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The
Global Great Divide
An
Integral Initiative
Don Edward Beck, Ph. D.
"What
if a malignant version of some fear-laced "-ism" -- this Truth is
the only Truth and will prevail at any cost" -- suddenly rears its
head for conquest and domination? Can the glass fiber infrastructure
of the global village withstand terrorists fighting holy wars or self-righteous
crusades?"
"Ancient
ethnic sores are belching fire while transnational companies linked
by satellites conduct their business oblivious to the feudal past
below."
-- Spiral
Dynamics: Mastering Values, Leadership, and Change by Don Edward Beck
and Christopher C. Cowan. Blackwell Publishers, Ltd. Oxford, UK, 1996
If, indeed, we
are about to launch the first war of the 21st Century, where are the
battle lines? The half century spent in fighting the Cold War pitted
two quite similar social/ economic systems in mortal combat. Yet,
they were simply alternative versions of modernity, with similar military
strategies and mutual destruction capabilities. When the Berlin Wall
fell only to be replaced by the Berlin Mall, that issue was resolved.
But the end of
the Cold War and the meltdown of the bipolar ice sheet that covered
the planet, revealed the hot ethnic cores, seething rage, and deep
tributaries of violence and revenge that had been suppressed. The
unspeakable horror from barbarism in the Balkans reminded us at the
time we may have won the war but not the lasting peace.
And now the fuse
that has been simmering for centuries in the Middle East flared in
full view on the morning of September 11, revealing yet another Global
Great Divide. Today we all sit on this huge fault line, one that 20th
Century Dogs of War or Doves of Peace are unable to handle on their
own. Heretofore acts of violence were like bacteria. We could locate
the source of the infection and inject antibodies in the form of the
Marines, or even smart bombs launched from on high. Terrorism is more
like a virus that metastasizes, mutates, lies dormant until triggered,
and flourishes when our immune systems are weak or preoccupied.
If neither Dogs
nor Doves can close the great Global Divide, who can? It will require
men and women with deep insights, 21st Century views, and brave hearts.
Call them Visionaries. They appear in times of great crisis and seem
to possess wisdom far beyond their official positions or list of professional
credentials. They should be heard.
To understand
this new Global Divide we will need to engage Visionary thinking that
sees beyond the stereotypes of religion, culture and nationality and
focus on the deeper codes and belief structures that cut across them
all. These codes, like cultural “DNA” scripts, drive human emergence
through layers and levels. Conflicts occur between layers (tribes
vs. tribes, empires vs. empires, holy-ism vs. holy-ism, etc.) or between
levels and layers, such as the ancients vs. the moderns or Thomas
Friedman’s Lexus vs. the Olive Tree. These themes exist in all social
systems but in different ratios, and can be either healthy or unhealthy
in their expressions.
On one side of
the Great Divide are the ancients feudal empires, zealotry, fanaticism,
“My Truth is the only Truth” self-flagellation, chosen-people exclusiveness,
jihad-like militant movements, often turbo-charged by the conviction
that death in the name of the cause guarantees a ticket to Paradise.
Wars are fought to protect holy sites, sacred places, the purity of
genetic lineage, or the spoils from predatory empires. Not all ancients
generate terrorism but here is the breeding ground for this malignancy.
The archenemy
of the ancients are the moderns - the Great Satan - secular, materialistic,
pragmatic, technology-rich, economically- sophisticated, win:win oriented,
industrial and consumer-based with a stress on personal freedom. Moderns
foster nation-states, multinational corporations, fast food restaurants,
and participate in global financial arrangements. Postmoderns add
explorations into personal feelings, high levels of permissiveness,
and strong rejections of authoritarian religions, all of which are
offensive to fanatical ancients. These sensitive and caring souls
are often the first in line to get their throats cut in revolutionary
times. If you don’t believe what I’m saying, you are a tad naïve.
In the 21st Century
the ancients and moderns are intermingled like never before. Globalization,
new immigration patterns, open borders, demands for human rights and
equality, and access to the Internet and CNN have illuminated all
gaps and asymmetrics. While we live at the same time, we exist in
different historic, cultural epochs. The clash of cultures is, actually,
the conflict in these deeply held codes and worldviews. Lines are
being drawn for a cultural Battle of Armageddon. Everybody is doing
what is right in their own eyes.
In spite of all
our information gathering and intelligence capacities we have been
missing the most important dynamic that is shaping these dangerous
times. A militant, pervasive, wrathful, virulent strain of Arab/Islamic
nationalism is rising and is blowing through archaic tribal/kingdom
structures and even traditional nation-states. Israel and the United
States are its archenemies; it is fueled by ancient myths of superiority
and oppression and empowered by the images of a holy calling that
must kill Western infidels in the name of Allah. Just as the ugly,
black clouds of poison cascaded through the caverns in New York City,
this blast from the Medieval past endangers civilization as we know
it.
We had clear
evidence this toxic tide was on the rise. The continual attack on
Israel by Palestine kids throwing stones, the anti-Israel efforts
at the recent UN race conference in Durban, and the creation of a
series of propaganda campuses that are instilling hatred in the minds
of Muslim youth, indicate such a pattern. These actions are fueled
by anger and irrational xenophobia. We’ve seen this before in human
history and such legitimate movements can be either malignant or benign.
The complex Israeli
culture was formed and is sustained by a similar nationalistic movement,
with radical Zionist elements on the cutting edge. What we are witnessing
on the Arab side is but a historical re-enactment of what they now
perceived to be the primary obstacle to their own emergence. These
are sensitive issues for many, but the safest place in any crisis
is always the hard truth.
