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Stumbling into a Spiritual Strategy to Combat Nuclear Weapons

Clarifying Where “We” Stand

Stumbling into a Spiritual Strategy to Combat Nuclear Weapons

by William E. Swing

Starting in 1983, I have done what I could to respond to the existence and threat of nuclear weapons. Read books and relevant news, watched movies and TV documentaries, written articles, given speeches, and met with proponents and opponents of nuclear matters. Finally, in 2007, I decided to try a new tactic. I asked friends of mine who are experts in this field – former Secretary of State George Shultz, physicist Sidney Drell, former Secretary of Defense William Perry, and eight others – to join with me in meeting on the phone (later through Zoom technology) once a month to discover new ways of advancing nuclear abolition.

Along the way, I wrote “A Nuclear Prayer,” to be said at the beginning of these meetings, and we have dutifully recited it for years. Then one morning, one of our members said, “Why don’t we make a YouTube video of us saying our prayer? And each of us could give a personal testimony of why we are so passionate about nuclear reduction and abolition.” We hired a production company and filmed in New York City and at Stanford University. The result was a moving 8-minute video.

Soon thereafter, this prayer started appearing around the world. Eventually our little group was beginning to be known, not only for the expertise of our members but for having unlikely people speaking about these matters from their hearts and souls.

The Importance of Scaling Up

Two public assemblies led us to think in larger terms. First was the Parliament of the World’s Religions meeting in Toronto, Canada in November, 2018. At the end of an exhilarating and exhausting week, our Nuclear Prayer folks led a session during the Parliament’s final workshop session. Instead of our estimated ten people attending, 50 people arrived. When we showed them the Nuclear Prayer video, people reached deep down in themselves to write their own nuclear prayers. Most of them wanted to be part of our work in some way.

Two clear groups were present at the Parliament workshop: a) those who cared about the threat of nuclear weapons years ago but had drifted from any sense of urgency and b) those who had no idea about the reality of nuclear weapons in today’s world.

Photo: Pexels

Photo: Pexels

The second critical gathering came during the Accelerate Peace Interfaith Action in Global Peacemaking conference, at Stanford University, in June 2019. Again we led off with the YouTube video, but this time we added a second video, A Child’s Nuclear Prayer.

Before showing the videos, I said to the audience: “There are many groups in the world which work diligently to rid the world of its nuclear weapons. What makes us unique is that our primary focus now is emotional, visceral, moral, and spiritual. When human beings are grasped by the utter devastation intended by these weapons, something deep inside the soul snaps and revolts. Precisely at that moment, a prayer is uttered, the cry goes up, the fight is enjoined. Without this primal reaction to nuclear insanity, nothing can change this world’s inexorable march toward nuclear annihilation. But if this primal reaction is elicited and harnessed in enough people, then life on this planet will have a future. So in this next hour, we hope that you will reach down in yourself, and discover or rediscover your most basic response to this world’s nuclear threat.” More than 125 people wrote their own responses and indicated that they would like to be part of the effort somehow.

The next morning, more than 50 people showed up at breakfast to state that their commitment to help move our work forward. In the process, the “we” has become the Voices for a World Free of Nuclear Weapons – a Cooperation Circle of the United Religions Initiative.  URI’s executive director, Victor Kazanjian along with the Board chair of the Charter for Compassion, Charles Barker, also attended the breakfast. What became clear in the conversation was that the time has come to think in much more expansive terms.

What if there weren’t just one or two hundred people ready for our message? What if there were thousands and hundreds of thousands, and then millions? What if we weren’t only URI but also Charter for Compassion? What if we invited all interfaith and spiritual groups to share in this spiritually, ethically motivated work? What if we launched into social media and became a presence on the internet?

At Hand Now

Historically, this is a moment when two things are happening in the global arena of nuclear weapons. On the one hand, the major nuclear powers have chosen to “modernize” and expand their arsenals, meaning that the new weapons will be stronger and new delivery systems more diabolic.

On the other hand, the arms control regime is collapsing. Major powers, such as the United States and Russia, are walking away from existing treaties and reducing profound moral commitments into lip service. This is a critical moment for planet Earth.

What is needed most now is to provide pressure by an aroused public to reverse the direction of nuclear states who are dishonoring their solemn commitments to treaties; and to move speedily toward the reduction and elimination of nuclear weapons. “We” need to expand ourselves in order to help apply the severely needed public pressure.

Through the two gatherings we decided to expand in every way possible, starting immediately. First, we wrote a strategic plan. Second, we created a Facebook page and hired someone to manage it. Third, we decided to reach out to other interfaith organizations to see if, together, we could create ways to mobilize a sizeable spiritual force. And fourth, we decided to create our own website. Until it launches and gives you a way to join the effort, send your name, email address, and phone number to Katherine Lehmann (klehmann@uri.org).

All of this meant renewed commitment, developing new colleagues, and finding sufficient money. I am 83 years old and work on this project as a volunteer. This work, if it is to succeed, will have to outgrow me immediately. I believe it can, so I am looking around for colleagues in leadership, and I am happy to say that I have found a few who are willing to be partners. I am confident that there will be others. To succeed we must grow exponentially, a collaborative effort to end a peril which threatens you and me and all that lives.

Photo: Pixabay

Photo: Pixabay

Looking back at where “we” came from … we started as a small group of experts trying to figure out how to be opportunistic about a response to the incognito nuclear crisis at this moment in history. Then we stumbled upon a destiny that grew out of our Nuclear Prayer. And now we are into serious capacity-building in readiness to take on the giants of endless nuclear proliferation and ultimate self-destruction.

Our unspoken assumption is that as human beings we are answerable to a higher Source for what we do with this beautiful planet we have inherited. We are not nuclear slaves waiting for the orders from Putin and Trump. The issues are far greater than the Republican or Democratic Parties or arms manufacturers or lobbyists or deterrence apologists.

As human beings, we understand the gift of this good Earth to be sacred and holy and to require us to be answerable to the entire enterprise of life on the planet. We intend our prayer to be a plea to the Originating Force of the Universe, to be a primal scream to Mother Earth, to the Author of all Life, and to the common sense that is woven into the DNA of survival. 

Photo: Piqsels