It is shocking to
watch the horrors unfolding in New Orleans from the hurricane and floods,
and to feel the pain of so many people who now have nothing but their
spirit and will to survive. And it was especially painful to see American
people left with no food, water or medicine because of the incompetent and
uncaring response from local, state and federal governments in the first
few days of the disaster. And as the rest of us sit watching the
suffering in our comfortable homes, it is a great test of our compassion.
How are we responding? Fortunately, many people coming to the area and
volunteering to help and thousands are sending donations.
From a deeper perspective, this disaster seems designed as a
spiritual wake-up call to highlight every significant issue Americans need
to address today: poverty, racism, the deteriorating environment, oil
depletion, increasingly huge debts from the war. Clearly the disaster is
revealing the huge racial and social divisions still festering in our
nation that need to be healed. The whole world could see on television
that it was poor, black people who huddled in the Convention Center for
four days with no government help--while whites had the resources to
quickly evacuate. Our friends around the world are emailing us in
disbelief at the callousness of our government, saying the government’s
handling of this disaster looks like what you would expect from corrupt
governments in the developing world.
As we wrote in our
book Spiritual Politics ten years ago, many cultures see a link
between events in the natural world-- drought, earthquakes, hurricanes--
and collective human thought. This is the element scientists miss and why
they can’t accurately predict the weather. Major natural disasters are
often seen as a spiritual message-- a sure sign that “the mandate of
heaven is passing” and it is time for a new ruler. Are you listening
America??
The long delay in federal response left many people wondering if this
was due to bureaucratic incompetence--or was it intentional, due to racism
and a desire to remove poor blacks so the area could be developed at great
profit to wealthy elites? Why were all the federal and local studies
urging serious preparation for hurricane disasters and immediate action to
repair the levies ignored? Was the meager federal response because many
National Guard troops and their equipment had been sent to the war in
Iraq? Or perhaps more darkly, was it a way to create more fear and chaos
and thus justify increasing use of martial law? Is this a rehearsal to
see how we will respond as a people to even more imposed controls and loss
of our freedoms under our new Homeland Security Agency?
The response to Katrina seems to reflect deliberate, underlying
policies of reducing government until it can, in the words of one
conservative activist, "be drowned in a bathtub," --a policy which has now
karmically come home to roost. This policy of "drowning the government in
a bathtub" has instead drowned thousands of helpless, poor citizens in a
bathtub of greed, deliberate neglect and endless wars to fulfill a
misguided national policy of dominance of the planet's energy resources
for our selfish use.
The disaster is also revealing the glaring lack of awareness of the
natural environment in the region. There has been little protection of
the delicate eco-systems that could have prevented much of the flooding.
Wetlands have instead been covered over by development with no thought of
the long-term consequences. Government funds requested by New Orleans to
rebuild the levees for storm protection were diverted to the war in Iraq
and to tax cuts primarily benefiting the wealthy. The floodwaters are now
so toxic from sewage, bacteria, chemicals, and leaking gas that many more
deaths may occur. (Yet the floodwaters are only bringing to the surface
toxins that have been hidden underground in so many major cities).
Recovery costs will have a huge effect on our national economy, as will
the skyrocketing price of gas and oil due to damaged refineries.
Symbolic Aspects of the Disaster
The flooding is also revealing the negative impact of the floating
gambling casinos on the Mississippi River. The huge casino barges became
battering rams in the floods, destroying many homes and businesses
symbolic of how gambling addiction and greed has destroyed many homes and
lives. The symbolism of these destructive barges is quite illuminating.
And significantly, the waters are flooding New Orleans, the sacral or
sexual center of the country. There may have been an accumulation of
negative mental and emotional energy in this center which needed to be
purified with wind and water. It was interesting that the hurricane left
Florida as a Category One hurricane and hit New Orleans as a Category
Four—much more severe.
Each nation has
major energy centers or chakras where specific types of energy flow in and
out of the national energy body. The Big Easy is known for its excesses
of sex, drinking and drugs, and water is the element associated with this
chakra. Thus it is not surprising that the primary destruction of the city
was not by wind, but by water. The previous disaster of 9/11 was in the
throat chakra of the U.S., New York, the creative and communication
center.
Like 9/11, the Katrina disaster has become another toxic wound in
America’s psyche. Seeing the pain and suffering of the poorest of poor
who’ve been left without homes, food or money, is a huge wake-up call for
America. We need to get back in touch with our higher purpose as a
nation, symbolized by the lamp held aloft by the Statue of Liberty,
welcoming and embracing all people with true compassion.
We need to realize that as a nation we are defined by how we treat
the least of our citizens. This is what determines our greatness as a
nation, not our military might, or our economy--but our compassion and
generosity. Individual Americans are very generous in times of crisis, but
they usually do not see how the government representing them is causing
great harm and suffering in their own nation, and to other nations all
over the world.
And very importantly, we need to not to confuse our spiritual
need to forgive the human frailty of government officials that made the
disaster worse, with our political responsibility as citizens. We
must hold our politicians accountable, both at the ballot box and in
direct action.
Meditation for the Crisis
So what can we
each do to help, besides sending donations or volunteering? We can offer
our prayers and meditations to see Divine Purpose outworking through this
crisis, bringing the highest good to all involved. We can visualize the
light of compassion filling the Gulf area, the nation’s sacral chakra, to
bring healing energies to the flood victims. See an outpouring of
compassion from the entire world to these people that their basic needs
may be met. Then visualize the floodwaters being purified with light,
cleansed of toxins. Ask that this light may heal the anger and divisions
among all races and economic classes and renew the spiritual consciousness
of America.
We can also meditate and pray that this crisis, which seems to be
designed for our maximum learning as Americans, lead to an awakening and
transformation of our personal and national conscience. If we learn to
care for all our people as our own “kind,” and thus demonstrate true
“kindness,” then perhaps we will learn one day to extend this compassion
to all our fellow human beings in the world, regardless of race, religion
or nationality.
Corinne
McLaughlin and
Gordon Davidson
are co-authors of Spiritual Politics (Foreword by the Dalai
Lama) and Builders of the Dawn and are co-founders of The
Center for Visionary Leadership. Corinne coordinated a national task
force for President Clinton’s Council on Sustainable Development and
Gordon was formerly the Executive Director of the Social Investment
Forum. They can be reached at: The Center for Visionary
Leadership: corinnemc@visionarylead.org;
www.visionarylead.org.