Chiron
Communiqué
Author's
Occasional Newsletter
from
Steven McFadden
|
Vol.
7 No. 3
|
© March, 2002
|
Redeeming
an Unholy Fire:
Pilgrimage
to the Poisoned Heart of Avanyu
Los Alamos, New Mexico Here in this place of Poplar and
Cottonwood trees where fire has at times bellowed up from the
earth with catastrophic consequence a purified flame of nuclear
energy returned on February 26, 2002 to its physical and spiritual point
of origin.
The flame, flickering in a lantern borne by pilgrims on foot, was largely
ignored in Los Alamos. Still, the pilgrims completed the work of spiritual
redemption they had come to accomplish, and then they walked on toward
the East, planning to arrive in New York City on May 12, 2002. Their
visit to this place of fire is of marked spiritual significance.
On Turtle Island (North America) there are many sophisticated and distinct
teachings from ancient times. Yet there is one widely held understanding
about the great story of the continent, a story that concerns the origins
of human beings and their relationships with one another and the Sacred
Hoop of life that supports them. In the beginning, some traditional
elders say, Creator established four nations of people and gave each
the responsibility for one of the four elements. The Red nation to keep
the Earth; the Black nation to keep the water; the Yellow nation to
keep the air; and the White nation to keep the fire.
In the beginning, it is said, the four nations lived together as one
and shared their gifts. Then came a time when it was necessary for spiritual
growth that the Four Nations disperse to the Four Directions and live
apart. Over time they could develop as human beings and master the mysteries
of their element for good or ill, according to their free will. Earth,
air, fire and water the peoples went apart.
At a crucial juncture of world history, the story relates, the four
nations would come together again on Turtle Island. By intermingling
again, it was said, they would have an opportunity to share and teach
to put their gifts together in a new and beautiful way. If they
neglected to do this, if they were distracted by fear and greed, then
the people would face a monumental challenge.
As I see it, the imminence of that colossal challenge a global
convergence of war, environmental destruction, Earth changes, and social
chaos was brightly illuminated by the courageous spiritual deed
of 30 pilgrims on February 26, and by the sacred fire they carried.
Their story is worthy of note.
Walkers Behind the Storm
A bruising, roaring, dustchoked wind preceded the pilgrims and
their flame. The stinging dust storm ripped across northern New Mexico
and the streets of Los Alamos all day Monday, Feb. 25, 2002. Then that
evening as the winds finally eased, 30 motley peace walkers entered
Los Alamos bearing their flame. They quietly moved into the Unitarian
Universalist church for the night, to share a meal and shelter.
The region they entered now called Los Alamos has been
a fire center since prehistoric times. It was widely known and
marked as a special node of material and spiritual fire, a place to
be enaged only with the utmost respect. Now it is more widely known
as the birthplace of the atomic bomb, and the home of the nations
nuclear weapons, Los Alamos National Laboratory.
t
The Peace Flame pilgrims walk East from Los Alamos toward the Sangre
de Christo Mountains.
Los Alamos is built on the eastern flank of The Valles Caldera, one
of the largest "dormant" volcanoes in the world a vast,
sleeping source of molten fire from the bowels of the planet. "Caldera"
is the Spanish word for cauldron. Such a place on earth is formed from
massive but infrequent eruptions. After the eruption much like
a nuclear bomb but without poisonous radiation that endures for hundreds
of thousands of year the blast hole fills with volcanic ash and
pumice. Scientists say the vast, 15mile diameter Valles Caldera
last erupted a million years ago, and that it is now dormant.
When American scientists were drawn to this region in the 1940s to build
the atomic bomb, they were as a matter of mystical consequence
being magnetically drawn to the most potent and significant fire
center of Turtle Island.
Carrying a Lantern
The prayer walk that came to Los Alamos in late February began January
15, 2002, at the grave of Chief Seattle in Washington state. A small
band of pilgrims, coming from nations all over the world, began a walk
across the US carrying a lantern with a flame ignited from the fires
started by the nuclear bombs which obliterated Hiroshima, Japan.
They are walking without recriminations, grievance or protest, but rather
in solidarity with life and in peace. They seek mainly to give people
an opportunity to partake of the flames redeemed meaning and power.
The flame the pilgrims carry was ignited 57 years ago and has been tended
with prayer ever since. In1945, after the atomic bomb was dropped on
Hiroshima, Japan, a man named Tatsuo Yamamoto walked into the ruins
of the city to look for friends and family. In shock and anger, he collected
some of the embers still smoldering from the bomb and carried them home.
