The Road Forward
Starhawk
She is a Tree of Life to all who cling to Her
Infinite Joy, Wisdom and Grace.
Nothing you desire can compare to Her
All Her paths are the Struggle towards Peace.
On election night, I felt an
intensity of grief, rage and anguish that rivaled any of the worst nights of my
life. Not so much that Kerry lost, but that millions of people could vote for
Bush, apparently because they define ‘morality’ as preventing two people who
love each other from making a legally-recognized commitment, while turning a
blind eye to a regime that has invaded another country for totally invalidated
reasons, lied to the American people, legitimized sexual torture, and all the
rest of it. It’s enough to challenge one’s faith not just in Americans,
but also in the essential goodness of human beings. Can we apply to join
another species? The wolves, perhaps?
I want to acknowledge my own
grief, rage and despair. People often look to me for words of hope—and I
have some—but they come only when I let myself feel just as rotten and awful as
I’m sure you do. Van Jones, organizer of Books Not Bars here in the Bay
Area, says we need to learn to grieve as a movement, and also to celebrate—and
the two are linked. This is a moment to grieve, which means also to yell and
scream and be mad as hell, to question whether life makes any sense at all, and
then maybe to crawl under the covers and rest, for a bit.
Yesterday, I really didn’t
want to get out of bed, but I went to the demonstration anyway. I would
have liked to curl up in fetal position and sleep for possibly the next four
years, but I roused myself to go down to the plaza and join those hard-core
souls who had planned to rally and march for health care regardless of who won.
I did it because I felt it is exactly what we need to do, the
counterintuitive thing—advance instead of retreat, carry on, see our friends,
support each other, share our grief, rage and shock. It felt good, to
march down Market Street, to stop at the hotels where workers are striking and
support them, to make some small, renewed effort at continuing to build the
alliances we need.
All day I kept thinking about
the vision I had at our Spiral Dance ritual, the certainty that we are on the
good road. I remember John Kerry said, “You can be certain and still be
wrong.” But I also remembered the voice I heard in the vision saying over
and over that the good road does not look very different, at it’s beginning,
from any other road.
We all know that the changes we need to make are deep and
systemic, that no politician’s victory will make them for us. Had Kerry
won, I believe we would be on an easier road. Now the way ahead will be hard
and stony, but it may be clearer and there may be unexpected twists and turns
ahead. And it may yet turn out to be steeper but shorter than the easier path.
Many good things happened in
the last few weeks. We mobilized many, many people to become active and
engaged. Many progressives set aside their own deep disappointment with
many of Kerry’s positions to work hard to assure access to voting for all, and
to prevent the worst abuses of the electoral process. We strengthened
many of the coalitions we will need to transform power in this country and the
world. Although the media and the Republicans will try to spin this as a
mandate for the worst of Bush’s policies, we have built a broader, deeper, more
committed opposition than we have seen in this country in a long, long time. Now
we must nurture those alliances and turn opposition into a clearer, positive
alternative vision—and a long-term strategy for getting there.
We need time to reflect on
these last days. It is easy to rush into analysis and blame and learn the
wrong things. So I want to be cautious in offering thoughts prematurely
on what we should do now.
However, one lesson I take
away from this last month is this: As progressives, as radicals, those of us
who are far left of the left, anarchists even, cannot afford to ignore or
disdain the electoral process. Not because we see it as fair or just or
empowering—which it is not—nor even a potential arena for power, but because it
is a powerful arena for mobilizing people and building the alliances we need to
transform power.
There are some things we can
do immediately. We can contact our senators and representatives and demand a
full and thorough investigation into all the voting irregularities, especially
the voting machines that gave results so mysteriously at odds with the exit
polls. Whether or not the number of missed votes would have elected Kerry
this time, we need to push for clean and fair elections for the times ahead.
We can support each other. As
I’ve been traveling around the country, I see many progressive groups faltering
or splintering not over deep political divisions but out of frustration with
interpersonal conflicts. Maybe it’s time to take a deep breath, think of
one irritating ally you have trouble getting along with, and resolve to allow
them just a little more leeway for being imperfect and human. We will
never have the luxury of building a movement solely of likeable, congenial
friends. We need to develop more skills for resolving conflicts among us,
and a realization that even annoying people can still have common goals and
take common action together. Now, more than ever, we need to, strengthen
our solidarity, give each other comfort and succor, know that we are all in
this together, and together we can make it through.
We can start thinking about
how to build our base, proactively. The right wing came to power by starting
small and local, taking over school boards, organizing door-to-door and
house-to-house. We can create living examples of alternatives in our
communities, making our positive visions real. We can turn our
frustration, rage and disappointment into creative action.
Last night, we had a beautiful
march, of maybe five thousand people, all the way through San Francisco from
downtown out to the neighborhood where I live, exuberant, defiant, saying,
“We’re still here!” We came back home, shared food and conversation and
frustration and sorrow with good friends and neighbors, experiencing the
healing balm of community.
And I remembered, marching,
that we are on the good road when we choose to be, with each step. When
we choose compassion, choose freedom, choose hope, choose to resist injustice,
choose to serve life. We do have a hard road ahead, and making those
choices will not be easy. It will require an effort of will, like it did to get
out of bed and go downtown to march. It will require sustained, stubborn
effort when times get tough. Making systemic change is like home
renovation—it always takes at least twice as long and costs twice as much as
you expect.
But we can still step out onto
that good road, if we refuse to give up, refuse to go back, refuse to hide, and
refuse to flee. And instead, with courage, with hearts open and open
eyes, let us take hands and go forward together.
www.starhawk.org <http://www.starhawk.org/>
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Starhawk is a lifelong activist in peace and global justice
movements,
a leader in the feminist and earth-based spirituality movements, author
or coauthor of ten books, including The Spiral Dance, The Fifth Sacred
Thing, Webs of Power: Notes from the Global Uprising, and her latest,
The Earth Path.
Starhawk's website is www.starhawk.org, and more of her writings
and
information on her schedule and activities can be found there.
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