“In a place where
there are no heroes—be a hero!” This two thousand year old challenge by Hillel
the Elder, whom many consider to have been Jesus’ rabbi, is a staple of Jewish
learning. But how does one do this?
The recent horror
at the Century 16 movie theater in Aurora, CO. called forth numerous heroes:
individuals who put the safety of others above their own, sometimes at the cost
of their own lives. Some of these heroes, like former sailor Jon Blunk and
firefighter Jennifer Seeger, had training upon which they could draw. But what
about the rest? And, more importantly, what about you?
I keep asking
myself what I would have done had I been in that theater during the massacre.
While I can indulge in fantasies of heroism, there is nothing in my past to suggest
I would have been a hero. The military training I had is decades old, and
prepared me to serve my country but necessarily my neighbor in a cinema killing
field. Would I have reached out to help the fallen, or merely to push them out
of my way as I scrambled for the exit? I don’t know.
An acquaintance of
mine who never goes anywhere without a gun said he would have drawn his pistol
and fired toward the muzzle flashes until the murderer was down. In all the
confusion of the moment, however, I suspect he would have only added to the
body count. And besides, while taking down the killer is heroic, the actions of
unarmed civilians protecting the lives of others is no less so.
The closest thing
we have to a national civilian “hero training” program is The Heroic
Imagination Project directed by Stanford University professor Dr. Phil Zimbardo.
In 1971 Dr. Zimbardo showed us how to turn male college undergrads into
sadistic prison guards in his Stanford Prison Experiment (prisonexp.org); today
he is showing us how to turn ourselves into heroes (heroicimagination.org). The
key is breaking down the mechanism that prevents us from making the transition
from knowing what’s right to doing what’s right. This is something would–be
heroes must practice daily.
A few weeks ago I
was teaching in Rome, Italy. One evening I witnessed a traffic accident. A
young woman on a motor scooter tried to pass a city bus on the right as the bus
was turning to the right. The bus clipped the scooter and the woman was thrown
to the ground several yards in front of me.
It took a few
moments for me to make sense of what had happened, and by the time I did a
crowd had already formed around the fallen woman. While I thought about joining
in and helping, it seemed that there was nothing I could do that wasn’t already
being done, so I did nothing. Then I noticed two police officers directing
traffic only sixty feet from the accident. They too did nothing. Several people
were calling to the police to get their attention, but this wasn’t working. I
don’t speak Italian, but it seemed a simple matter to walk over to the officers
and get them to notice what was happening. As I set out to cross the street
toward the officers they became aware of the situation, jumped into their car,
and drove to the accident. True, it would have taken them less time to just
walk across the street, but at least they were on their way. I stepped back to
the curb.
Was my action in
any way “heroic”? Not at all. But it was an action, and that alone is something.
Based on Dr Zimbardo’s data passivity rather than fear and cowardice is the
real enemy of heroism, and if we are to prepare ourselves for heroism we must
practice overcoming this passivity constantly. Here is what I suggest for
starters:
Pay attention as
you go through your day and look for and take advantage of opportunities to be positively
engaged in the life around you: help someone in need; thank a person who has
helped you or who is doing something that helps the community: picking up
trash, caring for the city’s greenways, trees, and plants; compliment someone
on a job well done; and, yes, step in to protect someone who is being bullied
or mistreated. The biggest impediment to being a hero is a lifetime of
passivity. As Torah urges us: “Don’t stand idle while your neighbor bleeds,”
(Leviticus 19:16). Practicing small acts of positive engagement will help
prepare us for the great acts of heroism to which we may be called.
4 comments:
You ARE a Hero. You may not run into a crowd with a gun blazing (thankfully)- or into a group already crowded around a person in need of specific assistance - You offer cutting edge Truth to anyone willing to consider . . you stand, quite often for Right Thought when others express their preference for self serving traditions . . you are one willing to lead the way . . You are one of my heroes -g-
Thanks for that, G.
I agree with Maggid. There are many forms of bravery. In this world of anonymous internet commentary and anonymous contributions to political front groups in the name of “freedom of speech,” it is bravery to speak your mind honestly and forth rightly with name and picture on potential controversial subjects.
I had an experience that called into question my heroic abilities. I was in tour group when a man I was looking directly at in a crowded room suddenly closed his eyes, slid down the wall, and toppled into the cold fireplace. I stood there a few feet away, within reaching distance and did not move. I had never seen someone pass out before in real life and it was like my brain was stuck grasping the reality of what was happening. By the time I was able to react, several people were at his aid and it was best to get out of the way. But this experience shook my fantasy belief that if put in a catastrophic situation I would be heroic in my reaction. Shock, surprise, disbelief, and unpreparedness do affect the mind’s ability to cope and react.
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