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J. Krishnamurti's talk to The United Nations when he was presented
with the
1984 United Nations Peace medal
"World Peace"
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Krishnamurti: I am supposed to talk on World Peace beyond the 40th anniversary
of the United Nations.
Mankind, man, has lived on this earth over fifty thousand years, and
perhaps much longer, or for less duration. During all this long evolution
man has not found peace on earth - 'pacem in terris' has
been preached long before Christianity, by the ancient Hindus and the
Buddhists. And during all this time man has lived in conflict, not only
conflict with his neighbour but with people of his own
community, with his own society, with his own family, he has fought,
struggled against man for the last five thousand years, and perhaps more.
Historically there have been wars practically every year. And
we are still at war. I believe there are forty wars going on at the present
time. And the religious hierarchy, not only the Catholics but the other
groups have talked about 'pacem in terris', peace on
earth, goodwill among men. It has never come about - to have peace on earth.
And they have talked about peace when you die and go to heaven and you have
peace there.
One wonders, if one is at all serious, why man kills another
human being - in the name of god, in the name of peace, in the name
of some ideology, or for his country - whatever that may mean - or for the
king and the queen, and all the rest of that business.
Probably we all know this: that man has never lived on this earth, which is
being slowly destroyed, and why man cannot live at peace with another human
being. Why there are separate nations, which is after all a glorified
tribalism. And religions, whether it be Christianity, Hinduism, or Buddhism,
they are also at war with each other. Nations are at war, groups are at war,
ideologies, whether it
is the Russian, or the American, or any other category of ideologies, they
are all at war with each other, conflict. And after living on this earth for
so many centuries, why is it man cannot live
peacefully on this marvellous earth? This question has been asked over and
over again. An organization like this has been formed round that. What is
the future of this particular organization? After the 40th year what lies
beyond?
Time is a strange factor in life. Time is very important for all
of us. And the future is, what is present. The future is now, because the
present, which is also the past, modifying itself now, becomes the future.
This has been the cycle of time, the path of
time. And now, not beyond 40 years of this organization, but now, at the
present time if there is no radical change, fundamental mutation, the future
is, what is now. And that has been historically proved, and we can prove it
in our daily lives.
So the question really is: whether human beings, you and us, sitting on
the platform - I am sorry to be sitting up here - are human beings? And as
long as we with each other, or with man and
woman, are in perpetual conflict there will be no peace on this earth. One
may talk about it endlessly. The Roman Catholic
hierarchy talks about 'pacem in terris', and they have been also responsible
for appalling wars in the past. A hundred years of war, torture, all kinds
of horrible things they have done to man. These
are all facts, actualities, not the speaker's wish. And religions, are all
facts, actualities, not the speaker's wish. And religions, including Islam,
Hindus, Buddhists, and so on, they have had their
own kind of war. And the future beyond the 40th anniversary is what is going
on now.
One wonders if one realizes that. The present is not only the past, but
also contains the future; the past modifying itself constantly through the
present and projecting the future. If we don't stop quarrels, struggles,
antagonism, hate, now it will be like that tomorrow. And you can stretch out
that tomorrow for a thousand years, it will be still tomorrow.
So it behoves us to ask ourselves whether we, as human beings, single or a
community, or in a family, whether we can live peacefully with each other?
Organizations have not solved this problem. You can reorganize but war still
goes on. So organizations, whether it is world organization or a particular
kind of organization to bring about peace, such organizations will never
succeed because human beings individually, collectively, nationally, are in
conflict. Strong nations, like America or Russia, are at war with each other
- economically, ideologically, and actually - not bloodshed yet. So
peace cannot possibly exist on this earth if there are nationalities, which,
as we said, is glorified tribalism. Nationalities give certain security, man
needs security and he invests in nationalism,
or in a particular ideology or belief. Beliefs, ideologies and so on, have
separated man. And organizations cannot possibly bring about peace between
man and man because he believes in something, he believes in certain
ideologies, he believes in god and others don't.
