The
first road sign I saw in Bhutan read: Start early/Drive slowly/Arrive safely. I
knew instantly this place and this trip was going to be different.
Bhutan
is a country so small -- fewer than 1 million people live there -- that, tucked
between China to the north and India to the south, it is very easy to miss. But
this little country is having more and more impact on the rest of the world
every day.
There's
something about being confronted by the obvious in the midst of the
unquestionable, however, that makes a person rethink all of life in the
process. I know that's true because it just happened to me. In Bhutan I saw
what obviously could be start to eclipse what is now unquestionable in society
as we know it.
What
has become obvious and unquestionable in a world of superpowers and global
systems is that small nations have little weight to add to the scales of more
modern and powerful nations. And yet what is astounding is the fact that one of
the smallest countries on the planet -- the tiny monarchical democracy of
Bhutan -- may very well be developing a great deal of international influence.
Our
task was to consider the practicality of such an ideal as well as its message
to the rest of society.
As
one social absolute after another -- money, power, social status and
productivity -- came under scrutiny, I asked myself what I was seeing. To be
truthful, it was a bit of the old story of Shangri-La, from James Hilton's 1933
novel about a hidden kingdom of peace and happiness, mixed with a touch of the
1959 film "The Mouse that Roared," the story of a small kingdom that,
by accident, manages to upset the entire geopolitical order.
And
yet in so many ways, Bhutan, a country once isolated from the outside world by
the Himalayan Mountains that encircle it and insulated from the more
progressive or "developed" world around it, is far beyond anything
that world has to offer.
The
concept of Gross National Happiness in a people formed in Buddhist values rests
on four major principles:
•
sustainable and equitable socioeconomic development;
•
conservation of a fragile ecology;
•
the promotion of culture and the purpose of a human civilization; and
•
good governance that looks beyond greed to human development. A Romantic model,
I know, but impossible. Except that here, it isn't.
For
instance, in Bhutan, fishing and hunting -- except under the rarest of
situations -- is forbidden because care for nature, including the animals, is
paramount.
At
this time, 72 percent of the country is forested, and the constitution requires
that that figure never be less than 60 percent. Buying this land to sell off
its wood on the open market is, then, illegal.
Bhutan
makes its money on tourism and by selling hydropower to India, not on mass
production or cash crops.
A
third, born with three kidneys when many people, he says, barely have one good
one, decided what he needed to do for his fellow citizens was to begin a kidney
foundation.
They
know they cannot keep the world out of Bhutan anymore, and they don't want to.
They lifted the restrictions on the Internet in 1999, for instance, because
they see its value to their development. But they are concerned about its use
and its influence. And they do want balance. They do not want an economy based
on money, greed and ruthless individualism to take over a culture based on
family, nature and human compassion. Or as Bhutan's Education Minister, Thakur
S. Powdyel, puts it, "A Bhutan of Gross National Happiness will be a moral
giant 'where everyone cares enough and everyone shares enough so that everyone
has enough.' "
They
make a person think.
Imagine
what our own country would look like if we refused to do anything that would
compromise our national resources, the care of the people, the preservation of
the environment rather than its exploitation and the protection of our animal
species, as well as the purity of the human environment. Just the way we once
did.
The
temptation, of course, is to call such a thing impossible in a modern world.
But it's only impossible if we choose short-term profits over human community.
Perhaps
before we get any spiritually weaker than we are right now, we ought to find
some politicians who are not in the pockets of Washington lobbyists and willing
to listen to what these young people in this young nation are calling the whole
world to consider.
From
where I stand, the problem does not lie in making something like this the basis
of human and national happiness. Obviously, there are those who want it.
No,
the problem lies in the fact that the United States as it functions now -- in
gridlock, under destructive partisanship, as an oligarchy, and, like Pilate,
pronouncing things like freedom, natural resources, education and mutual
support good then washing our hands of any responsibility for them -- has
chosen to be Sparta rather than Athens.
We
don't even pretend to aspire to values like these anymore. It's more money for
the rich that we're about and more power for the powerful that we seek rather
than more opportunities for the middle class, more support for the poor and
more compassion for the weak.
Maybe
we could use a few conversations on Gross National Happiness ourselves before
the next election, before Gross National Greed strikes the final blow and
destroys us all.
Joan
Chittister
25.07.2013
in
NCR
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