Of butterflies and bombs
Bill Meredith
"... time and chance happeneth to us
all." Ecclesiastes
History records that on August 12, 1785,
Samuel Emmitt met with a group of local citizens
at Hockensmith’s Tavern and marked off a group
of lots from his estate to create the town of
Emmitsburg. It is further recorded that as the
evening went on, Mr. Emmitt was toasted
enthusiastically and often. Perhaps this is the
reason the streets of the town are off several
degrees from a perfect east-west direction;
however, they are close enough to it to
determine that when our new house was built
parallel to Lincoln Avenue, it would face
approximately north.
That is why, as I sat on my porch one
afternoon some 226 years later, I was
appropriately positioned to spot a Monarch
butterfly as it caught an updraft and soared
over the old house where we used to live. It had
been a hot day and there was no wind, but the
air was moving in local eddies as it cooled off;
and the Monarch came toward me with all the
purposefulness of a paper airplane, scarcely
moving its wings and wobbling back and forth as
it slowly lost altitude. It might have been
asleep and running on autopilot. By the time it
reached the yard it was only a few feet above
ground zero, and it glided over the walk and
onto the porch as if it expected the front door
to open and let it pass through the house and on
out the back. When that didn’t happen, it
showed its first sign of awareness; it began to
flutter back and forth, conveying a sense of
increasing urgency as it looked for a way to get
past the house. It tried going up, but the
ceiling was in the way; then as it explored the
front of the house and the side walls of the
porch again, its actions seemed to pass from
urgency to desperation. The only open path was
to go back the way it came, but it clearly was
determined not to do so. That was North, and it
had been there; it was South or bust. I finally
got up and chased it back out into the yard, and
then fortune changed in its favor; a breeze
caught it and carried it up and over the house.
I walked around to the back yard and watched it
drift placidly, irresistibly southward until it
was out of sight.
It is driven entirely by instinct; it has no
awareness of where it came from or where it is
headed. But it will husband its meager fuel
supply, soaring when the wind is in its favor,
tacking against it when necessary, hunkering
down to wait if the weather gets bad. Flying
actively only to get around obstacles, it will
move inexorably toward a secluded valley in the
mountains of central Mexico, where it has never
been before. The odds are not in its favor; most
likely, it will be mistaken for a meal by a
naive young blue jay, or get battered to pieces
in a storm, or die in one of the thousand other
ways nature offers. Yet there remains that one
small chance that it will complete the journey
and spend its winter amid thousands of its kind
who also beat those odds, hanging on a butterfly
tree and creating a scene of beauty beyond
description.
As living beings, the butterfly and I have
some things in common. We need food and shelter
to survive; we share a drive to perpetuate our
species. But beyond these generalities, our
worlds are very different. In the butterfly’s
world there is no right or wrong, no good or
evil; there is merely survival or death. Some
animals eat, and some are eaten. Some seasons
are mild; some bring storms, droughts or other
calamities. Whatever happens, the butterfly will
be only dimly aware; its actions are governed by
instincts that are programmed in its DNA, honed
and perfected by the fact that they allowed its
ancestors to survive. In my world, there are
still a few instinctive activities, but most of
the behavior of my species is based on conscious
decisions; we have a brain capable of learning,
and the freedom knowingly to select actions that
will help or harm others. The upside of this is
that we humans have the ability to create things
of great beauty or utility. The downside is that
we may create great evil.
In our rhetorical attempts to express our
revulsion at events such as the terrorist
attacks of September 11, we sometimes refer to
the perpetrators as animals. This is not a valid
comparison; no animal could have, or would have
done such a thing. Evil is a human quality, and
the potential for it exists in all of us. We see
evidence of this in the threats and vandalism to
Moslem citizens and institutions in our country
that followed the terrorist attacks. This is why
we must be especially conscious of how we
respond in the weeks and months ahead.
There is no question that a response must be
made, but it should consist of actions that will
not make things worse in the long term. Some of
our leaders appear to be aware of this; their
statements have begun to educate the public of
the complexity of combating an enemy who is
faceless, fanatical and dispersed among civilian
populations. Unfortunately, others have
responded with simplistic bravado and wild-west
metaphors that seem designed to prepare the
public for conventional military retaliation.
Such an approach might result in the capture or
death of some known terrorists, but the
inevitable civilian casualties would brand us
morally as no better than the terrorists
ourselves; and they would exacerbate the
anti-American sentiment that provides the
terrorists with their most effective support.
Amid the rush to declare war without knowing
whom it was to be declared against, many voices
were heard lamenting that our world has changed
and will never be the same. Such voices are
naive at best. We were appalled; we were
horrified, we were outraged when the terrorists
struck us; but only those who have been living
in cocoons should have been surprised. We did
not know precisely when, where or how, but we
had to know an attack was coming. Both our
intelligence forces, inadequate though they may
be, and the attackers themselves have been
telling us this would happen for at least the
past decade. So the world did not change on
September 11; only our awareness of reality
changed.
At times like these the butterfly world, with
its freedom from making decisions and its
simple, direct emphasis on survival, looks
attractive; but we cannot go there. We are stuck
in our own world, complex, dangerous,
contradictory as it is. We must use our
intelligence (the human, not the military kind)
to become aware of how our world really is, to
survive in it, and to make it a better place. We
do have that choice. It was good to see flags
flying; patriotism, not blindly militaristic but
consciously aimed at protecting our safety and
freedoms, is a value we sometimes have lost in
more cynical times. It was good to see the
outpouring of support and generosity that
occurred after the attacks; too often we have
been self-centered and uncaring when times were
better. These are the qualities our leaders must
foster if we are to have a chance of winning the
struggle we are in.
Note: Readers who attend the Emmitsburg
Presbyterian Church may recognize the
"butterfly story" at the beginning of
this article; it is from an essay written
several years ago, and has been quoted
occasionally by Rev. Ben Jones.