I wonder if one has ever considered, religions based on a book - like the
Koran or the Bible - become very bigoted, narrow and fundamentalist. And
religions like the Hindu and the Buddhist, they
have many, many books, all considered sacred, real, straight from god's
mouth! They are not so bigoted, they are tolerant, they absorb. So there is
this conflict going on: those who rely, put
their faith in books, and those who do not put their faith in any book. So
conflict between the book and those who accept multiple books. I wonder if
one is aware of all this.
And we are asking deeply, if you are serious at all, whether you and I,
and those of us who are involved in organizations, can live at peace with
each other? Peace requires a great deal of intelligence, not just
demonstrations against a particular form of war, against a nuclear or atom
bomb and so on. Those are the products of minds, brains that are entrenched
in nationalism, in some particular form of belief, ideology, so they are
supplying armaments - the powerful ones, whether it be Russia, America, or
England or France - armaments to the rest of the world, and they also talk
about peace, supplying at the same time armaments.
It is a vast cynical world and cynicism can never tolerate affection,
care, love. I think we have lost that quality - quality of compassion. Not
analyse what is compassion - it can be analysed very easily. You cannot
analyse love, love is not within the limits of the brain, because the brain
is the instrument of sensation, it is the centre of all reaction and action,
and we try to find peace, love, within this limited area. Which means,
thought is not love because thought is based on experience, which is
limited, and on knowledge, which is always limited, whether now or in the
future. So knowledge is always limited. And having knowledge, which is
contained in the brain as memory, from that memory springs thought. This can
be observed very simply and easily if one examines oneself, if one looks at
one's own activity of thought, experience, knowledge. You don't have to read
any book, or become a specialist to understand
So thought is always limited, whether it is now or in the future. And
we try to solve all our problems, both technological, religious, and
personal, through the activity of thought. Surely thought is not love, love
is not sensation or pleasure, it is not the result of desire? It is
something entirely different. To come upon that love, which is compassion,
which has its own intelligence, one has to
understand oneself, what we are - not through analysts, but understanding
our own sorrows, our own pleasures, our own beliefs.
You know wherever you go, all over the world, mankind, human beings,
suffer, for various reasons, it might be petty or some very, very deep
incident which has caused pain, sorrow. And every human being on this earth
goes through that on a minor scale or a tremendous incident, as death. And
sorrow is shared by all mankind, it is not your sorrow or mine, it is
mankind's sorrow, mankind's anxiety, pain, loneliness, despair,
aggressiveness. So you, and we, are the rest of humanity, we are not
separate human beings psychologically. You may be a woman, or a man, you may
be tall,
dark, short and so on, but inwardly, psychologically, which is far more
important, we are the rest of mankind. You are the rest of mankind, and so
if you kill another, if you are in conflict with another, you are destroying
yourself. You can observe this very, very carefully if you look at yourself
without any distortion.
So there can only be peace when mankind, when you and I, have no conflict
in ourselves. And you might say, "If one achieves, or comes to an end of all
conflict within oneself, how will it affect the rest of mankind?" This is a
very, very old question. This has been put thousands of years before Christ,
if he ever existed. And we have to ask whether in ourselves sorrow, pain and
anxiety, and all that, can ever end? If one applies, looks, observes, with
great attention, as you look with considerable attention when you are
combing your hair, or shaving, with that quality of attention, heightened,
you can observe yourself - all the nuances, subtleties. And the mirror is
your relationship between human beings, in that mirror you can see yourself
exactly as you are. But most of us are frightened to see what we are, and so
we gradually develop resistance, guilt, and all the rest of that business.
So we never ask for total freedom - not to do what you like, but to be free
from choice. Where there are multiple choices there are multiple confusions.
