Posts Tagged ‘slavery’

Slavery and Colonialism — Part Two

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Howdy –

One of the things that Machelle Small Wright (author of “Behaving as if the God in All Life Mattered”) says: whenever there is a deep human conflict, the vibratory energy of that conflict is held by nature spirits until it can be consciously released by humans. She created a “Battle Energy Release Process” that she has used to release negative energy on the Civil War battlegrounds in the South.

I used a modification of that process, that I called the “Slavery Energy Release Process”, to release the energy of slavery from the waterfront in Savannah, Georgia, where, 150 years ago, human beings were gathered and sold. (Although the process was successful — you could FEEL the energy change — I stopped doing it. I didn’t think that it was my role as the descendant of the slaves to initiate the release process.)

The city of Richmond, VA, did an interesting twist of the release process, engaging in a full year of activities acknowledging and atoning for its slave past. I haven’t been there to feel the energy, but I’ve seen video of the process… it was quite moving.

America is haunted by its slave past. The formation and growth of America as a nation cannot be understood separate from the economic and consciousness foundations of slavery and oppression. Yet, we ignore it. The descendants of both the masters and the slaves are tainted by this history. We revere Oprah Winfrey, Michael Jordan and Colin Powell, but we still don’t come to grips with what it meant to own (and be owned by) another human being.

I become the “Invisible Man” in almost any urban setting in this country (including my own hometown of Portland, Oregon). When I walk down the street, especially in the evening, people avert their eyes, turn away, or freeze. The cloak of invisibility has nothing to do with how I am dressed, what I’m carrying or how I’m behaving. The only difference between me and others walking down the street is my skin color. This is the legacy of slavery. This is what we must cure. NO ONE moves forward without curing this disease.

Exclusivity — the concept of “I am separate” – was the breeding ground of slavery. “Racism” didn’t create slavery – exclusivity created both slavery and its rationalization called “racism”. Slavery is just an extreme form of exclusivity – the disease that threatens humanity more than any combination of viruses. And, once you shut down your heart enough to actually own another human being, other forms of oppression become much easier – the genocide of the First Peoples, putting Japanese-Americans in concentration camps, treating children like property and women like dirt, invading other countries willy-nilly.

The problem: we cannot deal with this legacy, at the same time as we continue our self-laudatory “We’re Number One” attitudes. Usually, an attempt to move us away from our mutual denial and delusion is seen as “Un-American”.

Now, for the good news.

All around this country, and all around the world, people of all colors and ethnicities have rolled up their sleeves and have committed themselves to doing the heavy lifting of undoing the legacy of slavery and oppression and forging a society that is based on the concept of “We are One”. In this country, there are thousands of groups that involve millions of Americans in releasing the energy of slavery.

My job, the work of Commonway Institute, is NOT to replicate the work of those millions. My work is to FOCUS the energy of those millions, so that we can turn these flickers of light into a laser beam that cuts away our denial and delusion.

I envision thousands of people (mostly white) going out in waves, a few in every city and town that has a legacy of slavery amd oppression (which is all of them), and releasing that energy. (Those “energy workers” would have to first map their location, working with local people to locate the places of slavery and/or oppression that need release. That mapping alone can be a healing process.)

Then, once the energy has transformed, engaging the inhabitants of the city or town in a “truth and reconciliation” process that allows them to consciously transform the energy into a positive force for change.

Is this possible? Of course. Will it actually happen? That, of course, depends on you…

Peace,

Sharif

Slavery and Colonialism — Part One

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Howdy

All around the world, people are talking about global climate change as the problem and “sustainability” (meaning different things to different people) as the solution.

I consider this to be the “low-hanging fruit” of the global transformation movement. Relatively easy to see, relatively easy to fix.

["What!?! Sharif, are you CRAZY??? Global climate change is EASY to fix??? What have YOU been smoking!?!?"]

(I thought I’d add that comment, to save the rest of you from having to write it.)

I believe that, in the restoring, “Mending” work ahead for us humans, coming to grips with the legacies of the combination of colonialism and slavery will be the deepest, most painful work that we will have to do. The changes made necessary by global climate change will pale in comparison. If we DON’T take on this effort, there won’t be any of us around to do the climate change work.

Think about the Holocaust. The entire world knows about the deprivations and horrors visited upon the minority people of central Europe, including 6 million Jews being put to death. Outside of a few crazies, no one denies that this exists, or minimizes its impact.

However horrible, the Holocaust is an event that occurred over a 4-6 year period (depending on how you mark the start). That’s half a decade. It impacted people who were the minorities in Germany and its surrounds. That’s half a continent.

The period of European colonialism and slavery lasted over 500 years. That’s half a millennia. I can’t think of a single continent, a single country, or a single ethnic group, that has not been negatively impacted by this history. It looms so large on the human horizon, we cannot see it.

I can see it. I am the descendant of slaves.

The two-headed monster of slavery and colonialism destroyed more civilizations than we can count. Greed and arrogance decimated African societies, South American societies, North American societies… Wherever the twin institutions of slavery and colonialism existed, the disruption of the fabric of humanity was the result.

And we haven’t figured out how to put it right yet.
Every single war raging on this planet right now (70-100 wars estimated being fought right now), every one of them, is a legacy war of colonialism and/or slavery. No one wants to own up to this. However, until we do, we will continue to dance around this major issue, to our collective doom.

Every time a black man looks at a white police officer (or anyone else who is a visible representative of authority), they look at each other over a gulf of half a millennia of oppression, pain and suffering. This gulf will not be crossed by ignoring the problem. This gulf will not be crossed with a weekend workshop or encounter group. We pretend that the gulf does not exist, but our very pretense makes the gulf wider than ever.

I know this to be true. I am the descendant of slaves.

My white friends say, “But I didn’t enslave your ancestors! I would have been an abolitionist. Why is it on me to make things right?” The answer is simple: just like we must deal with the global warming that started in the Coal Age, just like our children will have to come to grips with the mounds of garbage created in the Disposable Age, we must deal with the legacy wars, the legacy economics, the legacy disruptions created during the Age of Slavery-Colonialism.

No, you didn’t create this Mess. You just get to clean it up.

I do not forget that I am the descendant of slaves. Your task is not to forget that you are the descendants of the slavemasters.

I do not forget my heritage. While I recognize on one level we are indeed all One, I also recognize that we were each put upon this Earth, at this time, in these bodies, with these various histories, for a reason. Our job is not to FORGET our history, but to TRANSCEND it.

And, transcend this we will. We will because we must. I think about the numbers of people around the US and around the world who are doing cross-barrier dialog talks. I think about the various inter-religious, -ethnic, -cultural, -social groups that have sprung up over the years. I think about the hundreds of millions of people struggling with the legacy problems created by the European powers meddling with international borders and international people. (I find it interesting that the first act of the fledgling United Nations was to ratify the world’s international borders. The Third World borders were created for the benefit of the colonial powers, created by arbitrary, capricious and arrogant means.)

Yes, the people of the world will seek and give forgiveness. Yes, the people of the world will reconcile. Yes, we will re-do ALL of our national borders, we will offer and receive reparations for our great grandparents activities, and we will end the legacy wars and the legacy oppression of the Second Millennium.

Global climate change is supposed to change the shorelines of the world’s continents over the next 100 years, as oceans rise. Human activity will change the REST of the world map, as all the lines change when we transcend our history of slavery and colonialism.

And remember: global climate change and slavery-colonialism are just TWO of 50-100 symptoms of “the Mess”. We’ve got to roll up our sleeves and get started!

Peace,

Sharif