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Doors of Perception: How Zionists See Only What They Want to See By Paul Balles Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 31, 2011A few years ago, I
was fascinated by this very short story:
One day a man opened
the garage door, which startled a large butterfly. It flew immediately to
its perceived escape, the circle-topped window where it frantically tried to
exit through the invisible wall of closed glass.
The man raised the
third-car garage door in hopes of aiding its escape. This caused the
butterfly to fly higher and higher and become entangled in a spider web. Fearful that it
would remain entangled in the web, the man selected a long-handled broom to
assist him escaping the tangled threads.
At this, the
butterfly returned to furiously pumping his wings and banging into the
glass, which was, in his perspective, the pathway of escape, but remained
his cage. That story had me
thinking about how much the butterfly's behaviour was a paradigm for human
behaviour. Not only butterflies
have the problem of seeing new solutions. It's a challenge that applies to
all creatures large and small, including humans.
We only see what we want to see. We want to
see what we already know. Realizations
like these have fed the spread of the cliché “thinking outside of the box". The spread of the
cliché highlights the fact that it's nearly impossible to change other's
perceptions of anything--of you, your favourite food, political candidate,
TV programme or other pastime without a complete change in the way they
think.
Aldous Huxley, author of
The Doors of Perception,
wrote “There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between
are the doors of perception.”
The significance of
both the story and Huxley's comment is illustrated by another Huxley note:
“To travel is to discover that everyone is wrong about other countries." For instance, the
ideas that one has about the Israeli-Palestinian problem are
incomprehensible to writers and commentators who have never visited Israel
and Palestine. Even those who have visited Israel with guides will have their perceptions pre-ordained to fit those of the guides.
This explains why American congress people who have
been on sponsored trips to Israel, but not to Palestine, have opened the
doors of perception to only Israel.
"There are quiet
places also in the mind. But we build bandstands and factories on them.
Deliberately-—to put a stop to the quietness," wrote Huxley. In short, we resist
opportunities to see things differently, to expand our visions beyond the
familiar.
It is impossible for arch Zionists like Harvard law
professor Alan Dershowitz to see that Gilad Atzmon in
The Wandering Who? is prying open
visions of Jewish identities of which Dershowitz can't conceive. What makes Atzmon's
awakening so difficult for some to understand is that it takes one outside
the ordinary open doors of perception. In America,
President Obama's major problem is also one of perception. He needs to
recall the public's perception of him when they elected him. Instead, he has been
trying to change others' perception of him by being the negotiator with
people who refuse to negotiate. Obama was elected by
voters who have no power other than the power to vote. He has been trying to
please those in power only to be perceived as a weakling by both those in
power and the voters. Wrote William Blake,
"If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to man as
it is, infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things
through narrow chinks of his cavern." We need to learn to
see what others see, know what others know and feel what others feel. |
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