So can we live on this earth, 'pacem in terris', with great
understanding of mankind, which is to understand yourself so profoundly, not
according to some psychologist, analyst. They too have to be analysed. So we
can, without turning to the professionals, as simple laymen we can observe
our own
idiosyncrasies, tendencies. Our brain - the speaker is not a specialist
about brain matter - our brain has been conditioned to war, to hate, to
conflict. It is conditioned through this long period of evolution, whether
that brain with its cells, which contain all the memories, whether that
brain can free itself from its own conditioning. You know it is very simple
to answer such a question. If you have been going north all the days of your
life, as humanity has been going in a particular direction, which is
conflict, and somebody comes along and says, "That leads nowhere". He is
serious, and perhaps you are serious. Then he says, "Go south, go east, any
other direction but that". And when you actually move away from that
direction there is a mutation in the very brain cells themselves because you
have broken the pattern. And that pattern must be broken now, not forty or a
hundred years later.15 And can human beings have the vitality, the energy,
to transform themselves to civilized human beings, not killing each other?
Chairman: May we ask questions?
Krishnamurti: Yes, sir, ask any questions. Delighted!
Chairman: We have time for some questions and Mr Krishnamurti has kindly
agreed to answer any questions you may ask. When you ask a question please
raise your hand so that the sound will be connected.
Thank you.
QUESTION: I am asking a question with regard to wanting a spiritual
expression that I feel linked up with. Am I being heard? I don't think
so. I feel there is a disconnecting sense that is being communicated to me.
I would look forward to a spiritual connection to myself and fellow people
in this group that would be an elevating sense. That is what I would look
forward to experiencing
at this lecture, a more uplifting spiritual sense of oneness, rather than an
intellectual expression.
Krishnamurti: First of all, I don't understand the word
'spiritual'. Is it emotional, romantic, ideological, or something vague in
the air; or facing actuality, what is going on now, both in ourselves and in
the world? Because you are the world, you are not separate from the world.
We have created this society, and we are that society. And whatever
experiences one has, so-called religious and spiritual, one
must doubt those very experiences, one must question, be sceptical. I wonder
if you realize that the word 'scepticism', questioning, enquiring, is not
advocated in the Christian world. Whereas in
Buddhism, and Hinduism, that is one of the essential things, you must
question everything, until you discover or come upon that truth, which is
not yours, or any others, it is truth.
And this enquiry is not intellectual. Intellect is only a part of the
whole human structure. One must look at the world and oneself as an holistic
being. And truth is not something to be experienced.
If one may point out, who is the experiencer apart from experience? Is not
the experiencer part of the experience? Otherwise he wouldn't know what
experience he has had. So the experiencer is the
experience; the thinker is the thought; the observer, in its psychological
sense, is the observed. There is no difference. And where there is
difference, separation, there comes conflict. With the end of conflict there
is freedom, and only then truth can come into being. All this is not
intellectual, for god's sake. This is something that one lives, and finds
out.
QUESTION: You laid a great deal of stress on enquiry and scepticism. I
wonder if you could tell me if faith plays a role in that too?
Krishnamurti: What is faith? What do you put your faith in? One has faith in some
experience, one has faith in some belief, or in a symbol, and so on. Why
does one have faith? Is it out of fear, out of uncertainty, out of a sense
of insecurity? When you have faith, for instance as a Hindu in some symbol,
and you hold on to that faith, or to that symbol, then you are at war with
the rest of the world. But to enquire gently, hesitantly, questioning,
asking yourself, then out of that comes clarity. And there must be clarity
to understand that which is eternal.
QUESTION: At the end you said that we need to break the pattern of
conflict between man. My question to you is, do you see that as something of
an evolutionary process that inevitably will happen? Or do you see it as
something that we all have to work very hard to achieve? And there is an
expression that goes something like this: in times of darkness the eye
begins to see. And why I am throwing this at you because in a sense it is
either going to happen, or it is not going to happen, but how do you see it
happening?
