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The Way of the West -
Race against Time A Wake-up Call
The fundamental message of my book, Blackness & the
Dreaming Soul, is a plea for the West to wake; a plea for a
reconstruction of the way in which we make our reality. The
way of the West, it seems to me, is not the Way of Nature,
but a self- seeking, consumer-orientated global cultural
juggernaut that spells disaster for our beautiful planet Earth
and for all life on it. The question I’m forced to ask is why,
with all the evidence before us, we remain trapped in cultural
hubris; why we cannot mobilise to avert the ecological
holocaust that threatens our very survival. Why don’t we
make that shift in consciousness that would transform our
degraded world? Why not avoid division and war against each
other and against our very home, making that home a better
place for all mankind?
We seem to be caught up in a race against time; caught in
a dualism: instead of seeking balance in all things,
competition and greed motivates and divides us. Whilst
Racism has little to do with my brief, it has been the catalyst
that has forced me to try to make sense of my worlds. I
believe in the essential goodness and oneness of mankind,
a belief that has been so little shared and explored that it
seems almost impossible for us to see ourselves for what
we truly are, as an integral part of the mystery of life, capable
of viewing our home, our unique place in the Universe as
sacred – the only Planet as far as we know, with a delicate
and fragile life support system, floating in the
incomprehensible magnitude of Space - a spherical garden of
such beauty and wonder.
Despite our science, our burgeoning technologies, our
welfare state, the accessibility of university education for all,
our exploits into outer space and wonderful achievements in
every field of endeavour, our very existence, it seems, is
threatened. We have continual warfare with the collateral
damage and human suffering that results; nuclear and other
weapons of mass destruction; star wars; satellite
surveillance systems. Nuclear waste debris orbits the fragile
atmosphere of our planet; we hear talk of global warming -
carbon and radiation footprints, depletion of natural
resources - deforestation, pollution of our seas, fuel
shortages, genocide, drug abuse, rape, child abuse, sex
slavery, racism, ...the list goes on and on...
And we still pride ourselves that our way of life is best. Carl Jung, a student of alchemy suggested 'that the generally accepted Western world view based on rationalism is not the only possible one and is not all embracing, but in many ways a prejudice and a bias that ought perhaps to be corrected.'
He believed that modern man had not truly looked into the great divide within, which separated him from wilderness and nature. In a world view based on this reality, we strive for more and more technological advances that will prolong our lives but do not ensure the same for our children and future generations. How selfish can we be? The old patterns repeat themselves. In Medicine we produce more drugs with disastrous side effects. We put our trust in gene therapy and genetic engineering; genetically modified food instead of organic; agricultural seed patents and now bio-fuel. We ban cigarettes but have longer drinking hours, more gaming houses, more things to distract us; to fill the void, more bargains, more sex, more fame and are rewarded by more crime; we talk of zero tolerance but do not address the issues responsible for the disillusionment that feeds it; so opt for more prisons, more policemen. We know about the carbon footprint yet build more terminals (how appropriate) leading to more air miles, more pollution, spiralling debts, an unstable economy, celluloid violence, toys, play stations and
other excesses. 'More' is the daily mantra which we materialise and export - globalisation, colonisation of other cultures - monoculture and over-production to satisfy our every whim. In turn the newly colonised abandon their traditions and cater to our needs with their fakes, their quick fixes thus exacerbating the pollution and the degradation.
A Return to Native Value
People of the African diaspora suffered tremendously from colonisation of the mind. They are still unable to disentangle themselves from the identity of 'collective victim', rooted in the memory of slavery, which falsely gives them a sense of solidarity - a position that engenders further rejection, one which I call the 'black trap'. This reality can only be
transmuted by the knowledge of who these people really are, thus making themselves able to contribute positively to the healing of society. Indeed, their mere presence is already
doing just that - making Europe confront its racism. Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela have shown that they can influence and change entrenched attitudes. Mandela was
once considered a terrorist. My particular hero has been Aime Cesaire, the great revolutionary politician, poet/philosopher from Martinique who recently died. His
revolt against Europe is what worked on me in a subliminal yet positive way. It wasn't just a revolt against racism, colonialism and the excesses of European culture but a call
for a return to our native human values, to recognise that Nature is alive and bounteous and that we should not www.scimednet.org
abuse her. If we do, we abuse ourselves our very Home.
Black people still aspire to be accepted. They rightly revolt
against injustice but still seek to integrate with the
perpetrators of injustice and the gatekeepers of civilisation.
