August 17, 2008
Veterans Can Be a "Powerful Force for Healing in the World"
Again from Claude Anshin Thomas, a lovely quote about the true power of the combat veteran's experience. For every veteran who suffers whether silently or with loud cries and tears; or who ends his or her life because they simply can't take the pain anymore (and I wish they wouldn't -- they have so much to give), here's a reflection on what their experience can really communicate:
"At the retreat Thich Nhat Hanh said to us, “You veterans are the light at the tip of the candle. You burn hot and bright. You understand deeply the nature of suffering.” He told us that the only way to heal, to transform suffering, is to stand face-to-face with suffering, to realize the intimate details of suffering and how our life in the present is affected by it.
go here for more
http://www.healingcombattrauma.com/2008/08/veterans-can-
be-a-powerful-force-for-healing-in-the-world.html
Showing posts with label War and Peace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War and Peace. Show all posts
Monday, August 18, 2008
Veterans:A powerful force for healing the world
From Lily Casura at Healing Combat Trauma, a friend of mine and a true friend of veterans.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
'Soldier's Heart' has heartbreaking relevance
'Soldier's Heart' has heartbreaking relevance
By Bob Minzesheimer, USA TODAY
Fresh out of Harvard and Yale, Elizabeth Samet began teaching English at West Point a decade ago, when life there was peaceful — "there's no other word for it," she writes. Then came 9/11.
Samet and her students — future second lieutenants — found new meaning in works such as Tolstoy's War and Peace and Randall Jarrell's poem, The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner.
Samet's account of teaching and learning, Soldier's Heart: Reading Literature Through Peace and War at West Point, is absolutely fascinating. Never has Tolstoy or Homer seemed more relevant.
Her book explores serious issues — moral questions about courage and obedience — but with graceful writing and flashes of humor.
She is an outsider: a civilian and a woman in a military culture of, in Virginia Woolf's phrase, "unmitigated masculinity."
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