Krishnamurti: I don't quite understand your question, sir.
Q: All right. You talk about breaking the pattern, man has a pattern, the
brain has a pattern, and that pattern has to be broken in order for there to
be peace in the world.
Krishnamurti: Of course.
Q: Now do you see the breaking of that pattern being an active movement,
or a natural progression in the evolution of man?
Krishnamurti: Sir, have we evolved at all?
Q: I think we are continuously evolving.
Krishnamurti: So you accept evolution - psychological evolution, we are not talking
about biological or technical evolution - psychological evolution. After a
million years, of fifty thousand years, have we
changed deeply? Aren't we very primitive, barbarous? So I am asking if you
will consider whether there is psychological evolution at all? I question
it. Personally, to the speaker, there is no psychological evolution: there
is only the ending of sorrow, of pain, anxiety, loneliness, despair and all
that. Man has lived with it for a million years. And if we rely on time,
which is thought - time and
thought go together - if we rely on evolution then another thousand years or
more, and we will still be barbarous.
Q: My question is: what would have to happen for there to begin to be
psychological evolution as the speaker understands it?
Krishnamurti: What about psychological evolution? I don't quite understand the
question.
Q: You have said that you do not think there has been
psychological evolution. My question is: what can happen so that there will
be, so that there can be, psychological evolution.
Krishnamurti: Madam, I am afraid we haven't understood each other. We have lived on
this earth from the historical, as well as ancient enquiry, on this earth
for fifty thousand years or more or less. And during
that long period of evolution psychologically, inwardly, subjectively, we
have remained more or less barbarous - hating each other, killing each
other. And time is not going to solve that problem, which is evolution. And
is it possible, we are asking, for each human being, who is the rest of the
world, whether that psychological movement can stop and see something
afresh?
Q: I wanted to ask you the same question phrased in a different way: what
should we do in order to effect this resistance towards evolution. I just
want to say one more thing. There was a Dr Bohm
last month, he said the same thing you are saying in a different way, he is
a scientist, he was explaining the same problem. I wonder what do you think
we could we do right now in order to effect this?
Krishnamurti: I have got it. What could you do right now? Right? Change completely!
- both psychologically and outwardly. First the psychological revolution,
not evolution, but revolution, change completely. That is the real action of
humankind, not trying to fiddle around on the periphery.
QUESTION: You stated that an important condition for understanding
humankind is beginning to understand ourselves clearly. Do you see that
within these rooms within the next forty years, at
the United Nations, that this understanding of humankind through
understanding ourselves will become a part of global decision making?
Krishnamurti: I couldn't answer that question because I don't belong to the
organization. Ask the bosses!
Q: I would like to add another note, perhaps a note of greater
encouragement in my question. You indicated that organizations may not
provide the answer, and you also indicated that the history of humanity
would incline you to pessimism about the future or salvation. I think it
depends upon the nature of the organizations and whether these are
serving the interests of humanity and prepared
to evolve, as the UN and many other groups evolve, and as humans evolve,
provided we do not kill ourselves off and provided we can connect ourselves
by the affection and respect for which our genes are also coded. There is no
end to what we might do on or off this planet. And the implication there,
which I share, is that we have evolved because we have the capacity for love
and co-operation, and that we are not doomed because we manifest hate and
fear and greed, and have succumbed in the past to iniquities like that. But
by the very existence of the United Nations we have an illustration of man's
capacity for growth and shared goals. I think that the present does contain
the future and we by acting energetically in the present can affect our
future and our survival. Therefore I ask, what is the answer to the question
you raised about when one achieves peace within oneself, how will it affect
the rest of humanity, given the time limits?
Krishnamurti: What is the question, sir?
Q: The question was: when one achieves peace within oneself how will it
affect the rest of humanity without organizational structures?
Krishnamurti: I
explained that, forgive me, sir, I explained it. To say, if I change how
will it affect mankind, the rest of the world? That is the question, isn't
it, sir? Wait a minute, sir.
