1. World Peace Could Be At Hand--If We Could Only Be More
Like the Sloth
In July 2002, I made a seventeen day tour of Peru. I ventured to ancient Cuzco and the exotic
Inca fortress at Machu Picchu. I spent
several days on the Amazon visiting Indian villages and hiking through the
"selva." My final days were
in the capital of Lima. It is always
refreshing to escape the day to day life of the United States with its almost
claustrophobic feelings brought about by the media's incessant accounts of
turmoil and strife. Actually, for
almost three weeks I heard nothing of skirmishes in Afghanistan, homicidal
Palestinian bombers in Israel, Israeli tanks in Palestine, impending war in
Iraq, lingering strife in Northern Ireland.
No messages of conflict between congressional Democrats and a Republican
president reached my ears.
Was I in Nirvana? In
Machu Picchu and in the jungle, or as it is called locally, the
"selva," I began to feel that perhaps I was, but then I did come back
to reality in Lima. The city was
engulfed in protests and strikes. The
traffic was brutal. A stop sign or red light only meant that one would yield to
bigger cars or trucks. A go sign or
green light meant precisely the same thing.
Pollution was horrific. Black
soot flowed from each vehicle (actually newer cars spewed forth white smoke,
perhaps in hopes of the election of a new pope). Horns blasted forth every conceivable kind of loud sound. At every corner, beggars approached car
windows, as did persons selling everything from national flags and household
cleaners, to candy and chewing gum.
Squeegee blades were on stopped windows almost immediately. The beach suburb of Miraflores looked almost
like a southern European resort, but the thought of the temporary shacks aside
the surrounding mountains, made any feel of luxury or comfort rather
uncomfortable. Each city, town, and
suburb also found traffic flowing toward a central plaza--The Plaza de
Armes--which celebrated Peru's role in the wars of the 1870s with neighbors
Ecuador, Chile, and Bolivia. A heavenly
Nirvana it was not. But then, just maybe a heavenly Nirvana was
near at hand.
Human society, and especially Western society, embraces an
ethic of progress. The ethic is
reflected in the biblical admonition that mankind should go forth and subdue
the land for its own enrichment.
Christian and Muslim principles (indeed misinterpreted but certainly
acted upon) alike suggest that the faithful should go and convert the heathen,
and trample them (even to death) if they resist the "true word." Western individualism is often a playing out
of win-lose game of social Darwinism.
Militarism is a natural concomitant of human group value structures. Yet most faiths also envision a quite
different Nirvana, an almost non-materialistic "pot of gold," at the
end of the rainbow we call life. In
contrast with the images of CNN and the street scenes of Lima, the heaven we
seem to wish to seek is one of satisfaction, relaxation, non-competition, non-acquisition
but still self sufficiency, self pleasures of perhaps undefined natures (but
then of very well defined nature for suicide bombers, ala 70 virgins at one's
feet), and above all, most of all, always always PEACE. That ultimate desire of Peace is also the
central virtue espoused in diplomatic circles and in foreign policy statements
of all nations. That ultimate desire of
Peace is the rationale for international conferences, and it is the rationale
for the creation of bi-lateral and multi-lateral alliances, and of course, for
the creation of the United Nations.
In the selva I sensed that this Nirvana was alive and well
on our own earth. The naturalist guide
for our Amazon boat tours, urged us to be quite, but to get our cameras
out. He was sure he had spotted among
the leaves of a Kapok tree, a three-toed sloth. Indeed he had, and we sat in stunned silence as he directed our
eyes to an upper branches to what appeared to be a lump on the truck of the
tree. After we took our pictures and
moved onward in our journey, the guide told us about this most heavenly of all
god's creatures.
As the story unfolded, I indeed was convinced that the key
to our human survival, the key to peace on earth could be displayed in the
lifestyle of this much maligned creature.
The sloth is not a taker.
The mammal, which typically grows to be about 8 pounds and as much as
two feet in body length, does not engage in any win-lose or parasitic
games. As the sloth survives, it harms
no other living creature. He eats only
the leaves of very specific trees, deriving both nutritional substance and its
water needs from the foliage. Yet the
sloth gives back to the trees and to other creatures as well. He exists in a symbiotic and synergistic
relationship with all others in the environment of the few trees that he occupies.
The sloth has a hairy body, and the hair becomes a breeding
ground for the algae of the region. The
algae in turn gives the body of the sloth a greenish coloring pattern that
afford him a camouflaged hiding from predators. While the sloth spends most of its time hanging in sleep in mid
level branches of its trees, it does seek energy from the sun by rising to
higher limbs. The sunshine, in turn,
gives valuable heat to the algae as well, helping sustain its growth.
The long stringing hair of the sloth is also the residential
home of a special sloth moth. With its
limited dietary needs (the sloth craves only what it needs, unlike human
beings, not what it wants), the sloth needs to engage in the animal process of
discarding wastes only once a week. In
the process of doing so, he descends the tree, very slowly, digs a hole,
deposits the waste and in an environmentally correct nice manner covers up the
hole when he is done. How