Dag Hammarskjöld
By Roger Lipsey
 
When Dag Hammarskjöld, second secretary-general of the United Nations   (1953-61), reached New York City from his native Sweden to take up his   duties, he was an object of discreet curiosity. Little known beyond   elite diplomatic circles, a passably handsome bachelor in his late   forties, now called to the world’s most prominent diplomatic post, he   experimented in the early months with communications large and small.   Among the smallest: while furnishing his apartment on the Upper East   Side, he agreed to a house call by a journalist who specialized in   interior decoration. The decor was spare, in the best Scandinavian   taste. The journalist must have searched high and low for something   juicy to write and, failing that, recorded a comment by Hammarskjöld   that has a long echo: “Monastic, isn’t it?”
This can be said of his life. There must be ground rules, though I   have no idea where to find them written down, governing how to interpret   the force of desire in a highly dedicated life - how to understand it as   an evolving, contributing energy rather than a fixed Caliban growling   from the forest floor of oneself. The first rule must be not to put too   much emphasis on erotic desire. While it is surely true that no one,   including Mr. Hammarskjöld, skips untouched past the need for sexual   intimacy, monastic temperaments struggle to “place” it in their inner   economy rather than let it run loose. Another rule must be to recognize   desire at different levels, so different that a separate word is needed   at each level: monastic temperaments, when true to their calling, are   striving temperaments that instinctively need to move on, to refine, to   purify and focus. And the best of them know that one can’t leave  desire  behind: it comes right along and asks to be part of things.  Because  Hammarskjöld was a religious man with the custom in later years  of  recording poetically conceived prayers in his private journal, we  should  expect to encounter the desire best called wish - wish  for the  good, wish for guidance and willing obedience, wish for depth  of contact  with the One whom he addressed in prayer. Because he was  relentlessly  aware of his inner life, we can expect to find him  struggling like all  others to live by his ideals despite  counter-currents. And because in  his life’s work he was a peacemaker,  often negotiating with the world’s  most driven and self-assured  leaders, his deep desire for peace met many  immoveable or scarcely  moveable objects.
The desire that faces complex, resistant structures such as the UN   itself or the nations of the world - structures requiring insight, method,   and management - isn’t sensual. It’s cool, even if heated in expression   when heat is needed. It is searching, perspicacious, exploratory; it   probes and pokes; it questions; it stacks realities together in novel   ways through creative imagination and takes them apart again to check   their fit. It looks for lines of connection between what is and what   could be - what could be better, more just and fruitful. And it engages   directly when the time comes: “Every hour eye to eye,” Hammarskjöld once   wrote in his journal. Is this desire at work? There can be no doubt of   that. It is desire channeled and focused, desire serving well beyond   itself and its own flickers of need. Work toward peace is risky and   difficult, and in Hammarskjöld’s practice a rigorous discipline. During a   crisis he faced as secretary-general, he reported this to a friend:
One of the lasting experiences from the last months and weeks is   that, with our so-called rising civilization, we do in no way see a   decline in the art of lying. The modern media of communication, the   modern entanglement of interests all over the world, have opened the   door to a paradise for those who fight with words representing mala fide  assumptions, false presentations, invidious comments, outright   slander - and so on. If I were Hieronymus Bosch, I could paint a beautiful   triptych in the colors of Hell and in celebration of this new great   Harlot. But why be bitter.
The outer form of Dag Hammarskjöld’s immensely accomplished life was   visible to all: within little more than a year after taking office, he   was recognized by world leaders and diplomatic colleagues as a  perfectly  remarkable champion of the UN agenda and values. Owing to his  practical  wisdom, resourcefulness, and discretion, adversaries trusted  him to  hear their unedited views and uncover whatever common ground  could be  found between them. Through personal negotiation with the  leaders of the  People’s Republic of China at a time when that country  had not yet been  admitted to UN membership, he demonstrated a capacity  to solve  completely puzzling problems. “Let Dag do it,” became the  solution of  last resort, reliable when enough of the Great Powers  (permanent members  of the Security Council) lined up behind him. His  diplomatic  improvisations - for example, shuttle diplomacy in the Near  East, and  UN-flagged peacekeeping forces - became norms that continue in  use today.  He anticipated the rapid decolonization of Africa and the  needs of its  new nations, and died in an air crash while attempting to  stop an  outbreak of war in the newly independent Congo. His person, his  voice were the United Nations in that era; his thinking,  though muted now, still  echoes in the corridors of what he called with  some intimacy “this  house,” the perennially beautiful riverside home of  the UN in midtown  Manhattan. At a gathering in the fall of 1953, he  said, “Our purpose is  peace, nothing but peace.” This too sends a long  echo.
