What does it mean to be good ancestor?

IUMH Reflection at the service on April 14th, 2024, on the presentation by the GA Keynote Speaker, Roman Krznaric

‘What does it mean to be good ancestor?’ This is the question posed by the keynote speaker, Roman Krznaric, at the GA Conference last week. A question he adopts and adapts from the medical researcher who developed the first effective and safe polio vaccine in 1955, Jonas Salk. When Salk thought about the global threats of the 1950s (nuclear war, or destruction of natural environments), he argued that we would successfully confront and overcome these threats only by engaging in long-term thinking: that is, by looking at the potential consequences of our actions not just on the immediate future, but on future centuries. Salk framed it as the question: ‘Are We Being Good Ancestors?’ whereas Krznaric adapts the question to ask ‘How Can We Be Good Ancestors?,’ or, how can we combat what he calls ‘the tyranny of the now’ perpetuated by pervasive short-term thinking. And Krznaric underscores that being a good ancestor has to entail a focus on ‘we,’ on a collective pronoun. To translate long-term thinking into meaningful practice, the priority must be on what we can do together, on how our individual practices contribute to a collective goal, and on identifying long-term goals that transcend the self.

As Krznaric shows, it’s not difficult to see the harmful consequences of short-term thinking at a societal level. Think about the impact of politicians’ myopic focus on policies designed for electoral gains. Such political presentism, or short-term thinking, is at work when governments opt for the quick fix of locking up lawbreakers rather than dedicating time and resources to address deeper social and economic causes of crime.

Krznaric uses powerful metaphors and analogies that underscore the irresponsibility and selfishness of short-term thinking. He states that we’re effectively ‘colonizing the future’ if we continue to live without adequate attention to the centuries ahead. A colonialist pillaging of the future by future-dumping the fallout from our policies and practices (be it higher rates of incarceration, ecosystem collapse, technological risk and nuclear waste). And we’re doing this AS IF nobody will be living in these future centuries. Here, his analogy of ‘colonizing time’ draws on the legal doctrine of terra nullius (nobody’s land), the doctrine that British colonizers of Australia invoked, ignoring the indigenous populations living there. Now, K. argues, too often societies function as if the future is tempus nullius (nobody’s time).

However, Krznaric’s talk was not one of doom and gloom. Rather, as implied by his question ‘How can we be good ancestors?,’ he is full of hope, fired by a deep and active commitment to finding outcomes we value, identifying strategies that work. He proposes 6 ways of exercising our ‘acorn brains’ to engage in long-term thinking that will enable us to be ‘good ancestors’ and provides examples from both the past and the present. I’m not going to look at all six, but instead, introduce ways that his strategies may be relevant to our collective life together, locally, nationally and globally, as Unitarians:

1. Cathedral Thinking:

Krznaric uses the shorthand of ‘cathedral thinking’ to evoke the long-term vision present in sacred architecture in the Middle Ages. He uses it as a metaphor, or analogy, for the type of long-term planning extending beyond our lifetimes, but certainly not limited to construction: cathedral thinking can undergird public policy, science and culture, and can guide grassroots social movements just as much as it generates the blueprints for top-down planning. Kzrnaric sees striking examples of ‘cathedral thinking’ at work in many enduring and transformative projects undertaken in the past and present: be it social movements, urban design, or scientific endeavors. In science, he points to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault in Norway, opened in 2008, with over 1 million seeds representing 6,000 species housed in an indestructible rock bunker designed to survive at least 1000 years. Moving back in history, K. cites the building of the 82 miles of modern sewer system in London in the 1850s, still in use today, and that put an end to what was popularly known as ‘The Great Stink’ of 1858. In the early 19th century, decades of depositing of sewage into the Thames reached a crisis after multiple cholera outbreaks. A subsequent absence of rain led to sewage deposits six feet deep on the slopes of the Thames. This, in turn, precipitated a massive public health emergency. Thanks to the long-term thinking on the part of the engineer, Joseph Bazalgette, who predicted population growth, the system was built twice as large as needed at the time to handle this, and used the newly invented Portland cement that was 50% more expensive, yet much more durable since it strengthens on contact with water.

