Quotes about Coexistence
The environment," as we call it, is intimately with us. We're in it. It's in us. But also we are it, and it is us.
— Wendell Berry
It might prove out to be," Athey said, "that if we can't live together we can't live at all. Did you ever think about that?
— Wendell Berry
it is only on the condition of humility and reverence before the world that our species will be able to remain in it.
— Wendell Berry
There ought to be some mode of life where all love is good, where one love can't compete with another but adds to it.
— William Golding
We allow our ignorance to prevail upon us and make us think we can survive alone, alone in patches, alone in groups, alone in races, even alone in genders.
— Maya Angelou
No doubt it was necessary to civilize man in relation to man. That work is already advanced and is making progress every day. But man must be civilized also in relation to nature.
— Victor Hugo
I claim that human mind or human society is not divided into watertight compartments called social, political and religious. All act and react upon one another.
— Mahatma Gandhi
We have no right to prejudice another in his civil enjoyments because he is of another church.
— Thomas Jefferson
It seems clear, from reading the daily news if nothing else, that there will always be some in this world who want their holy wars, who will discriminate, vilify, and even kill in the name of God. They have narrowed down the concept of neighbor to include only those like themselves, in terms of creed, caste, race, sex, or sexual orientation. But there is also much evidence that there are many who know that a neighbor might be anyone at all, and are willing to act on that assumption.
— Kathleen Norris
Living with people at close range over many years, as both monastics and small-town people do, is much more difficult than wearing a hair shirt. More difficult, too, I would add, than holding to the pleasant but unrealistic ideal of human perfectibility that seems to permeate much New Age thinking.
— Kathleen Norris
The polarization that characterizes so much of American life is risky business in a church congregation, but especially so in a monastic community. The person you're quick to label and dismiss as a racist, a homophobe, a queer, an anti-Semite, a misogynist, a bigoted conservative or bleeding-heart liberal is also a person you're committed to live, work, pray, and dine with for the rest of your life.
— Kathleen Norris
There is a science of war, but how strange that there isn't a science of peace. There are colleges of war; why can't we study peace?
— Audrey Hepburn