Yamamotos grandmother preserved the embers and kindled a flame,
which was used to illuminate the family's prayer altar. For Yamamoto
the smoldering embers symbolized his rage over what had happened; for
his grandmother it symbolized love and the memory of the over 300,000
people who died directly from the atomic blast. Thousands of other human
beings later died of cancers and related illnesses, or suffered mutations,
directly attributable to the bombs nuclear radiation.
Over the next 12 years Mr. Yamamoto's grandmother kept the flame with
honor and respect. During this time Mr. Yamamoto underwent a complete
change of heart. The flame on the altar transformed for him from a flame
of hate and hostility into a flame of respect and love. Thanks to his
family and a nearby monastery, the flame has been burning surrounded
with prayers and incense since the moment of the Hiroshima blast
on August 6, 1945.
Through the last 57 years the prayers of the people of Japan
and others around the world have transformed that fiery expression
from material to spiritual. The flame no longer harms people and destroys
no life. It has become a quiet but potent focus of light and peace.
The 2002 Hiroshima Flame Interfaith Pilgrimage includes people of all
colors and faiths.They say their effort is not a political statement,
but a spiritual act. By walking and praying for peace, they say, they
focus a common hope of all peoples and a common prayer for our mother
the earth.
The Pilgrimage was organized by Sister Jun Yasuda, a Japanese Buddhist
nun, and Tom Dostou, a citizen of the Wabanaki Alqonquin Nation in the
Northeast region of Turtle Island. Jun San and Tom have been joined
by peace pilgrims from around the world, an international group of all
colors and faiths.
Material Realization
The very nature of the walk, and the very fact that the redeemed flame
was returned to the source, promps realization. They symbolize a crucial
choice the world must make now. That choice is between an essentially
materialist culture fenced in by desire and dogma, or a fundamentally
free culture that respects the living spirit in all of life.
The nuclear bomb is an ultimate expression of materialism. When the
atomic scientists of Los Alamos took the secret of the atom the
fundamental particle of matter and developed it into a weapon
of mass destruction, they unleashed a scathing, wrathful demon of fire
rather than a higher angel of warmth and illumination.
In splitting the atom scientists realized the core power of matter.
In using it against life they became immersed in awe of and deference
to the ultimate deathdealing expression of materialism. This can
be seen as a failure altogether to recognize and respect the spirit
that resides in all sentient beings, and as trespass against a universal
spiritual law: thou shalt not kill.
In works such as Lyrics from the Book of Nature and the Second Coming
over Lindisfarne, Welsh poet Charles Lawrie has expressed the excruciating
polarity of this choice in vivid terms, describing his inner images
in response to the first nuclear explosion.*
- Contrast
the eyescalding light of the worldshattering bomb, against
the radiant light of authentic spiritual revelation as in the Transfiguration.
- Contrast
the flash of heat that causes sands to melt to glass, against the
warmth of love which touches every human being.
- Contrast
the blast wave of sheer energy moving swiftly out as a destructive
shock, against the moral impact of what humans feel in response to
the revelation of the indwelling spirit and the shame of their personal
imperfections.
- Contrast
the deathdealing nuclear radiation (potent, invisible, lacking
honor) against the lifegiving radiance which comes from nurturing
other people and the earth we share.
- Contrast
the mushroom cloud, the crown of an antiking (who dispenses
death, illness and suffering),against the coming in the clouds from
the East, the radiant sky forms crowning a heavenly source of grace.
Vigil at the Place of Avanyu
At sunrise on Tuesday, Feb. 26 the walkers arose at the Los Alamos
Unitarian Universalist Church. They meditated for an hour, ate breakfast,
and set out on a short walk downtown to the Los Alamos County Skateboard
park. What is now a place for children to play, 50 years ago was the
site of the first plutonium processing plant. There the walkers and
a small band of local supporters formed a circle.
Shannyn Sollitt of Santa Fe, who guided the walk through the region,
sounded strongly on a conch shell to honor the Four Directions. The
Nichiren Buddhist monks chanted their familiar central tenet, Odaimoku:
Na Mu Myo Ho Renge Kyo, "the Lotus Sutra of the True Dharma."
Tom Dostou called upon several elders, who made prayers according
to their traditions. Shannyn Sollitt called upon the Los Alamos National
Laboratory to use their intelligence and skills not in service of
war and death, but rather in service of life.
