History lessens
the exclusivity
of now.
What seems
unique
is really
a tweak
of actions
of factions,
reactions,
and distractions
that humans
do
to
each
other.
This October
surprise
attack
by Hamas
upon Israelis
shocked
and horrified
in scope
and scale;
each
detail
grotesque.
Historical
comparisons
to 9/11,
’73,
and even
The Holocaust;
to Nazis
and Isis—
the ultimate
barbarism—
casts Hamas
among
other
embodiments
of pure
evil.
From eternity
to here,
history
does not
lessen
the reality
of evil
of humans.
We like
to think
we progress,
and we do.
We like
to think
we are more
sophisticated
than our
ancestors,
yet
history
proves
to be
more complex,
with effects
that traumatize
and catalyze.
History
must
humanize.
It is
the story
of humans,
sometimes
beyond
comprehension.
But that
is the
task
that history
asks.
We like
to think
we are
different
and less
naive
than our
predecessors.
But even
our successors
will have
or
will be
aggressors
or oppressors,
and certainly
transgressors,
because
humans
have such
capacities.
Forgetting
the lessons
of history—
human
actions
and
reactions—
lessens
the ability
to strengthen
stability.
Fundamentally,
fundamentalism
lessens—
a lesson
learned
from history.
The progress
and ideas
of accessibility,
diversity,
and inclusivity
that make
the present
feel
like sustainability,
become
thwarted,
distorted,
supported,
and exported
by extremists
who are
zombies
of history,
trying
to lessen
the inevitability
of time
and evolution.
I still
hope
for all
humanity
that sanity
will prevail
and we
can exhale
while learning
the lessons
now.