
and peace in our individual lives, in our communities and in the
public sector. Some solutions were offered. While not new, they need
to be consistently practiced with diligence and hope. They include
the following:
Look at the words we use. Do
they bring hope and healing or do they result in hurt,
hostility and conflict?
Do we provide good example for
youth today, demonstrating ways to interact and communicate
peacefully? We can write letters to the editors of local
newspapers and remind readers to assume shared
responsibility for teaching non-violence to our youth and
demonstrating it by the witness of our daily lives.
Politicians are called on to
drop destructive labels and bring people of different views
together to exchange ideas truthfully and with civility for
the sake of peace, unity and the common good.
In private and public life,
look at the judgments we make about people without
sufficient knowledge of their stand on issues. We need to
listen and learn from them and exchange ideas with respect.
It does not mean that we agree with them or give up our own
views and affiliations. We speak our own truth with clarity
and listen to the other side. Ask ourselves what role does
racism or prejudice play in our judgments of other people.
We must speak out clearly and
publicly when we perceive injustice and evil. We have a
moral obligation , says Henry Thoreau, to refuse to
cooperate with systems that oppress and dehumanize. Together
we can seek a non-violent response.
We can provide and promote room
for healthy discord and discover and practice effective ways
of dealing with anger, revenge, discord and hostility.
All people, youth and adults
can learn and use conflict resolution and dispute mediation
skills to help resolve differences and to communicate in a
non-violent way.
Pope Paul V1 reminded us that "there is
no peace without justice." To bring about peace we need to listen to
the struggles of suffering people and help them articulate what they
see as a solution and not just impose a solution for them to accept.
We need a deep faith in our effort to create a non-violent community
and systems and structures that support the dignity of all people.
We need to reclaim authentic compassion that will clarify our
attitudes toward justice and peace and renew our commitment to
non-violence in a culture that often promotes and even rewards
violence. If we are centered in prayer and in God’s spirit, we can
accomplish great things. When we approach things in a non-violent
manner, we try to walk in the other person’s shoes and try to
understand where they are coming from and approach them in a
civilized way that will help them respond in a more
reasonable way and look more clearly at
the issues involved.
Another world is indeed possible. Let
us begin to create world of peace and non-violence and do so with
courage conviction and hope. "Let there be peace on earth and let it
begin with me."