And then the pilgrims went on, walking about 10 zigzag miles
through Los Alamos, prohibited by federal security from getting close
to any of the many "sensitive areas" around and about Los
Alamos. The US Energy Department banned the walk from approaching
any of the labs, and from walking on any of the public roads that
pass the labs.
Since
the walk came not for confrontation but to perform a spiritual service,
the organizers changed the route without complaint. They walked and
held vigil as close to the labs as they were permitted, and then they
walked on.
In the afternoon the pilgrims walked further with the flame. They
set out from nearby White Rock, New Mexico along Pajarito Rd, to the
barbedwire fence outside the Los Alamos Labs Area 54,
Area G. This is a global wonder, the worlds largest nuclear
waste dump. According to Shannyn Sollitt, over 50,000 drums of contaminated
nuclear waste, plus additional unlined pits and shafts some of them
leaking their infernally toxic contents, the waste slowly seeping
into the earth to poison it and the scarce waters below for hundreds
of generations to come. The DOE says it plans to to bury an additional
2.7 million drums of waste here over the next 65 years.
Just behind the barbed wire and the warning signs which impotently
strive to seal Area G off from the rest of the world, yet clearly
visible from the road, are rock cliffs marked with a petroglyph. The
glyph was carved into the rock face of the outcropping thousands of
years ago by the indigenous Pueblo peoples, whose descendents still
live nearby. There are such petroglyphs all over North America, serving
as signs and signals of importance to native peoples.
The Hiroshima Peace Flame walkers stopped and formed a circle across
the road from a particular petroglyph, the carved image of Avanyu.
Avanyu is depicted as a great serpent with a lightningbolt tongue.
According to tradition, Avanyu represents the sacred waters of the
earth and sky, and the lightning-bolt can be understood to respresent
what modern spiritual scientists might refer to as Shakti, cosmic
electric fire with the capacity to enlighten, or to burn and destroy
if employed without wisdom.

Photo:
The Place of Avanyu, sealed off within the confines of Area G in Los
Alamos, NM - - now desecrated by the world's largest nuclear dump.
Beholding this ancient stone carving, the walkers viscerally understood
that the place where they had come Los Alamos, the city of
nuclear fire had been built directly upon what has for many
thousands of years been considered to be a sacred site.
In this place formerly regarded as worthy of high respect, our National
Lab has dumped ton upon ton of desecrating nuclear poison.
Message on the Wind
From the place of Avanyu, the walkers proceeded drumming and
chanting every step of the way about seven miles to Tsankawi,
a prehistoric site that is now part of Bandelier National Monument.
Tsankawi is a spectacular place high on a mesa overlooking the Jemez
Mountains to the West and the Sangre de Christo Mountains to the East.
The walkers climbed to the top of the mesa with the Hiroshima flame,
an indigenous woman from Ecuador, and two Native American elders from
the nearby Santa Clara Puebo whose ancestors once inhabited
Tsankawi. With the sun setting in the west, the elders guided a simple
ceremony, emphasizing peace and respect for all of the Sacred Hoop
of life.
"You will need to be strong," said Irwin Rivera, one of
the San Clara elders, "for you will be called cowards and traitors.
But it is an act of courage to choose sanity and peace when others
are choosing hate and war."
"Right now," the elder said, "the Valles Caldera has
the exact same technical classification that Mount Saint Helens had
up until the time it exploded in a massive eruption. The scientists
say it is dormant. But the caldera is not dormant, only sleeping.
Some of our elders say it may have to awaken some day to cleanse all
the poison that has been dumped here."
Atomic Aftermath
The wind people, the messengers, brought the flame home to its point
of origin, having purified it with their chants, prayers and incense.
They offered it to the people of the city without rancor, recrimination,
or challenge. They offered the flame with understanding and hope.
And then they walked on.
Not one scientist, not one of the new keepers of the fire, came out
to behold the flame that was still burning from the nuclear holocaust
started 57 years ago by the work done here. No one bore witness.
Except for a handful of locals, the newspapers, and the UU church,
the walk was overlooked. Scientists and citizens drove by with barely
a flicker of recognition or interest. The only people paying attention
were the County Sheriffs. In marked cars they diligently shadowed
the walk all day, remaining politely distant.
After the day in Los Alamos the walkers were hosted for a meal and
sleeping accommodations at the Rio Rancho community center. The next
day February 27, 2002 the peace pilgrims departed the
Los Alamos region quietly to walk East. On that same day, USA Today
reported that radioactive fallout from nuclear weapons tests across
the globe has caused at least 15,000 cancer deaths in U.S. residents
born after 1951.