While we may not be directly engaging in ‘cathedral thinking’ at such scale, K’s writings do prompt some questions for us.

What are the types of ‘cathedral thinking’ that we, as Unitarians, want to participate in locally, nationally or globally? When we think that in 19th century London, it took an acute and catastrophic public health crisis to activate ‘cathedral thinking,’ we need to ask what most effectively catalyzes such long-term planning? Is the generating of a sense of impending crisis the most effective way to argue for long-term system change? Or, does positive and optimistic messaging about a better future more effectively rouse people to action? How do these questions relate to Unitarianism in the UK today?

2. Development of a ‘Legacy Mindset’:

On your Order of Service, we’ve put the Maori proverb, ‘I walk backwards into the future with my eyes firmly fixed on the past.’ These words express the Maori sense of a powerful living chain of intergenerational linkage that travels forwards as well as backwards. The Maori world view, together with many indigenous worldviews, requires respect for the traditions and beliefs of previous generations while also being mindful of those who are yet to come. Being mindful entails asking how our everyday practices today can benefit, or harm, future generations. Through such mindfulness in the ‘now,’ Krznaric argues, we cultivate a legacy mindset central to being a ‘good ancestor.’ And K. emphasizes that by a ‘legacy mindset,’ he’s referring not to something we leave (as in a will), and not a family affair, but to something we grow through a daily practice in our lives and a legacy that benefits those outside our kin.

And here, he gives the example of The Green Belt Movement in Kenya launched by Nobel Laureate, Wangari Maathai in 1977 for women’s empowerment and conservation. To date, over 51 million trees have been planted. At her death in 2011, 25, 000 women had been trained in forestry skills, and today 4, 000 community groups work to promote sustainable living. In our own lives, many of us already engage in mindful practices that grow our own legacy mindset, be it in the way we shop, the way we vote, in rewilding projects, in the charities we choose to donate to: all of these mindful actions and practices, Krznaric argues, can help us become good ancestors and to ask ourselves about the legacies we want to grow for future generations.

3. Intergenerational Justice:

Here, Krznaric draws on the Native American concept of ‘seventh-generation thinking.’ According to Oren Lyons, chief of the Onondaga Nation, all decisions in their council ask, ‘Will this be to the benefit of the seventh generation?’ This practice focuses primarily on ensuring a healthy environment for their descendants and the limiting of exploitation of natural resources. And this practice of ‘seventh-generation thinking’ and deep stewardship is one that Krznaric contrasts with the economic and policy-making principle known as ‘discounting’ where future benefits are given less value compared to current benefits. Yet is it realistic to take an indigenous concept like ‘seventh generation thinking’ and give it meaning and traction in our high-velocity consumer-driven societies today?

K. argues ‘Yes, absolutely!’ He gives the persuasive Japanese example of Future Design, a political movement that is directly inspired by ‘seventh generation thinking.’ Future Design has been pioneering citizen assemblies in municipalities across Japan. It functions through asking one group of each assembly to imagine they are residents in 2060, and to discuss the implications of a potential policy from that perspective. Results of this experiment show that those thinking as imagined ‘future residents’ develop far more progressive and radical policy plans for their cities than those thinking from the present. And particularly in the areas of environmental and health care policy. Future Design aims to establish Departments of the Future in all local governments, and the central government.

Another example is the Future Generations Commissioner in Wales, a role established in 2015 under the Well-Being for Future Generations Act. Sophie Rowe, the current holder, reviews policy in areas ranging from housing and education to transport and health, to ensure that policies meet the needs of the present without compromising the abilities of future generations to meet their needs. She opposed the £1.6 billion extension of the M4, arguing that it was a ‘twentieth-century solution’ failing to promote a low carbon solution. And her opposition was instrumental in scrapping the project. She has been a vocal proponent of preventative care, arguing that without this, the NHS is really a ‘national illness service.’ And she has inspired others to follow her lead, most notably the British anti-poverty activist and founder of the Big Issue, John Bird. Driven by a conviction that climate change is hitting the poor the hardest, he has made a case for establishing a Future Generations Commissioner for the UK.