In the English speaking world black people are generally
unaware of the contribution of Cesaire. Frantz Fanon, author
of the Wretched of the Earth - the bible of the Black power
movement in 60s America - acknowledges Cesaire as his
mentor. This movement knew about 'Black is Beautiful', but
alas only on a superficial level. Cesaire's plea was for a return
to native values, to reconnect with Nature and a call for the
emergence of a new man with new values. The Black press in
Britain, I am told, did not even carry an obituary of the great
man. That's how ignorant we are - unaware of our roots in
Mother Africa, home of the Mitochondrial Eve; and Egypt
where Pythagoras, the presiding genius of European
culture studied for 21 years; unaware that Pythagoras’
teachings were based on Egyptian (and so African)
mathematical and religious pantheistic principles.
Despite the West's great 'civilisation' we live in fear
fanned by those who seek control, or profit (without our
consumer society our whole financial structure would
collapse); fear of one another, the outsider, the terrorist. We
defend our 'values' at all costs - all others must conform.
Each fear is symptomatic of the underlying degraded state of
the present age.
Blackness and the Dreaming Soul explores the causes of
our current alienation from ourselves and the natural
primordial world, unearthing the darkness of the human
psyche. It is an attempt to understand how we've come to
such an impasse. Out of concern for the direction we seem to
be heading, it is written hopefully- to shed light on our mutual
plight, on the dehumanised, self- destructing and violent world
in which we find ourselves. It aims not to be bitter or
recriminatory and is offered not just as criticism, for criticism
only invites polarisation.
Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth laments the global crisis
facing mankind but does not propose a solution. It is true
that we have the know-how to deal with the problem but
somehow we do not use it. The inconvenient truth is that the
outer environment reflects the inner. There must be a change
in the mindset. If we hope to bring about change we must
first change within. This holds true for the individual as well
as for society. What may appear to be essentially a critique
of the prevailing Western social, political, economic and
globalised Industrial system is rather a plea for a
fundamental change in the way we make our reality and so,
in human consciousness. The Western system of secular
consumerism perpetuates itself through its greed, its
multinational corporations, its educational institutions and
the media. I was brought up in this system, an
Insider/Outsider, a black man caught up in a white culture,
the great grandson of a slave, indoctrinated by an English
education, a volunteer in the Royal Air Force in World War II,
commissioned as an Officer, shot down and a prisoner of war
in Nazi Germany for two years. On discharge, I qualified as a
Barrister only then to become fully aware that I was an
indeed an outsider - no place for black lawyers in the 1950's.
My only choice, it seemed at the time, was to become an
actor on the stage of life and also a singer, not without some
success. But it was a fickle success. Enoch Powell saw to
that. As a cultural activist I set up the first Black arts centre
in London in the 70's only to realise that this was creating
even more separation. I was rescued by Aime Cesaire. I
toured his epic redemptive poem Cahier d’un Retour au pays
natal (Return to My Native Land) for two years in theatres
around Britain. This led to me setting up Concord
Multicultural arts Festivals in the 80's, to promote the
cultural diversity of present day Britain - a plea for unity in
diversity - a plea largely ignored at the time and still not
understood today. In my search for identity, meaning and a
sense of belonging, I still found myself marginalised all along
the way. So I was forced to explore what was wrong with this
culture in which I was brought up and bred.
Blackness & the Dreaming Soul began as an attempt to
record my outer journey but as Fate would have it, it became
my inner journey of self-discovery and healing. We inherit the
systems of our forebears, our culture, so there is no blame
here. My book is, I hope, an honest reappraisal of how we
make our way in life and an appeal for healing of society and
our fragmented and endangered world. We need to reverse
the prevailing all-pervasive primacy of mind over Nature.
Science and empiricism have been
entrenched too long as the ruling principles
– an existential reality, the creation of our
minds and intellect, unaware of our deeper
connection to the earth itself, to Mother
Nature and to our true being, who and what
we really are - the primordial wisdom of the
mystery of Life. But first we have to make
that descent into the darkness in order to
transcend the dominance of the intellect.
The Primacy of Science
The primacy of mind assumes that Science will solve all our problems. A prominent scientist recently claimed on TV that as Master of the Universe, he hopes one day to
discover that over-arching 'Theory of Everything' that will answer all our questions about the nature of reality and so solve all our problems; this, whilst claiming that our destiny
lies somewhere out there in Space! We are already out there in space! This misconception is typical of the delusion of yet another prominent scientist, that Science will confirm that
selfishness is the norm of Nature (survival of the fittest) and that there is obviously no place for co-operation or symbiosis - no place for the existence of a higher intelligence, an absurd position for a University professor responsible for the education of future generations.
