Welcome to the Words That Encourage newsletter. This week’s words are Community, Justice, and Listening. Please forward to a friend, or click reply.
i) Community
Can I heed the cries of people suffering on the edge of my life, my city, my suburb? Do I have an open ear to listen to the pain of others? These questions inspire, but I admit to mute responses when I speak only for myself.
Again: we are simply not individuals, solitary atoms engaged in human-like endeavour, alone in the room of the self. We are human beings with skin who reach out to one another. We ask for help and we give it, together seeking more out of life. We are made for community.
Photo by youssef naddam
ii) Justice
Our personal lives take on public dimensions. We can work together to build a more just world when we recognise each other as companions in the work of transformation.
Love is more likely to take shape in public when we look tenderly at the person before us. The soil of togetherness is where justice grows.
Photo by Gabriel Jimenez
We can indeed heed the cries of suffering persons when we connect with a sense of solidarity; in our own ways we too have suffered. I can indeed listen to the pain of another person when I am being nourished by community. Care for this person does not rely solely on me.
iii) Listening
Settler Australians have a track record of imposing upon First Peoples over the last 235 years of life on the continent. Governments formed in our names have implemented cruel, negligent, and demeaning policies. Although for 65000 years First Peoples lived peaceably on this land, they now suffer according to every quality of life metric (health, education, life-expectancy and more).
First Peoples now want to be heard. A proposed change to the nation’s founding document (the 1901 Constitution) will be put to a compulsory vote on Saturday 14 October. The proposed change would establish an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice to the national parliament and executive government. An elected advisory body, the Voice would compel people in power to listen to First Peoples regarding matters that affect their lives.
Miriam Rose Ungunmerr Baumann. Photo by Salty Dingo
For some time now we have been invited to listen in a spirit of Dadirri (inner deep listening and quiet still awareness) by Miriam Rose Ungunmerr Baumann, a Daly River elder, artist and educator. Us settler Australians would do well to listen in that spirit. Watch Miriam Rose’s inspiring Dadirri reflection here.
Have a great weekend,
James
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