There is terror in the world and the only thing that
separates us from it is now and later.
There is terror that ruins souls and banishes all sensitivity and
peace. There is terror that rapes the
body, explodes the mind and trashes the soul.
We have heard about it, read a book or an article about someone else’s
horror or seen a movie on it; we have even had nightmares revealing the essence
of terror. Ten days in Cambodia, one
book later, two films, and a few personal accounts and I had put the pink edge
of my toe in to the bloody massacre, the holocaust at the hands of the Khmer
Rouge between the years of 1975-1979.
Standing in the macabre tourist attraction/pilgrimage sight,
I felt for the hairs on my body to rise; I listened for the screams of ghosts
and the marching feet covered in rubber slippers of the perpetrators
overhead. I envisioned the abused,
sunken flesh back on to the jumbled skeletons in the shrine affront me and
closed my eyes to approach the blindness of their misery. I sniffed at the cool moisture of the cave
and drove myself to infuse the smell of death, rotting flesh, ruddy blood and
disease. Yet nothing could take me even close to the terror of the mass of
human beings left to rot in that cave. I am here after all, in this flesh, on this day with my
life, my loved ones, my comfort and safety, my liberation. I am here as a touring vibrant young woman,
arm in arm with my partner, privileged with love and human rights, all my
necessities and many luxuries. Terror is
the last of my worries even as I stare directly at the remnants of one of the
most atrocious acts of human kind against human kind, in our history.
I lounge on the bed with a full belly, reading the account
of a survivor under the Khmer Rouge as he details the little known facts of
what starvation does to the body and mind of a person. How it drives the body to create pockets in
the skin and bloat the stomach and leave a person wasted with exhaustion, how
it drives a mind to beat their child for stealing the last of a family’s
rations for his own aching tummy or how it calls a woman to eat the flesh of
her sister after she has died of starvation herself. This is true terror!
Oddly however, as I learned more and more about the Khmer
Rouge and their platform, without my typical self righteous tone, in an almost
whisper, I turned to Dawa and said I kind
of understand the original principles and ideals of the Khmer Rouge. ‘Kind of’ is a huge understatement. Could I have ended up in that regime of
stained hands? After all it was
Cambodians killing Cambodians and family members killing their own family. Too often we glorify ourselves as the
‘do-gooders’, the benevolent hearts. Is
that what the child soldiers of the Khmer Rouge thought too, that they were
exterminating for the betterment of all.
There had to be something that numbed them to the atrocities that they
performed.
No matter your ideals, a fanatic is a fanatic.
Be it a communist pig or a capitalist pig.
To the Khmer Rouge, all signs of the former society were
brushed off like infecting pests and deemed imperialist trash. Currency was not taken by the officials to be
used for their own means, but thrown in the dust as another sign of
imperialism. How many times have I
cursed a world based on money?
Countless. They believed in the
‘Ancients’, as they called them and an agrarian society where self
sustainability was key. I am a great
admirer of the simple people living out in the bush, in the countryside living
off the land, living remotely and cut off from the capitalist cities of
today. I romanticize the lines on their
face and the cracked rough skin of their hard working hands, the palm fronds of
their roofs and their naked babies brown with the dirt of our earth. I have spent the past tow years growing less
and less dependent on the grocery store and growing a larger and more equipped
garden. Hardly ever will you catch me
buying something that is not local.
“Be the change you wish to be in
the world.”
~ Ghandi
I
have humbly attempted to live by this notion to the best of my ability in this
life. And my principles on
sustainability and simplicity of life, I do agree in. So at what point can promising positive
ideals for the betterment of our planet and brothers and sisters twist in to neurosis,
hatred and intolerance.
There of course were things I could not relate to like the
Khmer Rouge’s discounting of religion. I
happen to be a Buddhist, the presiding religion of Cambodia. I can’t imagine a world where I was not
allowed to show love, devotion and respect for the great meditators and Boddhisattvas
and even worse, be restricted from practicing meditation and compassion. Also, they were anti education, culture and
art. That is something I definitely
could not understand. Education is
freedom embodied. Art and culture are
the sweet bites of humanity’s ability to reflect the human experience in such
extraordinary beauty.
However, truth be truth, myself and many of my like minded
friends could easily agree upon many of the regime’s original vision of
utopia. Equally so, myself and these
compadres also could say we are against the
opposition.
Not saying that we would necessarily come to the point of
committing crimes against humanity and unleashing sheer terror on the opposition, but perhaps we are still too
close to crossing the line of the middle way.
There is one thing we as the human populace share in common,
our goal for happiness. When you strip
away all the dogmas, the paradigms and face that naked soul, each one of us
strives for happiness, contentment, satisfaction. Now some person’s version of happiness could
look like the exact opposite of happiness, however we all are here for
different purposes and we are all equipped with varying tools.
