January 2006 | Conscious Culture
The Power of ‘One’
A new documentary about universal questions is homemade and heartfelt
By Mark R. Williams
Early one morning, three years ago, Ward Powers woke up with a buzz. He suddenly felt the urge to make a movie about “oneness.”
A 45-year-old Detroit lawyer, Powers had been living a comfortable life and minding his own business. He knew nothing about filmmaking. So he had to wonder, “Why me?”
“It was more an impulse about oneness than a vision or revelation,” he recalls.
Following the impulse, the homespun producer-director asked for help from his cousin and best friend, both likewise novices. He bought a mail-order video camera and started compiling a list of questions. Easy stuff (oh, sure), like, “Describe God, and What happens after death?” His plan was to interview some ordinary people and some extraordinary sages, record the answers and see if a film would emerge.
The result is “One: The Movie,” which debuts in Seattle at the Landmark Varsity Theatre Jan. 6 to 19. The documentary (visit www.onethemovie.org) is a refreshingly innocent collection of wise and wry comments about the human condition. It opened last month in San Francisco to enthusiastic crowds, if not across-the-board praise from movie critics.
Powers started out doing street interviews with average Americans, and a few eccentrics, from Times Square to Middle America to Fisherman’s Wharf. Along the way he met a slew of characters, like “Ron the Silver Man” and “Dragonfly, the Woodstock Fairy” whose words of wisdom and befuddlement are judiciously interspersed throughout.
He also contacted several renowned metaphysical sages including Ram Dass, Thich Nhat Hahn, Riane Eisler, and Robert Thurman—impressive list—and signed them on to the project. Nearly every faith is represented in the film, and there’s a harmony in their message.
“Indian yogis, rabbis, imams, priests and monks, Buddhist nuns, Native American medicine men all came forward,” said Powers, “Oneness—on the power of that energy alone they let us in.”
Wind-aided run
Even the normally inaccessible Deepak Chopra opened his door. Others stepped forward to help at just the right time with equipment, advice and even a musical score provided by the Dalai Lama. Powers now had the wind in his sails.
“Immediately you could feel there was something else behind [the filmmakers] that was pushing them in this whole venture,” recalls Sufi mystic and northern California resident Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee, one of the film’s more lucidly perceptive voices. “There was an innocence in the questions and a chemistry that worked—an idea that wanted to become a film—and it was bigger than them.”
Viewers get to watch Powers’ personal filmmaking journey, which began with an innocence bordering on naiveté. Can one really talk about “oneness” on film without slipping into parody? But Powers avoids the pitfalls, opening the interviews with Sister Eveleen, in full Irish brogue, “Growth entails healing. Most people have been hurt fairly seriously and must do their healing first.”
Then “One: The Movie” cuts to a modern-day Everyman, alone and dejected, lying in a fleabag hotel room. He listens to depressing news of child abductions and terrorism. The bedside clock radio shows 9:11, and he reaches over to smother it with his pillow.
The image changes. We’re now in the studio of a blustery, Christian talk-show host who implores listeners to fall on their knees and accept salvation. Cut to a “summer solstice” picnic of Michigan atheists, who scoff at anything spiritual (“God is make believe, a fairy tale for adults”).
This is the film’s first lesson. Oneness is not about being the same.
Powers is exploring the ever-illusive “meaning of life,” but not all his questions are metaphysical. “Why is there so much poverty and suffering in the world?” “When is war justifiable?”
A rabbi bemoans, “The world is fractured, and we have no alternative but to feel lots of pain.” Everyman listens intently, then flees his seedy surroundings, distraught, but finally emerging from his shell. He spots a small child sitting quietly, a mirror of his own lost innocence.
What keeps us from feeling oneness with others? Materialism, greed, selfishness and, above all, fear, which lies at the heart of separation. But what are we all so afraid of?
Mostly others.
Everyman enters a café and hears a man on TV preaching the politics of fear. He grabs the remote and switches channels. It’s Deepak Chopra speaking insightfully, “Our dualistic thinking leads to ignorance, and we institutionalize it in organized religion. And then we go to war.”
A delightfully vibrant yogi asks, “Why are certain people willing to shed their own lives just to cause a little misery to someone else? Something must be making them so desperate to do it.”
“There is great iniquity in the world,” says Chopra.
Shedding the fear
What is the way out of this separation and fear? For filmmaker Powers, it lies in a single word: Compassion. Everyman roams the grim streets and sees a down-and-outer rummaging in a dumpster. He clutches his arm in a gesture of empathy and unity. The cloud of despair around him is beginning to lift. To achieve oneness we must heal ourselves and show compassion for others, be vulnerable and really feel their pain. But this won’t be easy because so many people tune out the world’s problems by staring at the television or computer screen.
“Most people can be bought off fairly easily, “ says Franciscan author Richard Rohr. “There’s no ground or center, and whatever the dominant consciousness tells us to believe we by-and-large believe. The Romans did the same thing with bread and circuses.”
Yet global unity is not without some underpinnings.
“It’s a hundred percent fact that we’re all one,” insists one interviewee. “If you were standing on the moon looking back, you would see one Earth without any of the divisions or strife.”
The paradox of oneness lies in multiplicity. Each person on the planet is unique and distinct, but we need to value differences instead of fearing them. A good start is seeing the divine spark in others and in ourselves. Father Thomas Keating, a leading Catholic contemplative thinker, says, “Finally you realize that you and the Other (capital O) are one, always have been and always will be.”
Arguably, the film’s most inspiring aspect is Ward Powers’ own personal journey. How he took a huge idea and ran with it.
“Something about me being an unlikely candidate plays into the real meaning of oneness,” he says, ”that it lives in unlikely places and doesn’t come from the top down. And how the universe supported me. I took some chances, and there was a net under the high wire.”
Mark R. Williams is the author of In Search of Lemuria—The Lost Pacific Continent in Legend, Myth and Imagination.
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