FANA-FI-GAIA

Samhain (When the Veil is Thin)

October 31, 2023

9th Quarterly from the Ziraat Council

Note from the Council - Requiem for the Animals

Samhain traditionally marked for the Celts the end of the harvest and the beginning of winter. Eventually it merged with All Hallows Eve and coincided with All Saints‘ Day and All Souls‘ Day. It has now become the time of year to consider those who have gone before. 

All over Latin America on Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) grave yards swell with activity, celebration, offerings, feasts, flowers, candles and camp fires that burn long into the night as each cemetery becomes a sea of light. In the homes ofrendas (altars) are created for the departed and decorated with favorite foods and drink while the departed are invoked and kept alive by the stories that are remembered. It is said that a person does not die as long as their story continues to be told.

So friends, this is that day! Today I would like to suggest that we keep alive in our memories not only our close loved ones, but also all the beloved animals that have come and gone from this earth. In the midst of collapsing systems we find ourselves also in what seems to be the 6th mass extinction. What feelings of grief and sadness, or perhaps anger and hopelessness, this brings up for us! We want to be skillful with our response. We don’t want to repress or deny our feelings. We want to feel them and open to the reality of them. But we also want to use these feelings to propel us into ripe and good action. As we remember these incredible, glorious creatures, let us feel deeply into how we can best honor those that are still here with us. We bow down and give thanks. We offer our deepest gratitude and honor. And we vow to do what we can for those who remain here with us!


So friends, today’s Fana-fi-Gaia newsletter is a Requiem for the Animals. This is an opportunity to engage in both communal grief and collective positive action. As we respect, acknowledge and honor the lives that have passed, let us also transform loss into new forms of commitment.



The following was written by Joanna Macy in 1985 for the first Council of All Beings. Today we can add to this list: polar bears, elephants, tigers, whales, monarch butterflies, bees, and many more.


Love,

Darvesha

Requiem for the Animals

BESTIARY (from Thinking like a Moutain) Joanna Macy


The earth obey’d and straight  

Opening her fertile womb teem’d at a birth 

Innumerous living creatures, perfect forms, 

Limb’d and full-grown . . . 

John Milton, Paradise Lost, VII, 453


short-tailed albatross

whooping crane

gray wolf

peregrine falcon

hawksbill turtle

jaguar

rhinoceros

 

In Geneva, the international tally of endangered species, kept up to date in looseleaf volumes, is becoming too heavy to lift. Where do we now record the passing of life? What funerals or farewells are appropriate?

 

reed warbler

swallow-tail butterfly

Manx shearwater

Indian python

howler monkey

sperm whale

blue whale

 

Dive me deep, brother whale, in this time we have left. Deep in our mother ocean where once I swam, gilled and finned. The salt from those early seas still runs in my tears. Tears are too meager now. Give me a song . . . a song for a sadness too vast for my heart, for a rage too wild for my throat.

 

anteater

antelope

grizzly bear

brown bear

Bactrian camel

Nile crocodile

American alligator

 

Ooze me, alligator, in the mud whence I came. Belly me slow in the rich primordial soup, cradle of our molecules. Let me wallow again, before we drain your swamp, before we pave it over and blast it to ash.

 

gray bat

ocelot

marsh mouse

blue pike

red kangaroo

Aleutian goose

Audouin's seagull

 

Quick, lift off. Sweep me high over the coast and out, farther out. Don't land here. Oil spills coat the beach, rocks, sea. I cannot spread my wings glued with tar. Fly me from what we have done, fly me far.

 

golden parakeet

African ostrich

Florida panther

Galapagos penguin

Imperial pheasant

leopard

Utah prairie dog

 

Hide me in a hedgerow, badger. Can't you find one? Dig me a tunnel through leaf mold and roots, under the trees that once defined our fields. My heart is bulldozed and plowed over. Burrow me a labyrinth deeper than longing.

