One World Wisdom
Thich Nhat Hanh
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REST IN PEACE (by Vietnamese Buddhist monk, Thich Nhat Hanh) I am a World Trade Center tower, standing tall in the clear blue
sky, feeling a violent blow in my side, and I am a towering inferno
of pain and suffering imploding upon myself and collapsing to the
ground. I am a terrified passenger on a hijacked airplane not knowing
where we are going or that I am riding on fuel tanks that will be
instruments of death, and I am a worker arriving at my office not
knowing that in just a moment my future will be obliterated. I am a pigeon in the plaza between the two towers eating crumbs
from someone's breakfast when fire rains down on me from the skies,
and I am a bed of flowers admired daily by thousands of tourists now
buried under five stories of rubble. I am a firefighter sent into dark corridors of smoke and debris
on a mission of mercy only to have it collapse around me, and I am
a rescue worker risking my life to save lives who is very aware that
I may not make it out alive. I am a survivor who has fled down the stairs and out of the building to safety who knows that nothing will ever be the same in my soul again, and I am a doctor in a hospital treating patients burned from head to toe who knows that these horrible images will remain in my mind forever. May I know peace. I am a tourist in Times Square looking up at the giant TV screens
thinking I'm seeing a disaster movie as I watch the Twin Towers crash
to the ground, and I am a New York woman sending e-mails to friends
and family letting them know that I am safe. I am a piece of paper that was on someone's desk this morning
and now I'm debris scattered by the wind across lower Manhattan, and
I am a stone in the graveyard at Trinity Church covered with soot
from the buildings that once stood proudly above me, death meeting
death. I am a dog sniffing in the rubble for signs of life, doing my
best to be of service, and I am a blood donor waiting in line to make
a simple but very needed contribution for the victims. May I know
peace. I am a resident in an apartment in downtown New York who has
been forced to evacuate my home, and I am a resident in an apartment
uptown who has walked 100 blocks home in a stream of other refugees.
I am a family member who has just learned that someone I love
has died, and I am a pastor who must comfort someone who has suffered
a heartbreaking loss. I am a loyal American who feels violated and vows to stand behind
any military action it takes to wipe terrorists off the face of the
earth, and I am a loyal American who feels violated and worries that
people who look and sound like me are all going to be blamed for this
tragedy. I am a frightened city dweller who wonders whether I'll ever
feel safe in a skyscraper again, and I am a pilot who wonders whether
there will ever be a way to make the skies truly safe. I am the owner of a small store with five employees that has been
put out of business by this tragedy, and I am an executive in a multinational
corporation who is concerned about the cost of doing business in a
terrorized world. I am a visitor to New York City who purchases postcards of the
World Trade Center Twin Towers that are no more, and I am a television
reporter trying to put into words the terrible things I have seen.
I am a boy in New Jersey waiting for a father who will never
come home, and I am a boy in a faraway country rejoicing in the streets
of my village because someone has hurt the hated Americans. I am a general talking into the microphones about how we must
stop the terrorist cowards who have perpetrated this heinous crime,
and I am an intelligence officer trying to discern how such a thing
could have happened on American soil, and I am a city official trying
to find ways to alleviate the suffering of my people. I am a terrorist whose hatred for America knows no limit and I
am willing to die to prove it, and I am a terrorist sympathizer standing
with all the enemies of American capitalism and imperialism, and I
am a master strategist for a terrorist group who planned this abomination.
My heart is not yet capable of openness, tolerance, and loving. I am a citizen of the world glued to my television set, fighting
back my rage and despair at these horrible events, and I am a person
of faith struggling to forgive the unforgivable, praying for the consolation
of those who have lost loved ones, calling upon the merciful beneficence
of God/Yahweh/Allah/Spirit/Higher Power. I am a child of God who believes that we are all children of God
and we are all part of each other. |
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