Soul Activism
Robert Sardello
When we look at something going on in the
world and feel dissatisfied with what is happening, it is our soul aspect that
feels this dissatisfaction. We either like or dislike what we see. If we are
highly dissatisfied, then it is easy to imagine the possibility of joining some
sort of protest, or of becoming an activist. However, dissatisfaction, even
when felt deeply, does not form a very good basis for activism. Say you were
deeply opposed to the war and felt it was entirely unjust. It is not sufficient
to imagine the world without that war, and, imagining that the world would be
decidedly better without it, join a protest. While that would seem to be
following your soul sensibility, this could hardly be called Soul Activism. A
judgment coming from these soul feeling cannot be made based on the few facts
close at hand in conjunction with your soul feelings. The feelings are entirely
valid, but humankind would not necessarily be served by your activism, because
it is too narrowly based. For this
level of soul engagement to become the basis for activism, it would be
necessary to refrain from any judgment concerning the war and spend a very long
time searching out all sides of the question, mainly because what comes to us
from the media is fraught with misconception and lies. At some point in the
work of taking all aspects of the question deeply in the soul, a sudden insight
will arise, a creative insight that makes a whole picture of the matter we are
concerned with. Only at that point would we see what is at stake in a larger
context than the immediate soul dissatisfaction. Rudolf Steiner, for example,
followed this methodology of activism in his work, The Karma of Untruthfulness. Such an insight leads to an activism
most likely quite different that what immediately caught our emotions. For
example, activism against the war might well turn instead to an activism
countering manifestations of rank materialism. This level of Soul Activism, however, is
insufficient because it rests in being oppositional which always results in
providing energy for what we stand against to feed off of. For example, the
million man march in Washington several years ago was immediately followed by
the greatest one month increase in subscription to the National Rifle
Association that has ever occurred.
It is possible to go to an even deeper level of
soul engagement by taking a current event in the world with which you feel
strong dissatisfaction and to take the difficulty into meditation. For example, we may have very immediate
feelings of dissatisfaction with the way McDonald’s buys its eggs. For a long
time, this corporation purchased eggs from factory chicken farms that keep
animals in overcrowded pens stacked up on top of each other. This situation was
actually the basis for the work of an activist group. They felt repugnance at
animals being treated this way. It
is certainly possible to work with this situation at a deeper soul level. If
you took it deeper, you would go beyond the personal soul level and begin to
have an inner experience in meditation of the life of the animal soul in
relation to the whole of the cosmos. You would begin to inwardly have a sense
of what treating animals in this way does on a larger cosmic and spiritual
scale, the way such treatment numbs us to the deep spiritual sense of life
itself. As you deepened the meditation, the feelings of anger and
dissatisfaction, surprisingly, would go away. They would not, however, be
replaced by feelings that this way of treating animals is acceptable either. We
have now gone to a different level, a level beyond likes and dislikes in which
something of the spiritual consequences in the world that result from treating
animals in this way can be felt. And in the process, the desire to protest, to
become an activist in the usual sense would also disappear. The question,
though, is, how would what one experienced at a deeper soul level come to
expression? It would seem that a completely different kind of activism would
now be needed. One for which I do not think there is a form. What might that
form look like?
At this deeper level, spontaneous thoughts,
feelings, and images begin to come to you. You may find creative ideas coming
concerning the forms your individual engagement with the concern in question
could take. These soul images always take the form of creative possibilities
and are, at least at the outset, always possibilities to be carried out
individually rather than in groups. An example. A friend of mine, Gail Thomas,
who certainly could be called an activist of the city, one whose life energies
are devoted to bringing a sense of soul to the city, was working with the city
of Dallas with the aim of persuading planners to refrain from building a large
freeway alongside the Trinity River in Dallas without regard to the river. One
of their objections to taking the river into account was that in one place
along the river there is a toxic dump that would require too much money to
clear, and hence it was expedient to avoid confronting that problem
altogether. Gail had come across
some interesting research in which mushrooms are utilized to ‘feed’ off of
toxic waste, which could be a way of clearing the toxic waste inexpensively.
What is interesting is that when she worked with this meditatively, all sorts
of creative ideas began to come to her, not only with regard to the work with
the city, but in many other areas as well. The image virtually exploded with
excitement, and instead of protesting against the city for their disregard to
the soul of the river, she instead introduced them to the wonderful power of
the mushroom.
