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Inclusion

Introduction

In this selection of past Radix submissions, students call for nuanced, caring approaches through which all are treated with dignity.

Selected Artwork and Writing

Universal Compassion and Radical Empathy

Sikh langar event
Photo by Rhiane Persaud, Fall 2023 issue
In 鈥淔rom Competition to Compassion鈥澨(Fall 2024, pg. 8-9) Aditya Sharma compiles an array of quotes from sacred texts, each of which touches upon the importance of care and compassion without prejudice. He writes, 鈥淐ompassion is the essence of all religions. In the Bhagavad Gita 12:13, Lord Krishna describes the attributes of devotees dear to him, saying 鈥淭hose devotees are very dear to Me who are free from malice, and who are friendly, and compassionate towards all living beings." In Luke 6:35, Jesus Christ commands 鈥淏ut love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back." Chapter six verse twelve of Tattvarth Sutras, a Jain text, mentions that compassion towards living beings brings happiness. Dhammapada, a sacred Buddhist text says 鈥淣ever here by enmity are those with enmity allayed. They are allayed by amity; this is the timeless truth." Such teachings can be found in all the spiritual philosophies throughout the world. Therefore, just as the sun shines equally on all beings, flowers spread out fragrance for all, and water equally quenches thirst without any bias, let鈥檚 also be compassionate to all beings regardless of differences to bring meaning to our human lives.鈥

Embracing Human Complexity and Diverse Identities

In 鈥淎 Humble Hymn to Something鈥 (Summer 2017 pg. 17), Alice Damiano meditates on the value of breaking down rigid categories that work to exclude and seeking to honor experiences and identities outside dualistic frameworks:

I feel so distressed

when I hear someone saying

鈥淓verything or nothing

and there鈥檚 no third way鈥

Why should I limit

one thousand options to two

why should I approximate

until I lose the clue

Why should I label people,

as well as myself

as perfect or awful,

as normal or strange

Why should I replace

a colour picture with black and white

why should I describe the world

in darkness and light鈥

Inclusion as the Language of Cultivating Connection & Relationships

hand reaching out of a tree
Photo by Hugo-Victor Solomon, Winter 2022 issue
Victoria Taittinger鈥檚 poem, 鈥淭he Language that Belongs鈥 (October 2015 pg. 14-15), tells a story focused on how the desire to connect can allow us to transcend language barriers:

For if you don鈥檛 belong you cannot be?

Yet be you must,

in words you can.

You see, the wheels once turned into a room.

Lone room of one. Lively and well, in they went.

Neck braced, immobile, she lay.

鈥淣o French, no English鈥 the lone woman said.

She looked, I saw. Belong I thought, insist.

Resist she did not, Farsi it was.

Iran I did not see. Swipe of my screen.

At Salam, a smile. To Haleh shoma chetor ast?

A nod, a tear, hope in a glim.

Smiles returned, a life鈥檚 battle message passed, good luck my friend.

Inch鈥橝llah you replied, Inch鈥橝llah you spoke.

I do not know of any God. I do not know where you begone.

But there, on the clean cold clinical linoleum, we spoke and we belonged.

Language tied and cast its net. For if there is one in who I know, albeit distrust be such.

Language divine is such. For sometimes, if the language we all speak we hear, then we can be.

Language in Babel did not disperse. For two hearts know the Language that belongs.

Putting Aside Prejudices & Crafting a Space of Belonging

Michael Clarke鈥檚 鈥淪tereotype, a Definition鈥 (November 2014 pg. 6) addresses the flawed and biased nature nature of stereotypes. An antidote is "seeing with Love:"

A static formulation of an individual;

hearsay.

To anticipate behaviour without prior substantiation.

A judgement formed a priori.

To disallow complexity.

To indulge in oversimplicity.

To deny Truth its gray vestments and vague vespers.

To yield to Confirmation Bias; see Pattern Recognition

(Psychology).

To indiscriminate.

To inherit the assumptions of one鈥檚 immanent culture.

To unwittingly bastardize a people; see xenophobia.

To yield to Arguments from Authority; see filial piety.

To believe without knowledge.

To understand without compassion.

To see without Love.

To laugh without smiling.

Edward Ross鈥檚 鈥淪hells鈥 captures painful feelings of rejection when others are unable to see beyond outward appearance (November 2014 pg. 17):

flower wreath
Art by Jennifer Hamilton, Mar. 2013 issue
My shell is thick.

It is my skin.

It keeps me warm in winter wind.

It is my safety,

and it鈥檚 my home,

but outside of it

I can not roam.

My shell is the part

that most will see.

It does not make up

the whole of me.

The outside part

feels like a gaffe.

When others see it,

they only laugh.

I did not know

that so much pain

could come from those

who are so vain.

They judge my shell,

with a long leer,

for its colour, its shape,

why is unclear.

If it is green or red,

or short or tall,

it does not mean

you know me at all.

I am who I am.

I am not someone else.

Get to know me first.

Judge me for myself.

Envisioning Heaven

hands forming a heart
Photo by Josh Sterlin, Mar. 2013 issue
Patricia Kamara imagines the afterlife as an inclusive space in "Heaven" and invites other students into cross faith dialogue on this topic听(Spring 2020 pg. 12):

If I were to have a heaven it would be open to all

As long as you don鈥檛 make other people fall

My heaven would help the people on Earth

to see that maybe their heaven is right where they are

I鈥檇 visit hell and Earth also as often as I should

Because I鈥檓 only human and I might need to remember why my heaven is so good

If you had a heaven what would yours be? Would I be in it? Would you have lots of trees?

Write me a letter and mail it to my heaven

Resisting Cultural and Social Exclusion

Sarah Bell advocates for Indigenous peoples and their rights in "Untitled" (January 2014 pg. 13), a call for Truth and Reconciliation, compassion, and inclusion:

people aren鈥檛 meant to be shot at turning brother

against brother

people aren鈥檛 meant to hit one another

to leave each other battered and bruised

people aren鈥檛 meant to walk around with broken

hearts

and to see nothing but pain

people aren鈥檛 meant to be forced to speak another language

people aren鈥檛 meant to be taken away from their

mothers, their fathers

people aren鈥檛 meant to be missing

to be murdered

to be taken advantage of

to be stripped of all that they know

to be reduced to a shell

so how do we undo the pain that has been wrought upon these people

perhaps let鈥檚 start with

people were meant to be connected to one another,

to the earth

and to their people

to speak in their native tongue

to sing songs that have been passed on and on from

mothers to daughters and fathers to sons

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