Building Peace
Building peace is the most
urgent task of our time. Humankind is on the very brink of multiple
catastrophe; war, terrorism, environmental degradation and gross inequality
threaten our very existence. Yet there has never before been so much knowledge
about each other, or such opportunities for collaboration and mutual learning.
The time for action is now. We have the ability to create a good future for
ourselves.
Peace is not just the absence
of destructive conflict. It implies a natural state of balance and harmony with
joy, exploration and excitement. Simple passivity would never satisfy human
beings because we love adventure. The world is a beautiful place with immense
opportunities for learning and positive excitement.
The task of building peace
starts within the individual. People
are a blend of body, mind and spirit. For an individual person to be truly at
peace with her/himself and hence able to create peace around her/himself, there
needs to be harmony between these aspects. Body mind and spirit need to be fed
and to be used. The "feeding" of body, mind and spirit is about
giving and receiving love. In the process of giving and receiving love, people
are healed and become whole and at peace, able to build peace by simply being
themselves. No individual can become fully integrated and fully functioning by
her/himself, we become whole only by loving and being loved.
The task we have if we wish
to build peace is awe-inspiring. It is no less than to build a world society
whose guiding principle is neither greed nor fear but love. There is no person
in the world who does not share this wish at some level. Every organisation has
in interest in it, too, because the present system can only lead to chaos and
disintegration resulting in the degradation of a very beautiful planet and the
end of human life on Earth.
The process of peace building
is multi-layered. People who "sacrifice" their family life to the
cause and create unhappy families do not provide models who are credible to
others. They can become fanatics. Far better to conduct "peace
building" in a way that gathers family and community support!
This is stronger because of
the base of psychological support and provides a model people can identify with
and follow. As "peace" is a
natural harmonious state this implies that the process of peace making should
be natural and spontaneous. "Building peace" then becomes a matter of
supporting and strengthening processes that are already operating in that
direction, rather than imposing aggressively "new" processes that may
create antagonism and resentment.
The natural processes include
the worldwide communication revolution that has the potential to provide
accurate information about the beauty, vulnerability and interdependence of our
planet. There is an extremely rapid diffusion of ideas and practices throughout
the world and growing awareness of the threats to peace. Collaboration about
issues about peace across national frontiers is increasing dramatically and
"ordinary" people are taking determined stances. Above all, people
are starting to discover the hope that lies beyond despair. The process for building peace is to
support others' efforts as well as initiating your own. A letter to someone who
is taking a courageous stand can be enormously powerful. So can listening
supportively to people who are in fear or doubt.
Natural processes of peace
making operate also at local level and are very important. The resources of a
single community are enormous and if harnessed could make a fantastic
difference. Harnessing won't happen until community spirit is developed, so
that people feel supported enough to want to engage positively with the outside
world.
Creating support/community
spirit is of course valuable in itself.
How about community picnics and festivals, or creating informal networks
and festivals where people can start to help each other and create fellowship
across the cultural, racial and economic divides? This feels awfully risky but
is it really no more than the risk of not doing anything? Not acting leads in
the short term to community disintegration, violence and decay and in the long
term to chaos. When community spirit is developed, the caring community can
diffuse the caring of its members more widely even across national frontiers.
Building peace is not as easy
as this sounds. There are blocks that are primarily located within the
individual. They arise out of the hurt and misinformation we have all
experienced. They can be overcome! The easiest way is to talk about your
experience, thoughts and feelings while someone else listens with love.
The most common block is
"splitting" We split (e.g.) home and job and while attempting to
create a peaceful loving home may work for an industry that makes and sells
destructive products or an organisation that exploits human weakness. Living
with this "split" will eventually destroy our inner peace as well as the
world's. The cost of denying conscience is an enormous one. It can lead to
stress related illness, unhappy family life (confronting adolescent children)
and premature aging and death.
There is a great deal of fear about
doing practical things about building peace. In my own case, it is mainly
shyness, fear of failure "it is so big it's not worth starting" and
fear of looking foolish - people will only knock my efforts or attack me and say "I am
out of touch with reality, what can ordinary people do?" It is funny that
those fears sometimes seem more compelling than the fear of dying in a radioactive desert or leaving our children a barren wasteland…
Another block is being
competitive; building peace must involve collaborative effort. It is too big
and complex a task for anyone to do alone. Yet somehow dreams are the last
things we share. It is a terrible insult, not a compliment, to be termed a
"visionary", or an idealist, but without vision or ideals there is no
long-term future.
If action is required
something has to be done. Many people believe wholeheartedly that peace needs
to be built but have some difficulty in seeing where to start. Here are a few
first ideas, based on the principle that lasting peace is best achieved through love.
Ø
Make a new friend, later
plan with him/her a peace building activity.
Ø
Talk through your
anxieties about getting involved with a friend. Plan to do something, however
small.
Ø
Identify one thing you
are good at and see how to use it to build peace, locally, nationally or wider.
Ø
Write a letter to
someone in authority about a specific problem: put a possible peace building
solution.
Ø
Build or join a
supportive network organisation with an interest in peace building close to
your own.
Ø
Put interested people in
touch with existing organisations or each other.
Ø
Have a neighbourhood
party or picnic to celebrate a happy event. Encourage conversation about peace
building there.
Ø
Offer your help to an
individual or organisation involved in building peace.
Ø
Run or support a local
peace festival with music, theatre, and games. Invite prominent local people;
lobby them by offering your help in promoting peace.
Ø
Organise a conference.
Ø
Write an article
outlining your ideas and vision
Ø
Your own favourite idea!
If these and other ideas are
to work, they must model the process you want to create. It's no use to have a
solemn, formal, conflict laden peace building conference or party, if you see
peace as happy, enthusiastic and joyful! Make sure people have plenty of time
to get to know and value each other in a warm and friendly atmosphere. Above
all, do what you enjoy doing and what you believe in. You are responsible for
your own peace.
Education and Peace
Education seems to focus on
talking not listening and competition not co‑operation. Listening and cooperating skills are
essential for building peace and, indeed, in achieving anything with other
people. If you don't listen to others, you can't understand them and if you
don't understand them, how can you work together? The increasing
interdependence and uncertainty of our world demands a change in this
direction, fast. These skills are necessary for economic as well as social and
spiritual survival.
Edited slightly from that published in Self and Society Volume 11, No 1 1983
Using these materials
I am entirely happy for you to use or draw
on any these materials in any way you think will be helpful. I am keen to have
my work, and the work of the people I have learned from, used.
Please
will you say where you found them? One way
might be to give a link back to www.nickheap.co.uk
or to info@nickheap.co.uk. This will
help these positive ideas to spread, and help my business, too.
Thank you
Nick Heap