JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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For much of my life, I considered funerals a barbaric rite, useful
mainly as a means of supporting various entrepreneurs who commercialized
death. Evelyn Waugh’s “The Loved Ones” was my textbook on this subject.
Then I got older and -- in some areas, at least -- a mite wiser. In
paying last respects to a growing number of friends, I took another look
at the process by which we pass along our loved ones from this life to
the mystery that awaits. And I slowly accepted two points about that
process. First, a funeral is for the benefit of the living, not the dead,
who are beyond caring. And, second, it provides a transition -- a kind of
breathing space -- for the living between the shock of the death of a
loved one to whatever life can be made by the survivors beyond.
And so it occurs to me that we all attended a national funeral over
this past weekend. There was an open casket of twisted steel and powdered
concrete on display on television throughout the weekend: the corpse of
security as we have known it since Pearl Harbor. And there were 5,000
members of our national family buried beneath that steel and concrete.
And so we grieved, privately and in a multitude of services throughout
the land.
But there is also an aftermath of funerals. We come home, surrounded
by friends and family who have brought a cornucopia of food and drink to
our house. And we stand about and eat and drink and talk, mostly about
the way it was. We tell funny stories, loving stories, and hug a lot and
slowly drift off into the twilight, into our own homes, with our own
memories. And for a few hours, the edge of death is softened enough to
allow the beginnings of a transition into a different life within the
parameters of the same life. There is no lessening of grief; the loved
one isn’t there. But at best, the first faint stirring appears that it
might be possible -- just might be -- to one day begin to rebuild
something.
The transition that followed the services in the United States last
weekend has begun. Baseball is being played again. The stock market --
for better or worse -- is up and running. Airplanes are flying. Bits and
pieces of laughter are being heard. And we’ve turned, a little tenuously,
to some of the activities that made up our lives.
My regular poker game took place as scheduled Friday. We talked about
the events of the week, but we also drew to inside straights -- and
exulted if we got them. New York Mayor Giuliani, when asked Sunday what
those of us in the rest of the country could do to help his city, said:
“Come to New York. Go to our theaters. Eat in our restaurants. That would
help more than anything else.”
And so we begin to feel our way. We search in our garage for the flag
we put away three years ago -- or was it five? We watch television more
than we should and read the newspapers and magazines we’ve learned to
trust, finding more life and detail there than in all the hours of TV.
Last night, I turned off the television, put on a Mozart symphony and
actually gave it my full attention. And we think a lot.
I can’t help contrasting the transition that is taking place today to
the one that happened 60 years ago. There was solid ground on the other
side of that transition bridge then, offering firm things we could do.
There were planes and tanks to be manufactured and pilots and GIs to man
them. And behind that force, every citizen had a specific and useful
role.
Now we have smoke and haze and quicksand beyond the transition bridge.
Nothing is clear. We worry, properly, about getting into the quagmire of
another Vietnam. About emulating the monsters who have murdered our
family. About acting from either of the two places certain to be
counterproductive: outrage and despair. About whether a people accustomed
since Pearl Harbor to quick fixes can find the patience and forbearance
for what might be a long and frustrating campaign ahead.
And, after those of us so inclined seek help from God, we turn to the
one human element that seems to offer firm ground: a blessed and
expansive national unity. We see New York hipsters lining the streets to
hold up signs of love and encouragement for the drivers of the endless
line of trucks hauling out debris. We watch the coming together of our
elected officials in a common determination to find the best course of
action. We hear remarkable stories of bravery and selflessness by the
firefighters and police and all sorts of people trapped in the burning
buildings.
Because that unity is our refuge and strength, when the firm ground on
which it stands begins to show signs of cracking, we worry. When we hear
about the local primitives who terrorized a Newport Beach family with an
Arabic-sounding name with a series of threatening phone calls, we worry.
When we see a sign in a nearby frontyard that curses Afghanistan, we
worry.
And when Jerry Falwell says on television, with the firm backing of
Pat Robertson: “I really believe that the pagans and the abortionists and
the feminists and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to
make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU and People for the American
Way -- I point my finger in their face and say, ‘You helped this
happen,”’ then we really worry.
When we start using this national tragedy as a platform, co-opting
God’s name in the process, to blame other Americans we fear and hate,
then Osama bin Laden has won, no matter what happens to him.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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