This secret ingredient for a more placid and serene mind is
vital in maintaining equanimity in a complex jungle of various opinions on how
to live life and conduct oneself in society. Without a continually focused awareness, deep
understanding and compassion for society’s equal strive for happiness, we move
closer and closer to a world of extremism. This can come in many versions of ignorance
that we all know too well.
As we stand at our pulpit, we must start with humility, a
silence; listening for all of the voices, all of the needs, no matter how opposing
it may feel from our own. Then we must
remind ourselves to be flexible, patient and understanding. If someone else’s vision, we are sure is wrong, by the basic laws of nature
and karma, then we must expand ourselves with compassion and sympathy for the
darkness that a part of their heart and intentions reside in. And know that they too may have an inner
wisdom on where the darkness resides in our path. Humility!
Humility! Humility! We must stay open. Empty ourselves often for the ability to see
and feel with a breadth of wisdom. Then speak our mind. Speak from our heart. Focus on the light of our vision; focus on
the positivity of what is our idea of
utopia and not on what we find is the
negativity of another’s idea of utopia.
In this way, there is space for all 7 billion of us, our mother of
green, our father of blue and all of our cousin species. We have to be the change we want to see in
the world and watch others fall beside us in these missions or fulfill their
own destinies, creating a lively patchwork of various colors and flavors.
My father once rightly brought me down off of my soap box
when I needed it most. I am quite
capable of being a self righteous bitch.
But every day I try a little harder to remind myself of my own strong
belief in diversity. The world would be
a bland place if stripped of all of the varying voices, attitudes and ways of
being. Besides, that is an impossible
goal. As we have seen many times in our
cyclical history. Intolerance eventually
fails itself.
In the end, by their own hands the Khmer Rouge met their
demise. Growing more and more hateful,
inflexible, fanatic and ignorant finally led them to such a rooted paranoia. They started off killing away the ‘new people’,
then they turned against the very model of their original values, ‘the Ancients’
until they ultimately began killing their own ranks. Hatred and intolerance eventually self
destructs and all terrorism eventually ends in bringing terror to itself. For, we are the other and the other is
us.
We should never seize to feel the passion for our values and
beliefs, for our hope in the collective.
Let us keep standing up for our dreams.
We need vision! We need heart and
soul in what sometimes can feel like a hopeless world. Just be wise to smile at the person standing
up next to you, across from you, all around you in their own visions. Let us all meet heart to heart in the united
search for sustainable happiness.
11 comments:
being a communist does not make you a pig, nor does being a capitalist. YOU are capitalism at its finest. you flew in a plane, dumping fuels on third world countries to get to a place of struggle, just to type this piece on a computer. the local currency you have in your pocket RIGHT now, is probably more than the average citizen sees in a year. the struggle that is happening in cambodia, is no different than the struggle on your own soil, in new orleans. south central. oakland. harlem. chicago. detroit. the same atrocities happen to people of color and low income families EVERY SINGLE DAY, on your own capitalist pig soil. so because you can experience compassion, that doesnt make you a capitalist pig? i think not. your horse is extremely high. remember how lucky you are to have the ability to experience the world in the way that you do, and remember that you get to do it for WAY cheaper than the normal person does. what are you doing in these places to give back? what are you building in these places that is sustainable? what are you teaching the youth in these places? how many gardens have you started since you were there? how many bikes have you ridden in ratio to cars that you have been in since there? if the only answer to any of these posed questions can be money, then you are a capitalist pig too. no amount of compassionate writing, and good intent can change that.
It's hard to comment on your eloquent statement other than to add an experience I had at the Killing Fields. Walking around the excavated and unexcavated graves with bits of cloth and bits of bone still evident i stood to contemplate. Suddenly a little breeze rose and hundreds of white butterflies rose up out of the depressions of the mass graves. Awesome.
For all the stories you've seen, read and heard, the atrocities committed by that regime are even more depraved than we can probably know. Nicki, thanks for this thoughtful reflection on the dangers of clinging onto our ideals with closed minds.
I had a conversation with a friend a few days ago and despite sitting quite opposite on the political spectrum, we concluded that each side NEEDED the other. We need each other to carry the conversation forward, to grow and evolve, and, most importantly, to temper the tendencies for both sides to circle wagons and incestualize our respective golden-calves into ideas that are no longer relevant.
I guess when we were kids, I was pretty oblivious to what brought my parents to this country in the first place. I think I knew that something awful happened where my folks came from, but they never spoke of it and I never dared to ask. Despite growing up as "American" as anybody else, I've come to learn that the baggage of these horrors you describe definitely had an effect on my formation. Only years later did I realize how literal this truth was: My parents had fled the regime independently and only met afterwards in a refugee camp. Without the Khmer Rouge and all their atrocities, there's a certainty that I would never have existed. Mind. Blown. It does a number on your attempts to reconcile with and heal from generational wounds.
I'm sorry Still Ill that you are still ill, very ill. You missed the whole point of what Nicki had to say.
