New Years Day is also the World Day of Peace. It presents an opportunity to reflect on where we stand at the beginning of the new year, and to attend to how we wish to live personally and as a society in the coming year, writes ANDY HAMILTON SJ.
It can be hard to be enthusiastic about New Years Day because of a conflict within ourselves. We imagine it as a day for new beginnings but our mind tells us that the world, and we ourselves as part of it, will continue mostly unchanged. Most of us have at some time made New Year resolutions to live a changed and better life, only to find that three or four weeks later we carry on living as before. Similarly, the World Day of Peace holds before us an ideal world where conflicts will stop, nasty social media postings will turn to encouragement, bombs and guns will be allowed to rust away, and family fights will be resolved. Yet we have seen each year that wars continue and that peace remains an impossible ideal.
Perhaps that conflict between the way we like to imagine the New Year and our experience of it makes it difficult to celebrate naturally. Many people drink solidly through the night, shout, sing and blow car horns for ten minutes or so at midnight, drink some more, and when the sun rises it sees them with a headache regretting the night before, before they watch a game of cricket or a sailing race, each of which takes them back to the nineteenth century. The reality collides with the dream and leaves it gasping.
A ritual for celebrating the New Year in some Buddhist cultures brings together both the ideal and the reality. People wipe their faces with scented water to wash away the old year and to wipe in the new. The ritual acknowledges the failures and betrayals that have marked their lives at the year’s end, and marks a new start, the freedom that goes with it, and continued hope to build a better life and better world. It takes account of the past we carry with us as well as the unguessable future.
This New Year the reminders of continuous struggle are strong. We are aware of the power of the coronavirus and of the need to live carefully in order to stop its recurrence and spread. 2020, too, began as the year of the bushfires and marked a terrifying picture of how future years might begin if we do not address the factors that contribute to climate change. New Years Day is a time to look back on the year gone, to accept where we stand at the beginning of the new year, and to attend to how we wish to live personally and as a society in the coming year.
The Christian approach to the New Year is to emphasise attending to the goodness of our world and of people in it, and to keep hope alive. The image of the New Year is that also of Christmas: a new born child, a symbol of innocence and hope within all the perils of nature and of a murderous king. When we see a child we see our future. We look back at the world which we are leaving to our children, and forward to the world that we would want for them. At Jesuit Social Services we keep in mind the young people whom we accompany – the gift that they are, their fragility and their resilience. We hope that this year they may find good friends and mentors and make new connections with society.