Main content

To Bear Witness

Lamentation, testimony and chant come together in a call to confront the spiritual questions of our time.

While we, as a species, grapple with ongoing legacies of racism and violence, and as biodiversity loss and the mass extinction of wildlife on earth accelerates, the call to bear witness becomes ever more necessary. What might it mean - for ourselves and the other beings on this planet - if we were able to sorrow, if we knew how to grieve? As things disintegrate around us, is bearing witness a final act of love we can offer our world?

鈥淟oving and grieving are joined at the hip,鈥 says spiritual activist and author Stephen Jenkinson. 鈥淕rief is a way of loving what has slipped from view. Love is a way of grieving that which has not yet done so.鈥

Biologist and philosopher Andreas Weber and poet and psychologist Anita Barrows reflect on what is lost as beloved species and places of wilderness continue to vanish; reparations scholar-activist Esther Stanford-Xosei grieves the genocide of communities that were the custodians of ways of living in harmony with the earth; and activist Kofi Mawuli Klu mourns the immense beauty of forests now destroyed.

Every waking moment is a requiem - not what we signed up for. But what did you sign up for? Into what were you initiated? Lacking in ceremony and ritual, grappling with legacies of undone spirit work and ancestral trauma, bearing witness to what is happening within ourselves and around us might 鈥渘ot be everybody鈥檚 idea of a good time鈥 (Stephen Jenkinson), but it might be what we need to do. It might help us to belong.

Voice of the chorus: Niamh O鈥橞rien.
Cello improvisations: Lucy Railton
Additional words and music: Phil Smith

Produced by Phil Smith.
A Falling Tree production for 麻豆社 Radio 3.

Available now

29 minutes

Last on

Tue 6 Sep 2022 22:15

Broadcasts

  • Sat 19 Dec 2020 21:30
  • Tue 6 Sep 2022 22:15

Binaural sound

What is it and why does it matter?

Podcast