Sunday, October 10, 2010

In the Garden of War and Peace

Before Veteran's Day approaches, I thought I would ask instead of celebrating wars and the rumors of wars, or the stories of war heroes, what if we forgot our reasons for war for a moment?   I think I found a wonderful reason to forget them all. It is through remembering them, often hatred persists. We never seem to go forward, only told that we are supposed to hate our enemies and fight everyone and soon we forget why we are all fighting to begin with. There are wars that have lasted centuries, and some, since the beginning of time. Some in the name of peace. Some in the name of revenge. Some for no apparent reason at all, except to profit from it or to secure seats of power.
I have been to many war museums that proudly displayed their conquests over other nations. To record the past battles and victories along the way. Often these museums display the conquered with war trophies and stories that go along with them. However, hidden away, in a corner garden, I found the relics of warfare here. With nature growing all around it. Letting all of it go into the past, with the stories buried in the earth.
It seems ironic find such a peaceful setting. A conflict of seeing such beauty with the cannons now silent and still after taking so many lives along the way. I saw the wisdom of the silent weapons. Neither elevated for patriotic purposes or to be used to rub salt in the wounds of those who may have been defeated. Silent cannons raised and not aimed at another, but raised in a silent disuse.
Instead, they are a dark reminder of how stones were launched against each other. This is no fear of them ever being used again against another life.
As I looked at the inscriptions and saw how other nations may have interloped with this one in the past for their own financial gains, I thought this age, where others try to gain from those who seem less fortune along the way.
Proudly silent they remain in a garden not as a symbol of war, but of what peace looks like. A nation that celebrates peace should be as such and never proudly display weapons of warfare. With silent cannons and birds making their nests in the trees above them.

4 comments:

Ben said...

I'm sorry to say this but " Only the dead have seen the end of war " ~ Plato

Marilyn said...

That is why we need to evolve past fear and hate...and give ourselves a chance. It is more difficult to be creators, you need to have imagination. So perhaps Plato was incapable of imagination and needed to change his thinking.

Ben said...

I think Plato's words resonate more than ever for our times.Since the dawn of humanity...there has been relatively very little peace amongst men.It is inherent in our nature to bend our morals for our vices.Greed,envy,pride will bring the downfall of man.I might come across as been very pessimistic but i am a realist.I have seen the gaze of an hungry child...breaks my heart to know there is so much wasted food that ends up in the trash.Preventable diseases left untreated for lack of money.Bombs are raining down on the innocents and yet the world stands by... worrying about their own self-interests.We are plundering the earth and slowly bringing about our own demise.Multiple species are going extinct and in the end we will reap what we sow. The world is so wrought with injustice
and in the words of C.S Lewis"evil resides in the hearts of men".But in the end...I hope our compassion and the goodness that is in us triumphs over evil...best wishes to you :)

Marilyn said...

two key words, "among men".