麻豆社

Use 麻豆社.com or the new 麻豆社 App to listen to 麻豆社 podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Episode details

Radio 4,2 mins

Rev Jayne Manfredi - 15/06/2023

Thought for the Day

Available for over a year

Good morning. 鈥淎nyone can drown,鈥 says the RNLI. 鈥淣o one should.鈥 I don鈥檛 know the name of the man who saved me from drowning when I was a child, but I鈥檒l remember the sound of his voice forever. As I panicked and thrashed in the waves, my head going under, I choked and swallowed mouthfuls of salty water. And then he pulled me from the sea with a brawny arm and an outstretched hand. I didn鈥檛 know any of his Spanish words, but I still understood him: 鈥淚t鈥檚 ok. You鈥檙e safe now. I鈥檓 here.鈥 Instant emotional connection. He sounded like home. Marine biologist Roger Payne, who died this week, gave us a new emotional connection, when he introduced the world to the power of whale song, in 1967. Before we heard this ancient sound, whales were nothing more than big, lumbering creatures, and were slaughtered on an industrial scale. Rather than using data to persuade people that this was barbaric, he instead used their mesmeric song to appeal to the heart. Hearing that haunting sound, you can鈥檛 help but experience a connection: these are creatures who know and live and feel鈥 just like you and me. Roger Payne thought the greatest failure of humans was our refusal to acknowledge our interdependence on others. For me, all living things play a part in the bigger story of creation. No matter how numerous, no matter how small, no matter how seemingly insignificant, all belong to God. On land and in the sea. All animals. All people. Humpback whales, microscopic creatures, tiny shoals of fish, illegal migrants in flimsy boats. The RNLI saved 108 lives in the Channel last year. Simon Ling, head of lifeboats, has said "We've had babies thrown at our lifeboats, women screaming, men screaming.鈥 Regardless of the rights and wrongs of illegal channel crossings, this kind of human distress must be a sound far more haunting than whale song. Learning how to speak whale has helped us to understand that these are creatures worth fighting for. But perhaps there are other languages we need to become fluent in, in order for us to connect across difference. Compassion. Empathy. Understanding. Love. These are the languages of God, and they transcend differences in appearance, religion, or nationality. Stripped of all these things, we are all just creatures of the earth. There is more than one way for us to show compassion to those seeking sanctuary, but in a moment of crisis, to the drowning man in the sea, the outstretched arm and soothing voice of the lifeguard sounds like home.

Programme Website
More episodes