Martin Luther King Jr. Special Edition______ „A tEtye “UJortlanh (Dbaeruer c all to " a c t io n January 19, 2000 THE NEW MILLENNIUM: A TIME FOR RECKONING B y M argo D ockendore - = In this month when we celebrate the life o f Martin Luther King Jr., and his vision for humanity, and as we move into this new millennium, one thing that he said rings loudly: “G od’s will expressed emotionally is love; his will expressed politically is justice.” And as w e enter this new millen­ nium, w e are afforded a unique oppor­ tunity to examine ourselves, the way we relate to one another, where w e’ve been a n d -m o st im p o rta n t-w h e re w e’re going. It is a tim e for reckoning. It is time to take an inventory-indi- vidually and globally-to perform an accounting and to get our bearings as we chart a course for the future. Will we continue into our brave new world carrying with us all the baggage o f the old? Will w e continue in our pattern o f dominance, control, exploitation, prejudice and hatred? O r will we achieve G od's will? Will we express that will through love and justice? Beneath an island in the Aral sea in what is now Kazakhstan, the Russians have buried enough Anthrax to kill every man, woman and child on Earth several times over. The inland sea is shrinking, exposing the top soils to wind and erosion. A team o f U.S. in­ vestigators is there now, testing the air and watching the animals for signs that the deadly virus has escaped. India and Pakistan have each deto­ nated nuclear weapons into the atmo­ sphere, and have developed ballistic missiles. Both have refused to sign the non-proliferation and test ban trea­ ties. They have been at w ar for h alf a century. Now, both are fighting over the small province o f Kashmir. It is a small but bloody conflict that is in danger o f spiraling out o f control and engulfing the entire world in a nuclear war. In The Sudan, human beings are still being bought and sold as slaves. Around the world, children are forced to work in sweat shops for little or no wages. Famine, poverty and tyranny are rampant. China is about to become a new military superpower, and Rus­ sia, still with enough nuclear weapons to destroy human civilization forever, is falling deeper into chaos, rendering it more dangerous than ever in its history. And everywhere, human be­ ings are butchering one another with self-righteous zeal. The stock mar­ kets sore, driven by unparalleled cor­ porate profits, while regard for human life is plum m eting. People every­ where are frightened for their sur­ vival. Despite all our w ondrous ad­ vances in technology, life is becom ­ ing more incomprehensible and dan­ gerous. W e are lost and alienated, uncertain where the tides are carrying us. W e whistle in the dark, assuring ourselves everything will be alright even w hile the foundation upon which we stand cracks beneath our feet. William Butler Yeats wrote: Turning and turning in the widening gyre The falcon cannot hear the fal­ coner, Things fall apart; the center cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world; The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere The ceremony o f innocence is drowned; The best lack all conviction, while the worst Are full o f passionate intensity. In this new age o f ours, we have all becom e closely linked together is a chain. It is a chain that binds to strengthen, but w hich also enslaves many. In our shrinking and highly in­ terdependent world, events occurring in even the remotest areas o f our globe impact all o f us. Isolationism is no longer an option. Despite the enor­ mous power and wealth o f America, the burden o f maintaining global sta­ bility and peace is becom ing too great. Irrespective o f the moral arguments on either side, the U.S. simply cannot afford to shoulder the military or fi­ nancial burden o f world peace. The unbridled proliferation o f weapons o f mass destruction and the ability o f one despot, one terrorist, to inflict sweeping chaos on the planet renders every person on this planet weakened and vulnerable. It is the result o f ram­ pant inequality and injustice-and an utter absence o f love. That inequality and injustice is like a cancer affecting the entire body o f humanity. If there is a cancer in one part o f our body, no matter how unthreatening it may seem to be, do w e wait for it to spread to the vital organs before w e take action? Until we bring equality and justice to our world, until w e com e to accept that none o f us are safe until all o f us are safe, we remain dangerously ex­ posed. Until there is a truly effective means o f global security and an effec­ tive supra-national guarantor o f world peace, all o f us remain vulnerable. During this last year w e witnessed a num ber o f tragedies in our own cit­ ies. None o f them captured our atten­ tion like the murders at Columbine High School. But as a result o f the tragedy at Littleton, Colorado, we, as a society, are beginning to take a closer look at our behavior, our culture, our values. Parents are sitting down with their children and talking to them, asking questions about their lives, their school, their activities on the Internet. W e are examining the climate o f vio­ lence in this country, and the role o f guns, movies, television and video games. But mostly, we ask ourselves how two seemingly average young men could hold such hatred and com­ mit such unspeakable violence? M y novel M ahdi was about terror­ ism and a global apocalypse. It was written as a “wake-up call,” and an opportunity to examine ourselves. The overw helm in g hum an tragedy at Littleton, Colorado also provides an opportunity for us to examine the so­ ciety in which we live and to make fundamental choices about how we w ant to occupy this planet. The ac­ tions o f the two teenagers in Littleton was an act o f terrorism -no less than if committed by any foreign terrorist striking at the heart o f America. It,dramatically reveals our vulnerabil­ ity on a very personal level. And it dramatically demonstrates the devas­ tating impact that even two angry teen­ age boys can have on a community and a nation. As a nation, w e