|
THE PARLIAMENT OF THE WORLD'S RELIGIONS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Reflections on the Parliament of the World's Religions--six days spent among six thousand people of many diverse religious and spiritual traditions old and new, from all around the Earth:
How gratifying it is to hear and see, increasingly throughout the week,
so much acknowledgment that the beautiful city of Melbourne, on the banks of the Yarra
River, is the ancestral homeland of the aboriginal Wurundjeri people.
Unfurled on the floor of the convention center lobby, a brown
paper scroll on which we are invited to write messages to leaders at the United Nations Climate Change Conference who will meet later in the week in Copenhagen. I am so touched by the
intimate quality of what people are writing. These messages of love for the
Earth and sorrow for what is likely to befall it come right from the heart.
Conversation with Ven. Jin-wol Lee, Buddhist monk and Dharmic teacher from Korea:
Jin-wol: You are a seeker.
Trebbe: Don't you think everyone here is a seeker?
J: God-centered people seek God.
T: What do Buddhists seek?
J: Reality!
Norm Habel, editor of the five-volume Earth Bible on "green"
(Earth-friendly) and "gray" (anthropocentric, hostile to nature) texts in the
Bible: "When the flood came, the giraffe would be saying, 'What did I do?!'"
I share a small table at lunch with a Balinese Hindu woman, a
Jewish rabbi from Israel, and an Islamic imam. The imam and the rabbi exchange
business cards.
At a panel called "Men Who Love the Goddess," four men discuss
their relationship with the divine feminine.
Hindu leaders from around the world release their Hindu Declaration on Climate Change. Significantly, they acknowledge that the consequences of global warming may be inevitable: Thus, in the
spirit of vasudhaiva kutumbakam, "the whole world is one family," Hindus
encourage the world to be prepared to respond with compassion to such
calamitous challenges as population displacement, food and water shortage,
catastrophic weather and rampant disease.
In front of the convention center, before only a few witnesses, a
Balinese Hindu and an Australian street artist enact a spontaneous
collaboration to bless a barong, a traditional Balinese figure of peace and
well-being, this one made of materials from around the world. (See my Radical Joy for Hard Times blog for the full story.) Sacred activism!
A Sikh prayer ceremony: a young woman steps gracefully among
worshippers sitting on the floor of a convention meeting room, handing out
strips of orange cloth that non-Sikhs can use to cover our heads.
At a session of music by Zain Bhikha and three other South
Africans of different faiths, a young Maori woman rises from her seat and
tearfully thanks "my South African brothers" for having succeeded in achieving
the freedoms other indigenous people are fighting for.
The Dalai Lama at the closing plenary, after congratulating
participants for engaging in such good talks all week: "But maybe you need to
take a little more action!"
|