Winner 2013 Webby Awards for Best Political Website
June 18, 2013

 Choose a size
Text Size

Trending:     chris hedges     economy     nsa     politics     robert scheer
Most Read

The Terror Con

The FBI May Have Finally Found Jimmy Hoffa

Say Hello to the 'Super Rich'

This Will Not End Well

The Making of a Global Security State

Most Comments
Most Emailed

 * NEW! * The Making of a Global Security State
 * NEW! * Climate Change Puts Lake Life at Risk
 * NEW! * The Terror Con



The Unwinding


Truthdig Bazaar more items

 
Arts and Culture

All the Rest Is Commentary

Email this item Email    Print this item Print    Share this item... Share

Posted on Jul 27, 2010
love your neighbor

By Susanne Strimling

At the Jewish Community Center in Manhattan through July 30 is an exhibition called “All the Rest Is Commentary.” For this exhibit, Beth Grossman explores 12 Golden Rules from various world religions. She not only displays these rules, but engages people in conversations on topics related to the text in discussions called “table talks.” Grossman has used the metaphor of a tablecloth, as it represents the traditionally feminine aspects of society and because the table is a place where family and friends gather to discuss world issues such as religion, have general conversations and express gratitude.

I asked Beth Grossman about the motivation behind this work.

Beth Grossman: I was doing the research and found that every major religion has a version of the Golden Rule. Almost every famous intellectual and philosopher has at some point in time written something or commented upon the Golden Rules, maybe not calling it that, but in some ways referring to those kinds of issues. Yet, somehow, it is really hard for us to follow it.

So, I started asking everybody I knew, “What is the Golden Rule?” People said the damnedest things, like jokingly, “He who has the gold rules.” And I realized the reason why they said this was they really didn’t know the Golden Rules. Also, they were confusing the words, like saying, “Do unto others as they do unto you.” Or when I spoke with people about why it is so hard to follow the Golden Rules they would say, “Well I’m not going to do it until everybody else does—that would be stupid.” The other key piece I got out of my interviews was from the commandment of “Love your neighbor as yourself.” I found that people don’t really love themselves in this culture. The entire advertising industry has capitalized on that fact. You’re either too thin, you’re too fat, you’ve got pimples, you’ve got gray hair, thin hair, thick hair—whatever you have it’s not good enough to love yourself. So that is when I started to think, let me look at these text in an in-depth way.

Susanne Strimling: Can you elaborate about this specific rule and what greater meaning it might have?

BG: I think that there is a sense of loss of connection and this has made it harder to remember that we love ourselves. So we find other ways to act like we love ourselves: to buy something, to have the latest of whatever, or to have a lot of connections on Facebook, me and my 500 friends that I never talk to and I never see. I can look at that number growing and say I have 500 friends on Facebook. Or a lot of things make us think we love ourselves. In the conversations that I had, money came up a lot. For example, people would say we are working hard for our kids and by doing so we have a sense of loving our family. But in the end it is as if there is too much of nothing. Ultimately, it is the real face time and feeling connected to our family and friends that helps us feel that we are part of something bigger than ourselves and helps us feel that we are contributing to the world. I think those are the kind of factors that help us know that we love ourselves.

SS: How do the Golden Rules reflect the cultures that they originate from?

BG: The way that they are worded gives us a sense of the culture. “We are as much alive as the earth is alive” from the Native American tradition makes it clear that this is from an earth-based culture and imparts a sense that we are nothing if we don’t take care of our earth. It expands the rule from a more personal one to include Mother Nature. When I read “The heart of the person before you is a mirror, see there your own form” (Shinto), it reminds me of a Zen garden. This one, “No one of you is a believer until he desires for his brother that which he desires for himself” (Islam), tells me that in order to be a believer you need to accept a set of tenets and that it is important to be part of this community of believers, and it also tells me that it is patriarchal religion.

anyone as godwe are as muchwhat your fellow man

More Below the Ad

Advertisement

Get truth delivered to
your inbox every week.

Previous item: God Save Obama From Elisabeth Hasselbeck

Next item: Former Fugee Has High Hopes for Haitian Presidency



New and Improved Comments

If you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy.

By yours truly, July 29, 2010 at 3:27 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Dreamless Adrift The Undertow

so much suffering

but can one change the world

one not only can, one must

based on?

the golden rule

Report this

By peedeecee, July 29, 2010 at 3:15 pm Link to this comment

I would very much like to read the rest of the Strimling interview with Ms. Grossman. Does anyone know where it’s available for view?

I did go to the artist’s website - excellent, and I hope her renewal of moral truths spreads. We need it.

Report this
Peter Knopfler's avatar

By Peter Knopfler, July 28, 2010 at 8:44 pm Link to this comment

Tell that to the Muslim Jihad and their extreme desire to dominate the world and by death to America they feel they are superior, yes Irans Superier Being. Letsw not bury are heads in t5he vsand waiting to get runned over, Even the church didn`t behave for the last 2000 years, Raping deaf boys in wiscousin, St.John`s school for handicaps. This positive Rejection of reality, surprises me, at the moment when ww3 is around the corner, “What goes around comes around” and its commin back to haunt us. No excuses for the last 20 years of MISCHEVIOUS KILLINGS WORLDWIDE!, Golden Rule those who have the GOLD RULE!

Report this

By Roger Sandford, July 28, 2010 at 3:58 pm Link to this comment

Today I just finished ” 36 Arguments For The Existence Of God” by Rebecca Newberger Goldstein so I was tuned in to your article on the Golden Rule…which is ” Do Unto Others What You Would Wish Them To Do Unto You”.  Love others as you love yourself just does not cut it against the Golden Rule…Love is a word with many meanings and as you say many people have no idea how to love themselves and what it could mean in their lives. The Golden Rule is simple and concerned with activity and not open to much debate.
  The Golden Rule made me sit down and over a few weeks discover what my ethics were…I am amazed that I had never done it before.  Needless to say it hightened my awareness of the lack of ethics in our society…...especially institutions such as corporations , religions, the armed forces and politicians.  Truthdig is so valuable because of the paucity of ethics in our media so that correct information is hard to come by.

Report this

By bethgart, July 28, 2010 at 1:51 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Hello, this is Beth Grossman (the interviewed artist). Thank you Susanne Strimmling for your terrific interview. We had a rich conversation and this excerpt gives a just a taste of the fascinating issues that come up while considering this universal tenet.

Because my work as an artist is all about creating opportunities for dialog, I see potential for Truthdig readers to join in the conversation. I would like to ask for comments and stories about why it is hard to practice and live by the Golden Rule. Is the Golden Rule truly golden? “Love your neighbor as yourself.” How do I know that you want to be loved the way I would like to be loved? What can really work as a universal rule for humanity?

Please feel feel to tell your stories of times you practiced living by the Golden Rule or a time when someone else did and the impact it had on you.

Thanks for joining in. If you would like to learn more about this project and the participatory performance art events that took place in conjunction with this exhibit, please visit http://www.bethgrossman.blogspot.com

Keep thinking! Beth Grossman

Report this

By IGELLE ELIAS TERHEMEN, July 28, 2010 at 7:55 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

This is one of the most controvervisial commentary on any verse of th Holy Bible.Concise in approach, unique in thinking and above all precise to ùmodern time theology.

Report this

By Apostolos, July 28, 2010 at 6:12 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

The “Golden Rule” Exhibition” is an antithesis of what is transpiring in the occupied terrtories.

Report this
Newsletter

sign up to get updates


 
 
 
 
Join the Liberal Blog Advertising Network
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
© 2013 Truthdig, LLC. All rights reserved.