Both Bird and Krznaric emphasize that ‘seventh generation thinking’ would ensure that younger people have a greater say themselves in changing the future: K. would like to see citizens aged 12 and older randomly selected to participate in ‘good ancestor’ assemblies, or inter-generational juries, modelled on the Japanese Future Design Project. Such ‘good ancestor’ assemblies would have the authority to delay or veto policies that impacted negatively on the basic rights of future people. And he has also proposed replacing our Upper House of Lords with, instead, a Good Ancestor Assembly. And finally, the ‘seventh generation thinking’ is active in the giving of rights to nature, as in the case of New Zealand where the Whanganui River has been given the same legal status as a person to protect it from future ecological violation.

In this rapid overview of some of the ways Krznaric proposes that we commit to being ‘good ancestors,’ they may seem utopian or unrealizable. And yet perhaps in concluding, we might think about the words of Uruguayan writer, Eduardo Galeano on utopian thinking: ‘Utopia lies at the horizon. When I draw nearer by two steps, it retreats two steps. If I proceed ten steps forward, it swiftly slips ten steps ahead. No matter how far I go, I can never reach it. What, then, is the purpose of utopia. It is to cause us to advance.’

Written and delivered at the Ipswich Unitarian Annual Meeting, 4 – 6 April, 2024 by Liz Constable

'Future of the Past' by Ali Mercer

The Future of the Past

Part One

We are the living products of our past; walking, talking bits of history. Our bodies contain the elements blasted into being at The Big Bang; they carry the signatures of all the food we’ve eaten and the water water we’ve drunk. We have been shaped by our environment and as humans have evolved, we’ve shaped that environment in our turn, creating a different world for the next generation to grow up in.

Our homes, schools, workplaces; the streets, villages, towns and cities; the countryside we value as natural but which is 99% man-made; it all shapes us every day. We walk in the past.

It’s not just the physical realm which shapes us. By accident of birth, we are born into a human body of some shape and colour, into a family which may be stable or not, which is itself part of a wider society with all its attendant requirements and expectations. In our bid to survive, we learn to conform to the patterns of that society, but there will be many challenges.

Depending on where that baby is born, it will grow up very differently. A female child in some parts of the world can be so unwanted, she is left to die. In many places, she will grow up under the strict control of a male dominated society, never realising her potential. If she is lucky to be born into a fairer society, she may succeed in some field, despite the obstacles in her way. To be homosexual may mean living with anything from personal and institutional discrimination, to being in daily fear for your life because of the beliefs and traditions of the society you live in.

A child of colour may grow up never seeing a white person, or forever be the second-class citizen in a country where they are a minority. Other children may not even have a home to call their own, often unwelcome strangers in a world where artificial borders divide up the earth. The Roma, Kurds, Uighur and Rohingya are peoples whose names we know because of the struggles they face in trying to survive in a present shaped by a history which excludes or persecutes them for who they were.

As more people are forced to leave their homelands to find safe refuge in other parts of the world, they face the discrimination brought about by lessons others grew up with: that foreigners are stupid, unclean, untrustworthy, lazy, frightening and unwelcome. The propaganda of two World Wars, vilifying Jews, Roma and Africans amongst others, lingers long in cultural memory. The echoes of Empire keep some in a false sense of superiority over others.

In religious matters too, we live in the past. For some, religious affiliation is a given: they will grow up within the dominant religion of their country. Others may be born into a family whose traditions see them as a religious minority, such as Christians in a Muslim dominated country. Which tradition is dominant in the present day is a direct consequence of the past: who conquered who, which faction seized power when. The advent of Protestantism in Europe centuries ago, made the creation of the Church of England a possibility when Henry VIII and his cronies wanted to wrestle power and money away from the powerful established church.

As Unitarians, our traditions are part of a long history of religious dissent against past forms of religion dominant at different times. Some of that dissent was based on fundamental disagreements about theology or practice: some of the fissures which fragmented the Christian church changed the very substance of people’s beliefs. Others were ‘fake fights’ over petty subjects, perhaps a cover for personal power struggles. Disagreements and fragmentation seem inescapable where human beings are concerned!

