Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

Hope or Terror? 20 Years On

Amid the endless march of war the United States has undertaken since 1945, there’s been a steady global rise of nonviolence — not just as a tool for national liberation, as Gandhi used it, but in seemingly inexhaustible applications to human betterment at every level, from the individual to global.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

Normandy and Pietermaritzburg

TODAY, June 6, marks the anniversary of the Allied invasion of Normandy in 1944.  It is also, given the time difference, the day in 1893 (June 7th, over there) that Mohandas Gandhi was thrown off a train at Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. The former event marked the beginning of the end of World War II. The latter — if we can truly grasp its significance — marked the beginning of the end of all wars.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

A bit of History Offers a Clue for Going Forward

On Aug. 24, 410 C.E., Alaric with his army of Goths entered Rome and sacked the capital of the empire. The shock echoed throughout the circum-Mediterranean world and Europe: How could this happen to the “eternal city”? Though the scale of the attack was so much smaller, and it failed, many people throughout the much larger modern world today were shocked that this could happen to the “indispensible nation.” There are other differences, of course. The Roman emperor did not call down the attack on his own city!

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

Let the Healing Begin

Disdain for the less educated is embedded in our thoughts and institutions, but for that very reason we have several ways to tackle it.  We can be rebuilding on at least three levels: personal, structural, and cultural.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

Beyond the Storm

Long before social media, the soil for losing a grip on truth — and eventually being susceptible to delusion — was prepared by commercial advertising. Its relentless depiction of the human being as a needy fragment concerned only with his or her own material welfare, without agency in a hostile world created a compelling, but dangerously pessimistic narrative about the world and human nature that has come to set the tone of American popular culture.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

A Dream Realized!

It has long been our belief at Metta that the key leverage point for changing humanity from its disastrous course is the uplifting of the human image from that of a separate material fragment adrift in a meaningless universe to an evolving spiritual being inseparable from others and the rest of creation, endowed with the privilege and responsibility of playing our role, individually and together, in the unfolding of human destiny. 

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

‘The Un-Shock Doctrine’ — or why we need a plan to rebuild

We need the worldview that’s always been there, but is mostly buried in what are called the world’s wisdom traditions — and that have now, for the first time in over 300 years, the solid backing of science. The core of this worldview for our purposes is its strikingly different image of who we are as human beings. We are not primarily separate bodies, as advertisers and others try incessantly to tell us. We are body, mind, and spirit, or consciousness — indeed primarily consciousness. And that has tremendous consequences.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

MLK Today

Today we have quite a few thoughtful souls working out this story of the unity of life, the interconnectedness of meaning and the fundamental benevolence of the universe.  King was essential for not only giving it a public voice but showing what it can do.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

Re-organizing the future

As more and more people come to believe that our disastrous political, moral, and ecological situation is based on how we see the world, the vision of ourselves as evolving spiritual beings with the ability to pilot our own destiny in an extremely meaningful universe is taking on tremendous appeal.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

Planet Earth: Too Big To Fail

After centuries of neglect, we are now seeing a lot of useful writing about “the most powerful force at the disposal of humanity” as Gandhi called nonviolence. Its long neglect deprived us of a badly needed set of tools and way of being. Why, then, was it so long neglected?

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

The Purpose of Education

What is the purpose of education? A noble one. To help (primarily young) people continue the process of self-discovery that unfolded (hopefully) in the bosom of the family. From the learning individual’s point of view, it is to discover the meaning of life and who we are within it.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

How Did We Get Here From There?

People make heroes out of those who represent most conspicuously the values of their culture.  This was true of earlier Presidents whose values have disappeared into the quaintness of past history: honesty, competence; in the case of ‘probity’ the very word has dropped out of common vocabulary.  And it’s true today.

Read More
Article Archives Michael Nagler Article Archives Michael Nagler

My remarks at the UN

On October 2, 2018, I was invited by the Indian Mission to make some remarks at the United Nation’s International Day of Nonviolence meeting. It happened to be Gandhi’s 149th birthday. Here is my speech

Read More