html
by Prof. P. Krishna
The spectacular events of terrorism that took place in the United States a few
months ago have focussed the attention of the whole world on the issue of global
violence. At first sight it may appear that a few primitive, misguided extremists
from a faraway land are responsible for these acts and therefore they should be
eliminated. Not only is the United States trying to do this, it has also gathered
behind it a number of countries and they think that it is necessary to wage a war
against terrorism in order to protect so-called civilized society. There are,
however, two kinds of questions that must be asked. The question is: are only
those handful of people who were involved in those acts responsible for the
phenomenon of terrorism and violence. or are the so-called civilized elite also
responsible for what has taken place? Does the cause lie only with those barbaric
people or are there deeper causes which we need to address? For if we deal only
with the symptoms, we will find only a temporary cure; if the causes are still
operative the problem will raise its head again. The second question which we
must also ask ourselves is: whether the violence that is taking place in retaliation
is fundamentally different from the violence that was perpetrated? In other words,
is there such a thing as 'righteous' violence and 'unrighteous' violence? How are
righteous and unrighteous to be defined and who defines these? Is it that violence,
when it is on our side, protective of us and destructive of others, is righteous but it
is unrighteous when it is destructive of us? If this is so, how do we decide who are
'us' and who are the 'others'?
Clearly several issues are involved and if we want to understand these at depth, it
is important to come to these questions afresh, without pre-formed conclusions.
The quality of mind with which one approaches the questions is very important. It
seems to me that a mind that is both scientific and religious at the same time is
needed. Scientific in the sense that it relies on observation, is precise, objective,
rational and curious. And religious in the sense that it is free of pre-conceptions,
interested in deep perception of the truth; a mind that has sensitivity, a sense of
affection, without any division or fragmentation. This would mean that we are not
caught in superficial answers, not interested in a partial and limited response.
of the beauty of the mountains and rivers? What is occupying them and why are
they so divided and ready to kill each other?
With the alien, we too must ask ourselves this question seriously: are we really
superior, really cultured and civilized? Human beings may have greater ability,
greater power, and greater so-called intelligence and are thus able to dominate the
rest of nature, to kill animals and plants and destroy forests for their own welfare.
But power can hardly be the criterion for superiority. When we look into history,
or look around ourselves, we find that no other species has created as much
destruction of nature as man has, and no other species has been so cruel to its
own kind as human beings have been. Yet we deem ourselves superior to animals
and plants !
Evidently, the problem of global violence goes very far back and runs deep.
Although our attention may today be focussed on this issue due to the recent
events of terrorism, it has been going on for thousands of years. Biologically, the
scientists tell us that there has been evolution from the plant to the animal, from
the mammal to the ape to man, and this process goes on. A question that arises
here is: has there been any psychological evolution of human beings at all? Have
we become kinder, more compassionate, more protective of ourselves and of the
environment? Although humans have evolved in their technology and in their
forms of government, has there been any change in our propensity towards
violence and destruction?
Having seen that violence has been going on for more than 5000 years, we should
objectively examine what our response to this has been. In the last century, to
prevent disastrous wars between nations, we e created the United Nations. Thus
whenever two countries are about to spark off a war, the UN's job is to intervene
and enable them to talk, to resort to diplomacy and see that they don't start a war.
But we must ask ourselves, when do we call it a 'war'? What is the level at which
violence must reach before we declare it. as a war? Is it when guns start firing,
when airplanes start crossing and when bombs start dropping,? Or is it that, if we
are hating each other, wanting to kill each other, we are already at war? Though it
may not have manifested itself, violence already exists in our consciousness well
before a war is declared.
If we look at the level of the nation, we have created the police force, a system of
law-courts, rules and regulations, in order to contain the manifestations of
violence. For thousands of years we have had the police and these courts of law.
But have these quelled the violence within us? Individually, human beings
continue feeling jealous, feeling angry and hating. They try to control themselves
and constantly fail. For 5000 years, perhaps more, from the time of the
Mahabharata down till today, the phenomenon of violence has remained a part of
our lives. It is a global phenomenon, an ancient phenomenon, and its roots go
deep. If we treat or try to control only the symptoms there can be no change.
Violence keeps erupting again and again. So obviously, there is no freedom from
violence in merely controlling violence. This does not mean that one must not
control it. But it is important to become deeply aware that control does not
eliminate the causes of violence.
