The Only Diet for a
Peacemaker Is a Vegetarian Diet
Vegetarianism a key ingredient in the new
life of peace, compassion and nonviolence.
**John Dear, National Catholic Reporter.
AlertNet
In Fort Lauderdale, Fla., last week to speak at the National
Convention of Unitarian Universalists, I met my old friend Bruce Friedrich. We
spent eight memorable months together in a tiny jail cell, along with Philip Berrigan, for our 1993 Plowshares disarmament action. A
former Catholic Worker, Bruce is now one of the leaders of PETA, People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals. He gave a brilliant workshop on the importance of
becoming a vegetarian, something I urge everyone to consider.
I became a vegetarian with a few other Jesuit novices
shortly after I entered the Jesuits in 1982 and later wrote a pamphlet for
PETA, "Christianity and Vegetarianism." I based my decision solely on
Francis Moore Lappe's classic work, Diet for a Small
Planet, a book that I think everyone should read.
In it, Lappe, the great advocate
for the hungry, makes an unassailable case that vegetarianism is the best way
to eliminate world hunger and to sustain the environment.
At first glance, we wonder how that could be. But it's
undisputable. A hundred million tons of grain go
yearly for biofuel -- a morally questionable use of
foodstuffs. But more than seven times that much -- some 760 million tons
according to the United Nations -- go into the bellies of farmed animals, this
to fatten them up so that sirloin, hamburgers and pork roast grace the tables
of First-World people. It boils down to this. Over 70 percent of
Conscience dictates that the grain should stay where it is
grown, from
Meanwhile, eating meat causes almost 40 percent more
greenhouse-gas emissions than all the cars, trucks, and planes in the world
combined. (The world's 1.3 billion cattle release tons of methane into the
atmosphere, and hundreds of millions tons of CO2 are released by burning
forests due to dry conditions as in California or due to purposeful burns to
create cow pastures in Latin America.)
And global warming isn't the only environmental issue.
Almost 40 years ago, Lappe spelled out the
environmental consequences of eating meat in stark relief. But more recently,
her analysis received some high-power validation. The United Nations recently
published "Livestock's Long Shadow." It concludes that eating meat is
"one of the most significant contributors to the most serious environmental
problems, at every scale from local to global." And it insists that the
meat industry "should be a major policy focus when dealing with problems
of land degradation, climate change and air pollution, water shortage and water
pollution, and loss of biodiversity."
Much of our potable water and much of our fossil fuel supply
is wasted on rearing chickens, pigs, and other animals for humans to eat. And
over 50 percent of forests worldwide have been cleared to raise or feed
livestock for meat-eating. (A recent protest in
As a Christian, I became a vegetarian because of the Gospel
mandate of Matthew 25, "Whatever you did to the least of these, you did to
me" -- because I do not want my appetites to contribute to the ongoing
oppression of the world's starving masses. As a Catholic and Jesuit, I want
somehow to side with the poor and hungry.
But another issue arises, too, over the decades, I've
learned that our appetite for meat leads to cruelty to animals -- chickens
pressed wing-to-wing into filthy sheds and de-beaked, for example. And since
I've always espoused creative nonviolence as the fundamental Gospel value, my
vegetarianism helps me not to participate in the vicious torture and
destruction of billions of cows, chickens, and so many other creatures.
The chickens never raise families, root in the soil, build
nests, or do anything natural. Often they are tormented or tortured before they
are slowly killed, as PETA has repeatedly documented in its undercover
investigations -- for your chicken dinner or hamburger. (All this is documented
on a video narrated by Alec Baldwin, at www.Meat.org.)
Animals have feelings, they suffer; they have needs and
desires. They were created by God to raise their families and breath fresh air;
and if chickens to peck in the grass, if pigs to root in the soil. Today's
farms don't let them do anything God designed them to do. Animal scientists
attest that farm animals have personalities and interests, that chickens and
pigs are smarter than dogs and cats.
Animals figure in the Gospels. They brim with lovely,
respectful images of animals. Clearly Jesus was familiar with animals, and
cared for them, as he urged us to look at the birds of the air or be his sheep.
He even identified himself as "a mother hen who longs to gather us under
her wings."
And animals figure in the Hebrew Bible. Isaiah 11, a vision
of reconciled creation, dreams of a day when "the wolf shall be a guest of
the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; the calf and the young
lion shall browse together with a little child to guide them. The cow and the
beast shall be neighbors, together their young shall rest. The lion shall eat
hay like the ox. The baby shall play by the cobra's den and the child lay his hand on the adder's lair. There shall be no harm or
ruin on all my holy mountain, for the earth shall be
filled with knowledge of the God of peace, as water covers the sea."
(Isaiah 11:1-9)
A vision of a nonviolent world, all
creatures nonviolent, children safely at play with them, and no violence
anywhere. That is the peaceful vision of creation that we are called to
pursue -- in every aspect of our lives, from the jobs we hold, to our use of
gasoline and alternative energies, to what we eat and wear, say and do.
I admire the Bible's greatest vegetarian, Daniel, the
nonviolent resister who refused to defile himself by
eating the king's meat. He and three friends became healthier than anyone else
through their vegetarian diet. And they excelled in wisdom, for "God
rewards them with knowledge and skill in all learning and wisdom."
In his workshop at the Unitarian Universalists
convention, Bruce added another beautiful image, the Garden of Eden. The Bible
opens with a vision of paradise where God, animals, and humans recreate in
peace together. Clearly, the Bible calls us to return to that paradise.
And Bruce reminded us that from the beginning we are
directed to be vegetarians. Genesis
Biblical images and justice issues aside, there are medical
reasons to stop eating meat. Vegetarian diets help keep our weight down,
support a lifetime of good health and provide protection against numerous
diseases, including the
Dr. Dean Ornish and Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn both have 100 percent success in preventing and
reversing heart disease using a vegan diet. Meanwhile, Dr. T. Colin Campbell
writes that one of the leading causes of human cancer is animal protein. More,
vegetarians are also less prone to developing adult-onset diabetes. And then we
have to contend with the spread of Mad Cow disease and Avian
influenza. One could almost argue that the human body is not designed for
meat-eating.
But for me being vegetarian boils down to peacemaking. If you
want to be a peacemaker, Bruce said, reflecting the sentiments of Leo Tolstoy,
you will want to eat as peaceful a diet as possible. "Vegetarianism,"
Tolstoy wrote, "is the taproot of humanitarianism." Other great
humanitarians like Mahatma Gandhi, Albert Schweitzer and Thich
Nhat Hanh agree. The only
diet for a peacemaker is a vegetarian diet.
"Not to hurt our humble brethren, the animals,"
St. Francis of
So it was good to visit with my friend Bruce, and hear once
again the wisdom of vegetarianism. It's a key ingredient in the new life of
peace, compassion and nonviolence.
**John's autobiography, A Persistent Peace, (with a foreword
by Martin Sheen), is available Aug. 1. See also: www.persistentpeace.com.
John's pamphlet "Christianity and Vegetarianism" can be read online
at www.peta.org or free copies of the pamphlet or a free CD of John reading the
pamphlet can be ordered by sending an email to VegInfo@peta.org. You can listen
to or download John reading the pamphlet at www.ChristianVeg.com. See also:
www.johndear.org.
Source: The National Catholic Reporter Publishing Company
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