Science has replaced Wisdom. It has moved away from the beliefs of the founders of its own discipline - the philosopher/scientist, Aristotle, who saw Nature as one unified whole; Sir Isaac Newton, deeply religious and a practising alchemist. Today we demand empirical proof for everything but all we end up with is theories all of which can be disproved with the passage of time. Scientific theories follow each other in quick succession (see para 3 Holons & Holgrams BDS). Yet Science still operates within clearly defined parameters of the orthodoxy of the moment; in other words a purely scientific paradigm resists paradigm change. Science only investigates the physical, material nature of the Universe and so only gets answers in mathematical terms - how many molecules, or genes there are in cells, for
instance. It cannot explain how information jumps the
synapses in the brain, or how something can be both a wave
and a particle at the same time even when it can observe it.
Science cannot explain how the information stored in a single cell of DNA is of a magnitude comparable with that stored in a tiny acorn that grows into a massive oak tree; or
the extensive abilities in art and in mathematics of children with autism or Savant syndrome like Stephen Wiltshire, despite obvious neurological abnormalities that are found in the left hemisphere of their brains. We surely should be able to deduce that our survival as a species does not depend on rationalism, on our minds alone, or on ruthless competition and control of nature but in living in harmony with Nature and one another.
Some of the most important scientific discoveries have been made when the mind is no longer focused purely on solving the problem. Suddenly the solution mysteriously surfaces. This was the case with Newton and the falling apple; Einstein day dreaming in a tram as it approached another (relativity); James Watson riding a bicycle having viewed- and then appropriated- Rosalind Franklin's radio photographic work (the DNA double helix); and the dream of August Kekulé which led to the development of organic chemistry. Kekulé saw a snake dancing and biting its own tail, a vision which led to his discovery of the molecular structure of benzene. He interpreted his dream to mean that
the structure was a closed carbon ring and fundamental to organic chemistry. (Textbook of Organic Chemistry 1861) Scientific enquiry is the orthodoxy - the yardstick on which
we base our reality, our sense of being, our future. This is the fundamental flaw. We do not know who or what we are, yet think that we can discover this by our minds alone, only a
fraction of which we use in any case. Had the notion of the primacy of Nature prevailed we would not be in the mess we are today. We would fight with all our might to preserve our
unique home, Mother Earth, which as we have seen depends on a very delicate atmospheric balance that supports all life; which provides us with everything we need for our survival We defend our little homes, our countries or cultures, but miss the whole picture - our home is Mother Earth, Mother Nature.
Everything is Enfolded in Everything Else
The indigenous peoples of the Earth knew by intuition that everything is interconnected. But modern man has abandoned this inner knowledge in favour of empirical proof,
something that the New Physics so clearly demonstrates as impossible. The observer influences what he observes: there can be no empirical proof! Yet we ignore the philosophical and existential implications of quantum reality. The theoretical physicist, David Bohm,1 has provided us with a holographic model in which life and inanimate matter are not separate. For Max Planck one of the founders of Quantum Mechanics, 2 'matter' implied a bundle of energy which is given form by an intelligent spirit. The Fractal Geometry of the French mathematician, Benoit Mandelbrot 3 comes to the same conclusion - that every thing is enfolded in every thing else, similar to that of the French experimental physicist Alain Aspect, 4 that there is an unbroken wholeness or interconnectedness in the Universe. Also there is the new worldview of the transpersonal psychologist, Stanislav Grof, 5 that there are no absolute boundaries between body/ego and
the totality of existence.
Despite the recent outstanding development in nanotechnology, we are still stuck in outdated concepts. Our present explosion in technological knowledge clearly
demonstrates that there was (and still is) so much out there of which we were (and still are) unaware by our reliance only the power of the intellect. If we see that what is out there is also our innermost being, we will then know who we truly are and so re-connect to that wisdom beyond description; beyond the duality that divides and bedevils us.
Throughout the ages we have witnessed the indomitable spirit of man, that we have produced great music and great art and are capable of the noblest deeds, the greatest compassion, bravery and achievement, all attributes that stem, not from the intellect, the rational, but from a deeper source, our true natures - the wisdom of our bodies - our autonomous systems and our breath, the umbilical chord that connects us all, all races and all life on our planet to our Mother - Primordial Nature.
Article published Scientific & Medical Network Summer 2008 Review*
Blackness and the Dreaming Soul is published by Shoving
Leopard 2007. ISBN 978 1 905565 08 45 £14.99
Available Amazon World wide
Other books by Cy Grant: A Member of the RAF of Indeterminate Race, a
war memoir, Woodfield Publishing 2007, Rivers of Time
(Collected Poems) Naked Light 2008 & Ring of Steel: pan sound
& symbol.– the evolution of the Trinidad Steelpan, Macmillan
Caribbean 2000.
Photo Cy Grant courtesy Julian Andrews
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