What options
are open to us now? For a start, consider the following:
First, block
the polarizing stereotypes by redefining the issues in terms of these
underlying value systems. Respect the differences among extremists
and fanatics and healthy versions of Islam. Regard “Arab” as being
a rich spectrum of experiences. Brand the Bin Laden/Taliban version
of both as a virulent distortion. Assist the Arab countries in the
tilt toward moderns and away from ancients. Search for ways to direct
this emerging spirit of nationalism into constructive and positive
channels.
The moderns in
these Arab cultures will need resources and encouragement to fend
off attacks from ancients within their own midst. Bin Laden exploits
the tools of the moderns to promote the agenda of the ancients. He
and his cadres are very skillful in moving into modern contexts to
sow seeds of turmoil and fear.
The very best
people to detect and snuff out this virus are the moderns who embrace
Islam, live within the Arab societies, and are constantly threatened
by some ancients who are driven for a multitude of reasons to attack
Western society. Arab societies and Islamic believers now face an
existential moment of truth. They will not be able to straddle the
fence on this matter. While it seems like the real conflict is between
Osama bin Laden and his bands of terrorists and the United States,
a critical skirmish in this global battle will be fought between the
radicals and moderates, the ancients and moderns, within Arab communities.
This suggests
we should “wage war” in the religious, cultural, humanitarian, and
psychological domains while using our military power and threats as
a foreboding checkmate. We should consider sending in food and medical
supplies into many of the deprived areas instead of first launching
cruise missiles. Consider also a series of emergency summit meetings
at The Hague to “smoke out” these issues in more depth and detail.
The late 20th Century models of “peace,” “democracy,” and “cultural
pluralism” are no longer relevant to a world endangered by more primitive
elements born of the feudal age.
We should declare
Osama bin Laden an international criminal, a mortal enemy of Islam,
and brand the 9/11 attack on innocent citizens as a “crime against
humanity.” People from at least 40 different countries lost their
lives in the towers, indicating the assault was not just on Americans,
it was on the whole planet. While one can always blame the United
States for the sins of its past, it makes little sense to carry the
“system vs. struggle” polarity into such a complex world.
In short, we
must drive a wedge between the ancients and the moderns to enable
Arab/Islam and their countries to fend off the counter-attack from
their ultra-conservative elements. This is a time for creativity,
imagination, unexpected moves, defusing strokes, and a host of strategies
all designed to deal with the deeper dynamics that produce terrorists
acts as symbols of tectonic-like cultural shifts.
Second, mobilize
local and global resources to close the developmental gaps, thus
releasing millions of people who are trapped in abject poverty, restrictive
governmental structures, and puritanical, repressive religions. These
are the menacing breeding grounds for the dangerous viruses that are
spilling out into First World environments. Enlist the cooperative
efforts from foundations, think tanks, NGOs, business, religion and
other sectors to focus their resources like laser-beams to clean out
these cesspools, and find new ways to mesh divergent cultures who
must learn to live together.
The Israeli and
Palestine feud has gone on long enough and there is guilt enough to
go around for the dangerous impasse. Again, it is time for fresh approaches,
since what we have been doing is not working. If this means constructing
a 10-year wall of separation between the combatants, combined with
massive development efforts to raise levels of complexity and affluence
in the “Third World” sectors in Palestine, than so be it. There might
be other options to consider as well. This global sore has got to
heal, one way or another. Both the Oslo Accord and Camp David initiatives
were compromised by the rapidly expanding Pan- Arabian-“ism.”
Third, identify
the hot cells of violence, take them out if necessary, isolate
them when possible, and carefully monitor the growing threats from
biological warfare and other forms of mass murder. Use whatever means
necessary to both interdict and disrupt these forms of hideous terrorism.
The entire global community must rise in unison to purge this element
out of our mainstream. Life on this planet is at peril. Everybody
must be vigilant; everybody must be proactive; everybody must take
responsibility.
I have no doubt
but that military interventions will be required to clean out some
of the dangerous seed-beds and supportive infrastructures. These actions
must be part of the broader ‘hearts and minds” initiatives that can
shrink the size of “the evil,” drain the swamps, reduce "blowbacks,"
and redirect emerging Arab/Islam cohesiveness onto a different track.
The move out of ancients toward modernity is going to happen, one
way or another. Millions of youths are desperate to escape the control
by the mullahs, which means they are vulnerable to voices that offer
them a quick trip to a meaningful existence, the good life, and access
to the global mainstream. They need new options.
These new and
turbulent times will require new thinking, innovative and integral
strategies, and a host of new projects all designed to address the
deeper cultural dynamics that are now erupting in surface-level violence
and terrorism. No single ethnic group, nation, government, religion,
or any other social grouping can prevent terrorism and close this
huge global gap on their own. We can get it done with integral wisdom
and renewed resolve, but it will take time, patience, and perseverance.
Make no mistake
about it. What looms on the horizon are threats from biological and
chemical warfare, if not nuclear attacks. No one in the 21st Century
wants to hear this, but it is a reality. We have no time to lose.
Finger pointing and blame-fixing aren’t useful. This is a global problem,
requiring a global solution.
While the Dogs
and Doves will be necessary, let’s also summon the Visionaries. This
time of maximum danger is also resplendent with rare opportunities.
The whole world system must be set right before we can conquer this
horrible virus. This is our real challenge.
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