Had he accomplished all this and no more, Hammarskjöld would be an   illustrious figure in the history of the Cold War and of the UN. But he   was much more, and it is this that makes him important for our time.
There is a new question working its way through American thought and   attitudes, not prominently at the national level but unmistakably at  the  level of communities, institutes, projects, and broadly recognized   needs. The question is effectively expressed by the opening lines of  the  mission statement of Garrison Institute, a cultural center on the  lower  Hudson River:
Garrison Institute applies the transformative power of contemplation   to today's pressing social and environmental concerns, helping build a   more compassionate, resilient future. We envision and work to build a   future in which contemplative ideas and methods are increasingly   mainstream, and are applied at scale to create the conditions for   positive, systemic social and environmental change.
This is programmatic language, intended to inform rather than move, but it publicly summarizes values and intentions that privately  guided Hammarskjöld’s approach to himself and to public service a   half-century ago. And because he found his way brilliantly, he is one to   whom we can look both for large ideas and for sand - for the grit of   working things through. “Blood, grime, sweat, earth,” he once asked in   his journal, “where are these in your world of will? Everywhere - the   ground from which the flame ascends straight upwards.” By his   Schopenhauer-like phrase, “world of will,” he must have meant the world   one tries to shape, the world desired and sought. 
Dag Hammarskjöld lived two lives. The first was what he called “this   enormously exposed and published life” as secretary-general of the   United Nations. The second was intensely private, nonetheless surmised   by a very few friends who understood that they could speak with him   about certain things - for example, an Indian couple, close students of   Vedanta, could count on him to join their conversation as one who   belonged in it. Only after his death, with the publication in 1964 of   his journal, under the title 
Markings
, did it  become clear  in the English-speaking world (and a year earlier in  Scandinavia) that  Hammarskjöld had been a religious seeker for whom  certain source  texts - the Gospels, Psalms, Meister Eckhart, Thomas à  Kempis, the early  Chinese classics - provided steady inspiration and  guidance. It is true  that on rare occasions during the UN years he  would say or do things  that were self-evidently rooted in an otherwise  undisclosed point of  view. For example, in a public talk in the fall of  1953, enlarging on a  thought from the 
Tao Te Ching
,  he said, “We cannot mould the  world as masters of a material thing.  Columbus did not reach the East  Indies. But we can influence the  development of the world from within as  a spiritual thing.” But those  occasions were infrequent and scarcely  anyone, so to speak, took him up  on it.
 
Had religion been merely words for him, there would be little need to   take notice; but it was more. It was a Way, fully developed, just what   we mean today when we speak of spiritual paths. It imposed a personal   discipline, exacted a price, opened inner landscapes of mind, heart,  and  body, commanded a certain quality of relationship with others - and   provided resources to go on. That he walked his Way alone had certain   advantages, notably self-reliance. A sangha or spiritual community is,   among other things, cozy; he had none, though in his work at the UN his   immediate associates were men and women of great merit whom he greatly   appreciated, and he had friends - few of them close, many of them   distinguished - among writers, artists, and theater people. His inner life   was, as he once wrote, strictly “a negotiation between himself and   God.” This had certain disadvantages. Above all it contributed to   recurrent, consuming loneliness that he struggled to accept as a   destined feature of his individual Way. True, his sense of spiritual   companionship extended with immediacy far into the past and into other   cultures; he knew how to read; the thoughts and language even of authors   remote in time lived fully in him, as if spoken just today. For   example, reading in Arthur Waley’s classic book, 
The Way and Its Power
,   Hammarskjöld picked out and brought into a public talk a passage about  a  band of peacemakers in ancient China, which reflected his own weary   perseverance at the time:
 
Constantly rebuffed but never discouraged, they went round from state   to state helping people to settle their differences, arguing against   wanton attack and pleading for the suppression of arms, that the age in   which they lived might be saved from its state of continual war. To  this  end they interviewed princes and lectured the common people,  nowhere  meeting with any great success, but obstinately persisting in  their  task, till kings and commoners alike grew weary of listening to  them.  Yet undeterred they continued to force themselves on people’s  attention.