condemn other cul­ tures on this planet as barbaric and cruel, as violent and primitive. Yet, America has more violent murders than any other nation on the planet. But look within our own inner cities. They are a reflection o f the world in which we live. O ur own Third W orld is a cauldron for violence spawned from injustice and inequality and fueled by the virulent anger caused by those toxic ingredients. But the murders in Littleton were amidst affluence and opportunity. Still, the actions o f those two sociopathic youths o f Littleton are, in actuality, no different from any individuals or groups who commit acts o f terrorism in their desperate fight against op­ pression. While the names change; the actions remain the same. Are those two young men any different than any other terrorist group? People who find no inclusion, who feel oppressed because they are different, may turn to violence because they see themselves as martyrs in a cause with nothing to lose. They strike out in their pain and their frustration-and their hate. The killings at Columbine High School also reveal the lack o f ac­ countability w e have as a society. This lack o f accountability is a reflection o f our fear. W e try to comprehend the reason for such actions in order to assuage our fear, and in doing so we try to esca p e o u r resp o n sib ility through blaming the parents, the gun lobby, the media. While there may be some justification for that blame, what about each o f us? Because it says something about our society, it says something about how every one o f us chooses to live our lives-in every aspect o f our lives. Do we put love into the world through even the smallest o f our actions? Do w e forgive another’s mistakes? Do we allow for diversity and difference? Do we make our lives about power and com petition? 1 wrote The Mahdi because o f a long-held and passionate belief in the development o f a system o f global government that would ensure not only our survival as a species into the next millennium, but would guarantee free­ dom, equality and justice for all hu­ man beings, and which would allow for the human spirit to escape the enslavement o f poverty and oppres­ sion that keeps us from exploring our unlimited potential. I wanted to record events occurring in our present world in the hope that they might serve as a m irror to ourselves-a mirror that would help us see ourselves and what could happen if we do not take conscious steps to change the way w e relate to one another on this planet. Such a system o f world government is not an end in itself but simply a necessary step in a very long journey. All humanity is at war. It is not a war among conflicting nations-such wars are only a symptom. It is a war be­ tween good and evil, the darkness and the light-fear and love. It is what connects the myriad conflicts and ter­ rorism o f our planet with the tragedy o f Littleton. We live in a time in which we must make a fundamental choice whether to create a world based upon love or continue in one dominated by fear. All evil stems from fear. Love represents our highest virtues; fear our lowest. Love flows from our spiri­ tual beings-our connection to God, if you w ill-w hile fear is bom from our animal natures Charles Darwin said “Man, with all his noble qualities, his god-like intellect, still bears within his bodily frame the indelible stamp o f his lowly origin. In The Mahdi, Ben Williams notes during the midst o f World War III that there are no more bystanders in the world, only participants. In his actions in unleashing evil and global chaos into the world, Abu had made certain o f that. It is time for all of us to choose sides. There is no middle ground. And that choice has never been more critical than at the present time. It has been observed that for evil to triumph all that is needed is for good people to do nothing. As Margaret Mead said: "Never doubt the ability o f a small dedicated group o f individuals to change the world. Indeed, it is all that ever has.” Our survival on this planet is not and never has been assured. It is the highest form o f arrogance to assume otherwise. Ifwe are to survive, and ifwe are to live in a new age o f enlighten­ ment, we must actively choose it. Hu­ manity is in a state o f adolescence. We are experiencing all the pain, pas­ sions and conflicts attendant to that state Before we rush to blame those two horribly dem ented youths o f Littleton, Colorado, maybe we should first stop and reflect upon the possi­ bility that they are us. And, just per­ haps, that is what scares us the most. If G od’s will is to be expressed among us and upon this planet, it falls upon us to make it happen. The choice is ours. That is what Martin Luther King wanted us to know; it is what his life and his mission were all about. “We must pray with unceasing passion for racial justice, but we must also use our minds to develop a program.. .to bring an end to racial injustice.” By Martin Luther King — M ULTNO M AH CO UNTY OREGON "The ultimate o f a man is not where he stands in moments o f comfort and convenience but where he stands at the time o f challenge and controversy". M ultnomah County's Northeast Health Center joins the Portland community in recognizing the many achievements and lasting contributions o f Dr. M artin Luther King, Jr. Are you looking for a place to receive medical services for you and your familyt Give us a try. We provide medical care for adults, children, and pregnant women. Call 248-3333 to find out how to obtain services. Health Department Northeast Health Center 5329 N E . Martin Luther King Jr, Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 (503) 248-5183 Celebrate 64V\ lien evil men shout ugly words of hatred, good men jnust commit themselves to the glories of love. Where evil men would seek to perpetuate an • unjust status quo, good men must seek to bring into being a real order of ju s tic e .” MARTIN LUTHER KING Day! Martin Lather King. Jr. Gregory P. Oliveros Attorney At Law 2161 NE Broadway Portland, Oregon 97232 282-7285 GASTSIDE 315O E Burnside 231-8926 M U S IC M IL L E N N IU M N O RTH W EST 801 NW 23rd 248-0163 1