Rath,
Incredible to hear a personal voice and so beautiful are your words. What is sure is that we do need the other to challenge and understand all sides better including our own and ultimately come to a place where there are no longer sides. your words bring the subject to a whole new level. and your own personal connection and your family's connection makes it even more real.
and yes, to all those stories that will never be told and all those voices that will never be heard we can only hope that the collective felt their pain and learned from it.
thank you so much Rath for bringing so much more in to the light.
john,
wow! their is beauty that comes from the most unsuspecting places.
i found it quite striking, how the caves outside of Battambong were set up on top of some of the most beautiful vistas. It is like we're being reminded of all our frailty and impermanence and how the sun keeps shining no matter how dark it can get.
still ill,
i am sorry that you misunderstood my basic point. i agree that with every thing we think we are doing right, there are 200 things we are doing wrong or could be doing in the first place. Unfortunately with only 10 days i was not able to provide much to the Cambodian people but I thank them for teaching me so much and i hope that my kindness in return was enough for the time being.
my purpose in writing this is to admit my own ability to be inflexible, self righteous and delusional and therefore be blinded by my own "clinging to my ideals with a closed mind".
my use of the terms communist pig and capitalist pig are simply used as common examples of the kind of language we use to point the finger in the other direction. i am sorry i forgot the quotation marks to make that more evident.
we are all a little bit of every kind of 'pig' out there. we all have the ability to be just as evil as good. i do happen to believe it has to do with good intention, having heart and compassion. all of the religions, political structures, personal philosophies, etc... do not matter as we take our last breath or as we take our next step. it is about the man behind the curtain. it is about how and why we make our choices not the choice itself.
i do believe it is about love and seeing all sides because i think that is what will set us free. nothing else has seemed to work but love and compassion. it is not love that kills the people in our 'own' soil or any other. every inch of the soil of this planet belongs to all of us and none of us, so the lesson could come from anywhere, be it detroit or germany.
hatred, anger, revenge and intolerance are the essence of what chains people, kills their spirits and their bodies.
love, compassion, and open mindedness are historically what has set us free.
Patti Dimmano says:
Thank you for continuing to include me in your blog! :)
It was learning about the Khmer Rouge massacre in a Human Rights class I took in college that sparked the flame of social service as a career in my heart. I agree with so much that you speak-I pray everyday my sons have hearts of service and volunteerism and that Michael and I can be examples of that for them. When I learned about Pol Not and his followers and the extreme human rights violations and acts of cruelty that were committed under his rule-it was astonishing to me that this was happening just a few years before I was born, and just a hop, skip, and jump away from my home country. How could I just be learning about this at 19 and what other human rights massacres have been under exposed? Now as a mother I feel an overwhelming duty to support my sons in experiencing spiritual fullness through service and kindness.
Thank you for adding beauty to our daily lives with wisdom and words! Miss your pretty face!
XO
P
It's a difficult task to write about being in a place where atrocities that have taken place, and we can only try to find some words to describe our own response, as you have done so beautifully. There is no "sense" to be made of the unfathomable ability of some humans (Maybe all of us? We like to think not) to be so violent and brutal. Thank you, Nicki, for sharing your insights and feelings, your hopes, your light... As you well know and express, peace begins in our own hearts, and that's the only place to start.
Anonymous,
Why dont you make who you are public? You have NO IDEA who I am, NOR do you know where I come from. Keep your biased based judgments to yourself, unless you have something constructive or intelligent to say. Just because you do not like what you read, does not mean that I am not entitled to my opinion on what was written. Nicki's piece evoked much emotion, as I am sure my response did. Not everybody will agree with eachother. Not everybody will feel the same warm feeling from my response, as they do to Nicki's very eloquent piece. What is important, is that we tolerate any opinion, even those opinions of dissent. It takes all kinds to turn this earth, and we are all cogs in the wheel of this life. If what I wrote angered you that much to the point of passing judgement on me, somebody that you do not know, then you are NO BETTER THAN THE OPPRESSORS THAT WERE SO POIGNANTLY WRITTEN ABOUT. how very ironic of you.
Bubu,
Your way with words is always, and has always been, so very eloquent. May I too, clear up some proverbial pronouns. When I say "you" i do not mean YOU only, I meant it directed at the reader (and myself, for that matter). The piece written was extremely thought provoking, and very mirrored to my own battles and worldly journeys, inside, and outside of my head. Who you are and the things you have to say, are important to this world, and I am blessed to know you and read these words. May you continue to have epic journeys, experience the beautiful love of your partner and keep writing about all of your worldly experiences. I respect who you are as a person, as a teacher and as a basic human being on this planet. Your compassion for life and everything in it is humbling, and inspiring. Thank You for who you are, and thank you for sharing it.
VIVA LA REVOLUCION, SIEMPRE!!!
Summer
I know enough about you Summer to know what an ass hole you are and it's enough. Stay out of her blogs, your opinions are not needed. I am Nicki's love and partner.
Post a Comment