I stand next to my old mare and feel her warm
breath on my cheek, and I cry. Oh Mama Silk, I’m thinking about the families who have lost
their children or their mothers or their daughters two years ago in an insane
massacre at the elementary school in our peaceful little town. And I’m remembering how it felt last night to watch a group interview on TV with four mothers of the young
African-American men who were killed recently by policemen. My bones ache with the pain. My heart holds
their grief.
The hatred grows and spreads, each day, each week, each
month, each year, as the climate and the justifications for it are adopted by
our culture. Most of us turn away from it, hoping that if we ignore what is
happening, someone else will fix it or it will magically disappear. Newsflash –
it won’t if we don’t do something about it.
In my own small
circle of daily routine, I can’t ignore
that there are people who continue to harass and terrorize families in Newtown
after the already life-scarring, horrific experience of the massacre at Sandy
Hook, who call in fake threats or claim that the entire tragedy was a hoax, who
cause so much fear that schools here have lockdowns “just in case” the threat
is real and inflict even more pain and endless trauma to the children and
parents of our community.
I witness that there are people who in the name of “animal
rights” issue death threats and spread lies to humiliate innocent NYC carriage
drivers and their families, egging on the Mayor with their large contributions and
wildly untrue accusations that will cause the loss of jobs, create bitter hardship and leave
the horses homeless and useless.
I see that we live in a country where good, law-abiding young
black men are justifiably terrified of our police force, where torture is used
on foreign prisoners and excused by our government, where ordinary citizens are
routinely spied upon by law agencies and corporations.
And still, like a volcano rumbling under us, I can feel that there is a swelling of energy,
of rebellion that grows stronger by the minute. There is tremendous power in
those four grieving mothers, in all the mothers who refuse to allow the deaths
of their children to just disappear as old news without any meaning or change resulting from the terrible loss. Listen to
it. It’s coming from the mothers, from
the strong women, from a female understanding that many call “the Divine
Feminine”. It has been with us since the beginning of time, but the patriarchs
have crushed and buried it for centuries. Finally, Mother Earth is cracking open so the
women can be heard.
Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee, a Sufi teacher, says: “When we deny the divine mystery of the
feminine we also deny something fundamental to life. We separate life
from its sacred core, from the matrix that nourishes all of creation. We
cut our world off from the source that alone can heal, nourish and transform
it. The same sacred source that gave birth to each of us is needed to
give meaning to our life, to nourish it with what is real, and to reveal to us
the mystery, the divine purpose to being alive.”
2 comments:
You are so right Victoria. If we want anything to change, we need to participate. Too many people wait for someone else to take care of whatever is going wrong in this world. It takes energy to take a stand, and I hope more and more people are catching on. You have a very wise mare.
Thanks, Lori. I know you know how to take a stand and aren't afraid to do it. That's why you are my friend.
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