This information was obtained from an unreleased government study.
Coupled with findings from previous government investigations, it
suggests that 20,000 non-fatal cancers - and possibly many more -
also can be tied to fallout from weapons tests. When fallout from
all tests, domestic and foreign, is taken together, no U.S. resident
born after 1951 has escaped exposure, the study says.
Also on that day, to sound an alarm about the rapidly growing danger
of a nuclear conflagration, The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists moved
their famous Doomsday Clock forward two minutes closer to midnight.
The scientists wanted to highlight the dramatically mounting dangers
of political instability, the wide availability of nuclear materials,
terrorism, and the aggressive unilateral stance of the US government.
The Hiroshima
Peace Flame Walk will continue in the eastern half of the United States
until May 12, 2002. It will end its eastward trek in New York at United
Nations headquarters and at the site of the destroyed World Trade
Center. Later the walk will return the fire ceremonially to the Earth
at the Arizona mine where the uranium for the Hiroshima bomb was dug
from the ground.
To read about the end of the walk months later at Big Mountain on Black Mesa in Arizona, click here.
*For more on poet
Charles Lawrie and an essay on the spiritual implications of the nuclear
bomb, see "Nuclear Power, the Royal Stars, and the Destiny of
Humanity" by David Tresemer, Ph.D. and Robert Schiappacasse
http://www.thestarhouse.org/documents/ChainReaction.pdf
Praise for Legend of the Rainbow Warriors
Rev. Carol
ParrishHarra of Sparrow Hawk Village in Oklahoma
http://www.sanctasophia.org recently praised Steven McFaddens
2001 book, Legend of the Rainbow Warriors.
She wrote: "Touching, inspiring, and encouraging, Legend
of the Rainbow Warriors needs to be a school text to give
our children a deep appreciation for the wisdom of elders and how
each generation holds the future in its hands
My hat is off to
Steven McFadden for the effort he made in collecting and recording
such historic and timely stories."
Legend of the Rainbow Warriors (2001 Chiron Communications,
ISBN # 0966523466) can be ordered through your local
bookstore, by calling tollfree 18882852710,
or online through the Chiron website)
Chiron
Communications
2002
SCHEDULE
April 12 - Legend of the Rainbow Warriors - Evening Circle
at Yeoho Grove in Parkton, MD. All are welcome. By donation. For information
call Jacki at 410-343-0856 or send e-mail to yeoho8@aol.com
.
April 13-14 - Reiki I Training: Healing with Heart and Hands
- Reiki (pronounced Ray-Key) is a Japanese word meaning universal
life energy the energy that flows through all living things.
It is also the name of a simple, effective technique for healing via
the laying-on of hands. Reiki is a natural method of healing with
the use of basic life energy.
Students must register in advance. $150 tuition. All who complete
the course will be presented with Reiki I Certificates.
Reiki Masters Steven McFadden and Jacki Hayward Gauger have a combined
35 years experience with Reiki. They have traveled the Four Directions
on pilgrimage, and met with elders from many cultures to discuss and
experience life, ceremony, and healing. Steven is director of Chiron
Communications and the author of Legend of the Rainbow Warriors; Farms
of Tomorrow Revisited; and Profiles in Wisdom. Jacki is a nationally
certified practitioner of therapeutic massage, a certified practitioner
of CranioSacral therapy, and a certified facilitator of Transformational
Breath. Both Steven and Jacki are also certified yoga instructors
.
For information or to register contact Jacki at 410-343-0856 or e-mail:
yeoho8@aol.com
April
26 - Legend of the Rainbow Warriors - Evening Circle in the conference
room at the Super 8 Motel in Sedona, Arizona. All are welcome. By
donation. For information call Kathie Gabriel at Owl Feather Studio
in Sedona at 928-204-1344 or send e-mail to gabe@kachina.net
April 27 - Legend of the Rainbow Warriors - All-day intensive
workshop and circle in the conference room at the Super 8 Motel in
Sedona, AZ. All are welcome. By donation. For information call Kathie
Gabriel at Owl Feather Studio in Sedona at 928-204-1344 or send e-mail
to gabe@kachinanet.com
30
* The Chiron Communique is now posted as a blog on the Chiron Communications home page.
Contents—
© copyright March, 2002 by Steven McFadden
chiron@chironcommmunications.com