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When we are willing to rest with trust on this earth, the great force of life will
begin to move through us. I saw this force of life in the midst of tremendous desolation
some years ago in the dry and barren land of the Cambodian refugee camps, which I had
visited to assist the refugees. After the Cambodian holocaust, only parts of families had
survived--a mother and three children, an old uncle and two nephews--and each was given a
little bamboo hut about four feet wide, six feet long, and five feet high. In front of
each hut was a little patch of land perhaps no bigger than one square yard. After only a
few months of camp life, next to most of the huts in their little squares of ground,
people had planted gardens. They would have a squash plant with two or three small squash
on it, or a bean plant, or some other vegetable. The plants were very carefully tended,
with little bamboo stakes for support. The tendrils of a bean plant would wind around the
stake and up over the roof of the house.
Every day each refugee family would walk a mile and stand for half an hour in a long
line at the pit well at the far end of the camp and carry back a bucket of water for their
plants. It was a beautiful, beautiful thing to see these gardens in the middle of this
camp in the dry season when you could barely believe that anything would grow on such a
hot barren field.
As these war-shattered families planted and watered their tiny gardens, they awakened
the unstoppable force of life. So can we! No matter what inner difficulties or suffering
we may experience, in tending to the darkness with compassion we will discover this same
unstoppable life force.
From Kornfield, Jack and Christina Feldman, "Soul Food",
Harper Collins 1991 |