We must therefore examine the deeper causes of violence. For violence does not
lie only in Osama Bin Laden and the terrorists, whose acts are but a spectacular
manifestation of this. There is violence when a man subjugates a woman; there is
violence between families; there is violence in crime, in the family, in the office,
in the nation and between communities, castes, and religious groups, there is
psychological violence going on all the time. One may not even recognise it as
violence. For one can taunt or humiliate another human being, and it is legal. Only
physical violence is punishable, because it violates the law. The whole mechanism
of legal control cannot eliminate the violence we carry within.
The real cause of violence is the hatred and the division in the hearts of men. We
must examine where this hatred is born.Unless we go to its source we are only
playing with symptoms on the periphery. To understand the deeper causes of
violence one has to ask, what creates division? What makes me feel that these are
my countrymen, those are others? That these are my people, my family, my
religion, and those are another? How do I draw that boundary between myself and
another? For division starts right there and that division leads to violence. When I
am only interested in the welfare of my people, I don't care about the other
people. They are not my concern, not my responsibility. I even exploit them to
bring benefits for my people. In a war I can kill the others and be decorated as a
hero.
So from where does this division arise that is there in every human being? Every
human being is born in some family, in some country, as part of some language,
some religion. Growing up in the midst of the people around him, depending on
them, imitating them, there inevitably develops this sense that these are my
people, this is my family, this is my language, this is my culture and my religion.
Along with this comes the idea of others. Our thought process and the capacity to
imagine take the process further. And the mind becomes like a lawyer, interested
in profits for the me and the mine, caring only about the me and the mine, and
ignoring or denigrating the other.
The capacities of memory, thought and imagination are gifts we have received
during the course of evolution in greater measure than the other animals. It is
these gifts that generate the power which man has. Our accomplishments originate
from there, but so do all our problems. For these tools that nature has given us are
generally used to further the interests of the me and the mine. Though we may
occasionally talk about being kind to 'others', basically this division has become
embedded in us. Such is the process of the mind becoming self-centred. Thinking
about me --- my body, my family, my children, my culture, my country ---
becomes a self-enclosing process. I am constantly drawing my boundaries and
those people outside them become the 'others'.
One might ask, isn't that natural? Since the progression by which this happens
seems so inevitable, can one find fault with any step in this process? Indeed, it is
something that happens to every human being. But the question we have to ask is:
are we permanently trapped in this condition? Or can we come out of it? The
animal, in its reactions, is completely governed by its instincts, by what nature has
dictated. It is amoral, it cannot free itself from the past. But are we so completely
conditioned by our instincts, by the way the past has shaped us: the biological
past, the cultural past in the form of religion and language and the past of my own
experiences? If I am completely trapped in this, then the sense of division, with its
attendant conflict and violence, is inevitable. But there is perhaps in human
beings the possibility of a different response. I can begin by seriously asking
myself: how does this division between 'me' and the 'other' begin? Can I be free of
it? If we deeply ponder over this question we may come to realize that inwardly
we are not all that different from each other, that differences exist all around us
but they need not create division. The tall people have not had a war with the
short people, at least not yet ! And the dark-haired are not fighting with the
fair-haired. People don't group around this kind of difference. Such difference is a
natural fact: just as no two trees are alike, no two human beings are exactly alike.
So when does difference create a division? If I see a black man as a black man
and a white man as a white man, that does not create a division. It is just a fact.
However, if I say that the whites are superior to the blacks, then I become a racist
and I have created a division.
How does the idea of superiority, of value judgement, come in? There is
somewhere a process of comparison, of evaluation, of preference, that is going
on. I must examine this process, because it is the source from where the division
starts. If one were asked whether an Oak tree is superior to an eucalyptus tree,
one may find it strange to consider one as superior to the other. An Oak tree is an
Oak tree and a eucalyptus tree is a eucalyptus tree. There is no such thing as
superior or inferior. On the other hand, if one wanted shade, an Oak tree may be
seen as superior and if one wanted oil, the eucalyptus tree may be superior ! But
if one does not want anything, then there is no question of superior or inferior.
Hence, it is the 'wanting something', the desire through which one looks, that
creates the definition or the scale, based on which superiority or inferiority is
judged. In short, that which suits me, which gives me comfort, which protects me,
becomes superior in my eyes.
This process has given rise to an ego-centric approach to life, where I judge
everything from the point of view of what benefit I am deriving. I identify with
the family or with a nation because I feel secure and protected. I feel that I am
similar to these people, I belong to them, they will look after me. At one level, one
may consider this as natural, for that is how everybody feels. However, I need to
see that my mind approaches life in this self-centred way in the hope that I will be
more secure and safe or that I will gain benefits and advantages for the me and
the mine'.