This was his activity; his commitment to peacemaking and global   welfare was of just this kind. But what inner vision, what discipline,   what solace sustained him? What did he know of the “transformative power   of contemplation” and how did he apply it to “today’s … pressing   concerns?”
A reporter from the internal newsletter of the United Nations   Secretariat rather diffidently approached Hammarskjöld in January 1958   to interview him. As published in Secretariat News for February   14th of that year, their exchange was wide-ranging. Just at the end, a   question so compelled Hammarskjöld’s interest that he returned to it a   few days later in a personal letter to a Swedish friend:
Reporter: One last question, Mr. Hammarskjöld: What, in your opinion,   are the main qualities that an international official should possess?
DH: Well, that is a difficult question to answer straight away. You   should give me a little while to think about it. First off, however, I   would say that a heightened awareness combined with an inner quiet are   among these qualities. Also, a certain humility, which helps you to see   things through the other person’s eye, to reconstruct his case, without   losing yourself, without being a chameleon.
A little later, Hammarskjöld wrote as follows to his friend:
The other day I was forced by a journalist to try to formulate my   views on the main requirements of somebody who wishes to contribute to   the development of peace and reason. I found no better formulation than   this: “He must push his awareness to the utmost limit without losing  his  inner quiet, he must be able to see with the eyes of the others  from  within their personality without losing his own.”
There are five invisible realities here: inner quiet, awareness   pushed to the limit, a certain humility, permitting one to see from the   other’s point of view, without losing oneself. To speak of this   integrated movement of awareness and kinship as “mindfulness” - a term   Hammarskjöld may have encountered but to my knowledge didn’t use - is to   miss its singularity. Better to think of it as something Hammarskjöld   advised, something he had mastered or very nearly, something very good.   The two passages make clear that Hammarskjöld approached the diplomatic   day, the day of the peacemaker, as an exercise in awareness and   contact, and did so without calling attention to his approach.
“The international civil servant,” he once said, “must keep himself   under the strictest observation.” By the time he became   secretary-general, he had been following this practice for many years,   and if it had professional benefits - clarity about one’s motives, words,   and perspectives - those benefits have to be viewed as secondary to the   central need served by what he called “conscious self-scrutiny.” Within   the many cross-currents, desires, and hesitations of his own person, he   had long ago gone in search of himself. He was one who could not live,   perhaps literally, without self-knowledge. Among the resources and   methods he collected as a young man and progressively refined in later   years, self-observation was key. It opened him to himself, and therefore   to others; he learned to interpret himself, and therefore others; he   learned to be dreadfully honest with himself - and therefore to forgive   others. The sound of his self-observation, as recorded in 
Markings
, is sometimes nearly unbearable: dry, severe, accurate. We can take just one from the UN years as typifying many others:
 
Do you still need to evoke memories of a self-imposed humiliation in order to extinguish a smoldering self-admiration?
To be pure in heart means, among other things, to have freed yourself   from all such half-measures: from a tone of voice which places you in   the limelight, a furtive acceptance of some desire of the flesh which   ignores the desire of the spirit, a self-righteous reaction to others in   their moments of weakness.
Look at yourself in that mirror when you wish to be praised - or to judge.  Do so without despairing.
That mirror was one resource; there were others. He had discovered   the value - and sheer existence - of stillness and silence through two   unlike sources: the northern Swedish wilderness (he was a skilled   mountaineer) and close reading of Meister Eckhart, the medieval preacher   and mystic “from whom God hid nothing.” The beauty and silence of   remote Lapland stunned him into a sense of reality here and now; it was a   lesson he never forgot. The grandeur, mystery, and precision of  Meister  Eckhart’s explorations of inner experience at the far reaches  of  perception stunned him no less. Writing in 1956 about an Eckhart  sermon  he had been rereading, Hammarskjöld concluded:
“Of the Eternal Birth” - to me, this now says everything there is to be said about what I have learned and have still to learn.