Q: That is the question.
Krishnamurti: I think if I may most respectfully point out, that is a wrong
question. Change and you will see what happens. This is really a very
important thing. We have to put aside all the side issues. Please do realize
something tremendous: that you are the rest of mankind psychologically. You
are mankind, whether you live in India, Russia, China or in America, or
Europe, you are the rest of mankind,
because you suffer, and everyone on this earth suffers in his own way. We
share that suffering, it is not my suffering. So when you ask a question:
what difference will it make if I or you change, if I
may most humbly point out, it is a wrong question. You are avoiding the
central issue. And we never seem to face the central issue, the central
challenge that demands that we live totally differently, not
as Americans, Russians, Indians, or Buddhists or Christians.
I wonder if you have realized Christians have been responsible
for killing humans far more than any other religious group. Don't get angry
please! Then Islam, the Muslim world, then the Hindus and
the Buddhists come much later. So if the so-called Christians, the Catholics
included, about eight hundred million people, if they said, "No more wars",
you will have peace on this earth. But they won't say that. It is only
Buddhism, Hinduism, said, "Don't kill. If you kill" - they believe in
reincarnation - you will pay next life. Therefore don't kill, don't kill the
least little thing, except what
you have to eat, vegetables and so on. But don't kill.' We as Brahmins
weren't brought up that way, not to kill a fly, not to kill animals for your
food. But all that is gone. So please we are suggesting that the central
issue to stop wars is, you must stop your own antagonisms, your own
conflicts, your own misery and suffering.
Why do we choose, apart from physical things - two good materials,
clothes, between cars? You choose there because of their function and
mileage and so on. But psychologically why do you
choose at all? Why is there this choice? There is choice, you can move from
one town to another, from one job to another - not in Russia, not in the
tyrannical world, in the totalitarian world you are stuck in your place, you
are not allowed to move - unless the bosses agree. And in this country, in a
so-called democratic societies, you have a choice to do what you like. And
you call that freedom - to fulfil yourself, to become a great success. You
have there tremendous choice. Now we are talking about choice in the
psychological field. If you see things very clearly there is no choice. It
is unfortunate that we don't see things clearly. We don't see clearly that
nationalism is one of the causes of war. We don't clearly see that
ideologies breed wars, whether it is the Marxist ideologies, or Lenin, or
our own particular form of ideologies. So we choose from one ideology to
another, one religion to another, one group to another, and we think we are
free. On the contrary, it shows confusion. And when we are confused we act
in confusion, therefore multiply confusion, as the politicians are doing -
forgive me.
Q: We have a written question here for Mr Krishnamurti. Do you believe in
the so-called realized soul?
Krishnamurti: Do you believe in so-called realized souls? I don't know what it
means. Just a minute, sir.
QUESTION: I'm sorry right now you are talking from a public forum and
once this lecture is over probably you will return to a privacy that
probably you cherish greatly. So there is for most human beings in this
world a division between public life and private life. Could you comment on
this division? Do you feel it leads to conflict, is it necessary?
Krishnamurti: Between public life and private life? Is that the question? Why do you
separate this? Why do we separate public life as though something outside,
and private life? If one lived correctly,
precisely, not intellectually, but holistically, then there is no outward
life and private life. Holistically, that is to live as a whole human being,
not as a sectarian, not as an individual, not as a petty little mind, brain
active in our self interest. Sorry if I am emphatic. Is that finished, sir?
Chairman: There are two more questions.
QUESTION: If you are living peacefully and the tyrant attacks, do you not
defend?
Krishnamurti: What will you do then? If you live peacefully and a tyrant or a robber
attacks you, what will you do? That is the question. Do you live peacefully
for a day or two? Or you live peacefully all
your life? If you have lived peacefully for many years then you will do the
right thing when you are attacked.