There is an even further level we must go in
relation to the soul in activism. The act of activism is a social act, not just
an individual act. Even if I am an activist with a membership of one, it is a
social act. It expresses something concerning the soul of a people, not just
the soul of the individual. Our individual feelings of dissatisfaction
concerning something happening in the world easily bypass what is going on at
the level of the soul of a people. Our emotions lead us to think that what we
stand so strongly for is what is right and the other side is simply
wrongheaded. We do not stop to realize that our feeling is coming from a level
of soul that goes beyond our individual reaction. For example, Desmond Tutu was
a speaker recently at a local university and he was taking a stance against the
war. In the short news interview I saw, his way of speaking was quite
interesting. He said that this war was an unjust war. Now that statement might
be one that expresses the individual soul, a statement of immediate feeling.
But there was no trace of reaction in what he was saying. He did not say, for
example, that we must unite against this war and go out into the streets and
protest. He is, as you know, not a man who would be against such protests. He
went on, however, and spoke of how America is a country of great generosity and
is understood that way by people in many parts of the world. The archetype of
America is the soul quality of generosity, the true direction of will. He was
here seeing something of the deeper soul/spirit nature of the nation and he was
speaking how this war defiles that spirit. At that moment he touched into
another entirely different level of activism. This level requires us to say
that a nation is not the same as the collection of individuals who reside in
that nation. Each nation has a soul, and the urges to activism are based in a
deep, often unconscious sense of the folk soul of the nation. Desmond Tutu
entered another level of activism by prompting people to find ways to publicly
address the generous spirit of this nation.
There is yet one further level to consider.
Every people, as a people, not as individuals, every folk soul, have a mission,
a destiny. Every nation has its destiny and the destiny of each nation fits
together to make a whole, the destiny of humankind. And, in particular times,
particular epochs, one or more nations may have a particular responsibility of
carrying the soul aspects of that time period. In Rudolf Steiner’s terms, for
example, we are currently in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch the one following
the ancient Indian, the ancient Persian, the Egyptian, and the Greek-Roman
epoch - and this epoch is the epoch of the English-speaking countries with all
that accompanies that kind of soul logic, scientific thinking, commerce,
industrial thinking, individuality, technology ----all that we see coming into
the world since the 15th century. There is a soul necessity to the
direction we see so prevalent in the world. This epoch, with all it brings, is
a vast training of soul life into precision. We presently focus this precision
in outer things the precision of science, technology, and business. The
purpose of this training, however, is so that we can come to learn to observe
the processes of inner life with precision. An epoch is a time of particular
forms of soul development of humanity. If and when this training is completed,
there will be a further epoch, centered in a different part of the world, with
a different mission for the whole of humanity.
There are many individuals and groups that
clearly understand the mission of humanity, and knowing this mission, make use
of it for the purposes of limited groups. That is, there are those that want to
slant the direction of spiritual development in a way that turns that
development in ways that are useful to those groups. For example, rather than
taking this time as a soul education, the focus is kept outward on the
materialistic possibilities of the present mode of consciousness. And here is the reason for the crucial
importance of Soul Activism. For example, the mission of this time, if it is to
be in connection with the folk soul, the deep spiritual soul, and the ordinary
soul life, excludes exaggerations of power in the economic realms. The soul
mission of this time also excludes war. Wars sometimes and in some ages are
important. War itself it not something that is inherently wrong. But the
mission of this time, what we are supposed to be developing as human beings,
the soul capacities that come about through science and technology, commerce,
industrialization, and so on, do not need war as a necessary condition for
their development. If, then, we see wars going on we can be sure that there is
an excessive exaggeration of one or more of the soul aspects of the age. This
realization helps us to see that activism is not just for the moment but rather
concerns standing for the spiritual direction of humanity and trying to make
sure that direction does not get diverted into the selfish desires of a
few.
Each of these four levels of soul requires
different forms of activism. If the soul element is not a conscious aspect of
activism, our urgent feelings to do something that stands against destructive
forces and stands for creative forces are bound to be confused. We risk
unwittingly participating in the same mean spirited, oppositional,
antagonistic, self-centered, materialistic modes of consciousness that
characterizes what we protest against and fight for. Perhaps this reflection
will inspire new modes of activism.
A version of this article was previously
published in the online magazine, Lapis.