“The soul that would experience this birth must detach herself from   all outward things: within herself completely at one with herself. . . .   You must have an exalted mind and a burning heart in which, nevertheless, reign silence and stillness.”
And he knew how to pray. Lutheran, raised in the Church of Sweden   among active and even activist Christians, personally introduced as an   adolescent to Albert Schweitzer and a member of the audience that first   heard Schweitzer develop his principle of “Reverence for Life,” he drew   away from the formal church during his university studies but in time   found his way back, not to the church as such but to the substance of   Christian faith. To know how to pray is not a small thing; that opening   upward, its willingness to be nothing, yet to speak, in relation to the   One whom he invariably addressed as “Thou,” endowed Hammarskjöld with   breadth of understanding and inner poise. He did not live only in   relation to Nations, Powers, Dominions. Insofar as any modern person   can, he lived also in relation to what he described late in life as   “Someone or Something” that had called him, and to whose call he had   answered, “Yes.” We can only allude here to the core of inner peace   conferred on him by his religious life. Soon after accepting the post of   secretary-general, he wrote in his journal:
Maturity: among other things, a new lack of self-consciousness - the   kind you can only attain when you have become entirely indifferent to   yourself through an absolute assent to your fate.
He who has placed himself in God’s hand stands free vis-à-vis men: he   is entirely at his ease with them, because he has granted them the   right to judge.
If he was one of the chosen in his suffering, in the life of   self-sacrifice and utterly dedicated service he led, he was also one of   the chosen in the solace he received. 
Markings
  records  what can only be called mystical experiences of great depth  and beauty,  often as glimpses of what he named “the unheard-of,” more  rarely as  exquisite dreams noted down sometime later. There must have  been some  relation between the nearly relentless pace and tension of  his life as  secretary-general and the tranquility that entered him in  private times.  On some weekends, free of urgencies, he would host  dinners with  companions who could equal him in conversation, listen to  recorded  music, hike in the woods of Putnam and Dutchess  counties,  think about  things—and turn to the intimacy of his journal, where he  elaborated  prayers and recorded clarities and questions. We would know  nothing of  his mystical experience, had he not chosen to tell us.
 
- a contact with reality, light and intense like the touch of a loved   hand: a union in self-surrender without self-destruction, where the   heart is lucid and the mind loving. In sun and wind, how near and how   remote. How different from what the knowing ones call mysticism.
 
This article offers only a taste of a most complex life and   achievement. Does Dag Hammarskjöld foreshadow a new statesmanship - the   very thing needed, or something much like it, to perceive and manage the   almost absurdly difficult issues of our time? If so, may it occur in   his manner: understated, discreet, modest, relying on the intrinsic   charisma of truth and decency rather than personal enchantment,   resourceful in exploring alternatives, firm in action. He was the first   person Western by birth, education, and basic conviction to discover   within hard political processes the need for what we are likely today to   call enlightened mind; the first to convert high teachings into daily   practice at the level of world affairs; and the first, through his   posthumously published journal, to lay bare his own struggles as a   sample of what might, after all, be possible.
He was surprisingly relaxed about the future - at least sometimes. At a   journalists’ luncheon in the spring of 1958, celebrating his election   to a second term as secretary-general, he made some extended remarks,   including the following:
I cannot belong to or join those who believe in our movement toward   catastrophe. I believe in growth, a growth to which we have a   responsibility to add our few fractions of an inch. [This] is not the   facile faith of generations before us, who thought that everything was   arranged for the best in the best of worlds…. It is in a sense a much   harder belief—the belief and faith that the future will be all right   because there will always be enough people to fight for a decent future.
Speaking in this way, he was the Hammarskjöld the public knew:   clear-minded, realistic yet forward-looking, inspiring without   showiness. In his journal, where we can know something of his inner   life, he recognized the price that he himself paid, and that others   might need to pay who desire effective roles in achieving that decent   future. He wrote there:
Each day the first day: each day a life.
Each morning we must hold out the chalice of our being to receive, to   carry, and give back. It must be held out empty - for the past must only   be reflected in its polish, its shape, its capacity.
Article source 
here 
Image source 
here
www.dag-hammarskjold.com - Roger Lipsey’s web site exploring Hammarskjöld’s political wisdom, with links to other online resources.