Sirs, the speaker has been at this talking for the last sixty years, and
more - all over the world except behind the Iron Curtain, before the war he
was all over Europe - and these questions have been put to the speaker for
sixty years. The same pattern is being repeated by the young generation, by
a civilization that is recent like America, the same questions, with the
same intention, to trap
the speaker, or to really understand the speaker, or to understand
themselves. And if you have the misfortune or the fortune to have talked for
sixty years you will know all the answers and all the
questions. There is no difference between question and answer. If you
understand the question really deeply the answer is in the question.
Chairman: Mr Robert Miller would like to ask a question.
QUESTION: Well it is not to ask a question, it is to congratulate you for
your statement. And to confirm that having lived in this organization for
almost forty years and having lived more than sixty
years, I have come to the same conclusion as you. We are all being
programmed, we are being programmed into a nation, into an ideology, into a
religion. And all these are fragmented human beings. It took me forty years
to be in this house to be de-programmed from the two or three nationalities
imposed on me, each time I got also a gun to shoot at the other direction.
And it is here that after having seen the world in its totality and humanity
in its totality that I have come to the conclusion that it is more important
to be a human being than to be a Jew, or a Catholic or a Frenchman, or a
Russian, or a white, or a black.
Krishnamurti: Quite right.
Q: And in my book I will not kill under any reason, or for any nation, or
for any religion, or for any ideology. This is the conclusion which is also
yours.
Krishnamurti: Is it a conclusion, sir? Or an actuality?
Q: That is my actuality.
Krishnamurti: That's right. Not a conclusion.
Q: I am not arguing about religions but will remind that, 'an eye for an
eye and a tooth for a tooth' is not exactly a Christian precept. On the
contrary, Christ thought the peaceful way was to care for your fellow human
beings, have compassion and love for one another. But I would like to know
how to break this pattern of confrontation among human beings. I am not
talking about States because States are formed by human beings and
governments too, they are human beings that rule the countries. How can we
break this pattern? How is it that mankind has not been able to practise
such
glowing thoughts as those that Christ wrote to us and were written also by
all religions? I would like very much to see if we could find a formula, a
solution to break that terrible pattern of confrontation, and hate even
between families, as Krishnamurti has pointed out because it is not just war
among nations, there is always a confrontation, even among children
you see one is with Mama and the
other one wants to be there. That pattern, how could we break it?
Krishnamurti: May I answer you question? We are programmed, like computers - we are
Catholics, Protestants, Buddhists and so on. As Mr (?) pointed out, we are
conditioned. Do we realize, or see
actually, actually, not theoretically, or ideologically, but actually see
that we are programmed? Or is it just a casual statement? If you are
actually programmed do you realize the consequences of being
programmed? One of the consequences has been hatred, or war, or separating
yourself from others. If one realizes that you are being programmed,
pressurized, preached at, and if one really sees that,
you abandon it, you don't want a formula for it. The moment you have a
formula then you are caught in it. Then you become programmed again because
you have your programme and the other fellow gives you another programme. So
what is important is to realize the actuality of being programmed, not
intellectually, with all your blood, energy.
Chairman: Because of the time element we will not be able to entertain
any more questions. On behalf of the Pacem in Terris Society and the
Movement for a Better World, we would like to thank our honoured guest
speaker and Brother Fellow and Ambassador Barry who are the Honorary
Presidents of the Society, and all of you who came to attend the lecture
today.
I have a very simple ceremony before you leave. Mr Krishnamurti was here
last year on the 17th April, just about the time we had the Pacem in Terris
day. And this year we were very fortunate to have on the twenty second
anniversary of the Pacem in Terris , and you have already heard about it. On
behalf of the Pacem in Terris Society at the United Nations, we have the
honour of presenting you, Mr Krishnamurti, the World Teacher, with the
United Nations 1984 Peace medal.
New York. United Nations 11th April 1985 |
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