It’s interesting to note that the words we heard from Rev. McDonald Ladd were spoken in 2016, and yet today they seem as relevant as ever: we still hear the same responses to Black Lives Matter, still hear the same tired old excuses of “They were different times” or “You can’t judge historical figures by modern standards” or “But look at all the good things these people did”. Or the best one of all: “You can’t rewrite history”, which is ridiculous as ‘history’ has always been and will continue to be rewritten. The trope that ‘history is written by the victors’ makes the history of the downtrodden no less valid or important.

Part Two

Who knows where the time goes indeed. Time is a funny thing, sometimes stretching out interminably, while at other times it seems to go winging by ever faster! We simplify it in our minds as a single line, past at one end, present in the middle, future at the other end. But I get the feeling it’s more complex than that, as if our place on that line jumps about, or perhaps the line itself gets twisted and we live in this strange kind of past-present. What seems certain is that the tie to our past is unbreakable and that examining that past is important to our future. 

But examining history can be painful. It can dig up uncomfortable truths which rock the foundations of our present days lives. And so it should. The pain experienced by people today is a direct consequence of past decisions taken. We think of progress as a never ending trajectory towards improvement, but it’s not. It’s just change, some of it is beneficial, some is not. 

Take for instance our way of living. There’s no doubt that the Industrial Revolution, technical innovation and medical advances have given many of us us access to homes, work, transport and a longer, more healthy lifespan. But they have also brought about a decrease in environmental cleanliness, over-use of resources, a disconnect between human beings and the world they inhabit and a still-widening gap between the richest and the poorest.

In recent times, we have as a society been faced with the anger and demands for justice from those who have been wronged or believe themselves to be. When we hear of investigations into ‘historical child sex abuse’ we have to acknowledge both that it happened then and still happens now. When a terrorist commits an atrocity as their way of being heard, we are forced to examine where that level of hatred derives from and our part in creating it. When people of colour and their allies pull down statues of slavers, we have to look at the society which chose to put that statue up and the society which chose to leave it here for generations.

Admitting faults strikes at the heart of who we are, personally and at the level of wider society and national identity. How can we sing of Britannia proudly ruling the waves at the same time as acknowledging that our supremacy allowed us to profit from the use and abuse of so many others? How do we celebrate our heroes while admitting that they were terribly racist or sexist? How do we challenge the order of the society we live in without making ourselves unwanted outsiders? I’m not sure the answers are simple, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t ask the questions and explore the possibilities.

When we hear the voices of the oppressed rise up, we must listen. We have as individuals chosen to put ourselves under the Unitarian name at a time when we are free to practice our faith as full members of society. It wasn’t always so. Unitarians and others have known the bitterness of being outsiders, of being restricted and even persecuted. Perhaps that should make us more keenly aware of the importance of examining the past and the way it shapes our present.

We have at various times made changes which were not always comfortable for everyone: even the lighting of the chalice, so central to our services and identity now, is a recent addition which some saw as a part of other religions’ traditions, not ours. We are faced with questions about what we want to bring with us to give to those who come after and what we think we should leave behind.

As a faith group we also have to recognise where we stand, where we have done well and not so well. We helped shape the changes to laws on same-sex marriage, but perhaps we haven’t always been as welcoming to strangers as we like to think we are. We pride ourselves on our liberal, inclusive values, but if our churches and meeting houses are largely full of white, middle class, heterosexual people, we perhaps need to check that we aren’t just talking the talk.

As members of a wider society too, we should take a look at ourselves, personally and as a group. Are we prepared to stand by our principles, even if it makes life hard for ourselves? Will we challenge the status quo, call out the people and structures which continue to treat people unfairly? Jesus became the enemy of the establishment, both political and religious, unwilling to change his standards even if that might have out him in a position to make positive changes. We have found ourselves a home in a liberal religious tradition which has a tradition of standing up and questioning what it sees as wrong: members have been arrested, jailed, beaten and even died as they have joined their voices with others to call for justice and change.

I don’t know in which year the Rev. Nick Teape wrote his words. I do know it was before I was born. I find it a little sad that those words are still such a challenge today, but also it gives me hope: hope that the world is still full of decent people who will Stand on the Side of Love, who will be brave enough to try answering the big questions and look to make a new, happier, more peaceful and fair history for those who come next.

May it be so.