 

thick-billed parrot

zone-tailed pigeon

desert bandicoot

Southern bald eagle

California condor

lotus blue butterfly

 

Crawl me out of here, caterpillar. Spin me a cocoon. Wind me to sleep in a shroud of silk, where in patience my bones will dissolve. I'll wait as long as all creation if only it will come again—and I take wing.

 

Atlantic Ridley turtle

pearly mussel

helmeted hornbill

sea otter

humpback whale

monk seal

harp seal

 

Swim me out beyond the ice floes, mama. Where are you? Boots squeeze my ribs, clubs drum my fur, the white world goes black with the taste of my blood.

 

gorilla

gibbon

sand gazelle

swamp deer

musk deer

cheetah

chinchilla

Asian elephant

African elephant

 

Sway me slowly through the jungle. There still must be jungle somewhere, my heart drips with green secrets. Hose me down by the waterhole, there is buckshot in my hide. Tell me old stories while you can remember.

 

fan-tailed flycatcher

flapshell tortoise

crested ibis

hook-billed kite

bobcat

frigate bird

 

In the time when his world, like ours, was ending, Noah had a list of the animals, too. We picture him standing by the gangplank, calling their names, checking them off on his scroll. Now we also are checking them off.

 

ivory-billed woodpecker

brown pelican

Florida manatee

Canada goose

 

We reenact Noah's ancient drama, but in reverse, like a film running backwards, the animals exiting.

 

ferret

curlew

cougar

wolf

 

Your tracks are growing fainter. Wait. Wait. This is a hard time. Don't leave us alone!

Excerpt from Ziraat Reader

NAYAZ, revisited

(An inspired variation that came to Shamcher)



Beloved One,

Who plays in the rays of the Sun and through the waves of the air, I see you

and I feel you

in Nature, in others, and in myself.

Ziraati Changemakers

Kalama Reuter



If you are interested in a Sufi sangha around Earth care, we listen, support and use inspirations from a variety of sources to frame our zoom meetings. We rotate leadership so each of our concerns and growing edges can be given consideration. We may draw on practice, prayer, open sentences, dyad inquiry work and more, all at the leader’s discretion. We are a circle of caring hearts and find value in meeting once a month to keep our personal efforts for Gaia nourished. Please contact [email protected] for more information. 

 

Our inspiration springs from Joanna Macy’s beautiful framing of Active Hope. We are waking up to a whole new relationship with our world. This grows from Gratitude and what we cherish. We honor the pain of what we are losing, including the fear, anger and sorrow that we feel. We open to “suffering- with" because we realize our interconnectedness and our interdependence. If the bees die, how will our fruit trees be pollinated?  This time of crisis propels us to consider how we got to this point and search for solutions with a new perspective — what is sustainable, what is circular, what is right relations? We find a shift from centering our separate selves and rigid structures toward flows of relationships and live giving processes. We reorient to the desire for the welfare of all beings and allowing Earth’s self healing powers to take hold. We are called to action — to align our gifts with the world’s need. 

Keeping Up

Why You Shouldn’t Laugh Off Rebellious Orcas and Sea Otters Too Quickly

 https://www.counterpunch.org/2023/08/22/why-you-shouldnt-laugh-off-rebellious-orcas-and-sea-otters-too-quickly/


Ever Been Friends With a Cow? https://www.youtube.com/embed/Qep4af03wdA

Silly Bears and Odd Birds Among the 2023 Comedy Wildlife Photo Awards Finalists — See the Shots

This year's shortlist includes images of balancing otters, sunbathing sea lions, and other amusing critters

Read in People: https://apple.news/A24-e_v19SWSnM962xa_jXQ

What an Owl Taught Me About Life 

https://time.com/6320590/owls-nature-carl-safina


Even those of us who are aghast are enmeshed. It is easier to imagine the end of the world than how we will end our destructive habits.”

From our Ziraat Website

Awakening True Identity



https://www.ruhaniat.org/index.php/sacrament/2098-awakening-true-identity

Photo by Pir Shabda Kahn

Practice

From His Holiness the 17th Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje:

Before entering the supermarket, pause, and make the aspiration that your choices today will be beneficial to all: to the whole web and all the creatures and all the people.