However, this hope may in fact be an illusion. We must question whether we are
really becoming secure in this process of identification and division. Hasn't this
division itself produced the greatest insecurity? Because,from that division comes
the divide of Hindu versus the Muslim, the Catholic versus the Protestant. From
this feeling has arisen perpetual conflict and the use of power to annihilate each
other. It is here that violence begins and is sustained This psychological process of
division may be the greatest cause of violence in man. And if all human beings are
violent, how can the collection of human beings, which is society, be non-violent?
If every human being is self-centred, aggressive and harbouring hate, whichever
way you organize them --- as a communist society, a socialist society or a
democratic society --- the violence within man will inevitably express itself in
society. Therefore one cannot blame society outside of us. I must see that I alone
am totally responsible for the ending of violence. When each one of us is violent.
we create a sea of violence, and in that sea of violence there are storms, which
are circumstantial --- sometimes it happens in Ireland, sometimes in Kashmir,
sometimes in Bosnia, and sometimes in New York. The potential for it is ever
present so long as this division is there and the hatred between human beings
remains. There lies the nerve-centre or the core of the problem.
Though outwardly our lives have changed and we have made tremendous
technological progress, inwardly we have made little progress. We are still tribal
and for my country or my people we are prepared to kill other people. The same
hatred which earlier manifested through bows and arrows and axes is today
manifesting through our tremendous ability and power to construct nuclear bombs
and other sophisticated weapons. This lopsided development of the human being
is the deep-rooted source for the multiplying global violence that we see around
us.
Individually, it may seem to us that the violence of terrorism is very distant from
us. Yet logically and rationally we can see our complicity in it, for it is all
connected. It is a process of cause and effect and the effect becomes the cause of
the next effect and so on. So it starts from here, from the sense of division in each
one of us, and it ends up there. Each one of us is contributing to this violence, but
it is convenient to make people like Bin Laden the scapegoat. We must ask
ourselves what created a Bin Laden? Have not the educated elite too contributed
to creating a Bin Laden ? Because, we have all sustained the factors behind that
hatred. And we are now increasing the hatred by bombing "them". A 100 other
Bin Ladens will arise for the same reasons the original Bin Laden arose. Unless
we understand what creates a Bin Laden how can we free ourselves of violence
by just retaliating. ?
The roots of violence can only be approached by understanding that it is not the
spectacular or ugly manifestations of the ego which are the problem; the ego itself
is the problem. And the ego is this self-centred approach that we take for granted.
Is the ego something so natural and inevitable. Or am I just assuming that the way
one has been using thought, memory and imagination is the only way it can be
used ? Our present education system reflects the assumption that human beings
cannot change in the use of their faculties. We spend all our time educating a
child to understand the external world --- how the computer works or how a
rocket goes to the moon. But we don't spend even a few hours discussing the
origin of violence in us and whether there is a possibility of freeing oneself from
this violence. Should we not probe this question seriously? The religious quest is
essentially a quest for discovering the right use of the faculties that have come to
us in the course of evolution. And should this not be part of our education?
A clue might lie in the way we respond when we are able to perceive a direct
threat to our lives. Nature has given us a certain intelligence which prevents us
from putting our finger in the fire, from jumping off a cliff; or standing on the road
in front of a truck and getting killed, One doesn't have to think, one immediately
moves: the danger is so clear. Can a human being similarly perceive the danger of
the ego-centric approach? If we perceive it the way we perceive the danger of
fire, nature's intelligence will act. One will not then live that way. One will not
approach one's friend, or any other human being, or even an animal with that
ego-centric instinct.
The problem may be that we have not seen the danger. Just reining in our
ego-centric impulse is not enough, for we have to see its great danger for
ourselves. Krishnamurti pointed this out rather dramatically, when he said, "Your
house is on fire, and you are not aware, you are sleeping". We laugh at the figure
of Nero who fiddled while Rome was burning. But we too may be like Nero: our
house is on fire and we are fiddling with laws and rules to contain the violence,
indulging in entertainment to escape facing it, or offering some worship in the
vain hope of a better future.
Therefore each individual must take responsibility for the ending of violence in
his/her consciousness. Without that there is no possibility of permanently ending
the violence out there in the world.
Prof. P. Krishna
Last modified: Mon Apr 25 22:21:03 PST 2005