The Balance of
Spiritual Combat
China’s
Cultural Challenge to the West in the 21st Century
By Terry Boardman
This essay appeared
as an article in "New View" magazine Winter 2005/6 (Northern
hemisphere season) http://www.newview.org.uk/new_view.htm
The Crucible of the 13th Century
Many have
recognised the great debt owed by western natural science to the spiritual
stream of what has been called Islam, but which in fact is far broader than
that of just the 7th century Arab conquerors of the Middle East, since it
includes the fruits of the much more sophisticated and long-developed cultures
of the region – Syria, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia. To a very large degree,
western natural science is the product of this Middle Eastern culture – the
offspring of the intercourse between Christian Crusaders and Muslim Holy
Warriors in a martial age. When peoples fight, there is enmity, hatred, and
rejection, but there can also be respect, mutual learning, and even love
between individuals in the groups involved. Like teenagers getting to know each
other, they ‘bounce off’ each other, sometimes literally, aggressively.
Self-knowledge can result from such struggles with ‘the other’, until, like Parzival and his Eastern opponent Feirifis
in Wolfram von Eschenbach's great epic, one realises
that the other is actually part of oneself, one's own brother in fact.
In addition to the physical wars
waged by the Crusaders against ‘the infidel’ during the 200 years of the period
of the Crusades, there were also spiritual battles fought by the intellectual
defenders of Christendom. Thomas Aquinas (1224-1274)
and the Scholastics felt that they had to refute – in the strongest possible terms
– the powerful seductions of the Middle Eastern, not merely Islamic, philosophy
of Averroes and Avicenna
which had entered western culture via the schools of Islamic Spain. Men like Albertus Magnus (1208-1280)
and Thomas Aquinas felt that all that was new and ‘progressive’ about western
culture – which was connected with the sanctity of the individual soul and its
relation to Christ – would be fatally undermined by what were essentially
pre-Christian ideas re-cast in Islamic form by Muslim philosophers: these ideas
held that the individual would once again be subsumed within the group; after
death the individual soul would lose its being, like a drop in the cosmic
ocean. There can be no doubt that the Scholastics were right to wage that
struggle and if they had lost it the consequences for European, and indeed
human, civilisation would have been dire indeed. As it was, the consequences
were difficult enough, because the Middle Eastern yearning for the transcendent
Father did make its way into the heads of such as Roger Bacon (1214-1294) and William of Occam (1285-1349)
and ultimately transformed itself into the longing to know with the intellect
the overarching, all-powerful world of Nature; this search for the Divinity in
Nature would eventually, in the 17th century, give rise to the western form of natural science.
However, just as the military Crusaders were losing their own battles against
the Muslim armies of Saladin and later, the Mamelukes, so the intellectual Crusaders of the 13th
century, the European Scholastics, succeeded in stemming the tide of Muslim
Middle Eastern thought long enough for mediaeval Christendom to create a
culture that would enable the individual soul to feel its self-worth before the
Father, Christ, and the spiritual world. This victory was ultimately to
contribute greatly to individual Europeans being able, at the end of the Middle
Ages, to break free from what had become the stifling spiritual control
exercised by the Papacy, the self-appointed guardian of Catholic Christendom.
Another, equally vital, contribution to the spiritual liberation
of European humanity came from another, more hidden, direction. It was also the
result of the meeting between the Christian West and the Middle Eastern world
that lasted for some 700 years. The encounter had begun after the death of the
Prophet Mohammed with the eruption of the Muslim Holy War against the byzantine ‘infidels’ in the mid-7th century, and culminated
with the ejection of the western Crusaders from the Middle East at the end of the
13th century. This other contribution, working by more subterranean
cultural channels, resulted in works such as the "Parzival"
of von Eschenbach, inspired by his mysterious
teacher, his kinsman Kiot of Katalang’n
who found in Toledo the star wisdom of the pre-Christian Middle Eastern
astronomer Flegetanis, written in Arabic. Then there
were the Knights Templars’ social, cultural and
economic initiatives and the effects they had on the souls of many; there was
the barbarous persecution of the Cathars and other
"heretical" groups, most of whom had their spiritual roots in the
Middle East and sought a Christianity more inspired by the Holy Spirit that
could speak to the individual, free from church-controlled dogma. In the early
17th century would emerge the legend of the journeyings
in the Middle East of Christian Rosenkreutz and the
mysterious Rosicrucian movement he was supposed to have founded; indeed, much
of what has come to be called ‘western’, as distinct from Indian or East Asian,
traditional esotericism owes its origins to the Middle East, to Egypt and not
least to contact with the Kabbalistic and esoteric
teachings of the Jewish people, which both pointed to an inner way of salvation
that the individual could take, as well as to the relation between the
individual soul and the world of Nature and Cosmos. It is now generally
recognised that the European natural science that emerged in the 17th
century has its roots as much in this secretive Middle Eastern heritage of hermeticism and alchemy as it does in the rediscovery of Greece and Rome.
There were two sides then, to the Middle Eastern spiritual
influence that came towards the West in that 700 year period – an exoteric
intellectual one, seen predominantly in the works of Averroes
and Avicenna, which had to be resisted if the fragile
seeds of Christian individuality in the soul were not to be overwhelmed, and a
more mystical esoteric one, which sought to develop a deeper interiority
in western souls that could help them understand themselves and their relation
to the divine without having to depend on Church dogma (this would also be one
of the main sources of the Protestant Reformation).
From Mongolia…..
However, during the culmination of that
particular East-West meeting, in the mid-13th century, the West momentarily
came into direct contact with something even more powerful and elemental than
Middle Eastern spirituality. It was suddenly confronted by the awesome forces
of the ‘Far East’ – awesome, because they were not dualistic
in the theocratic sense of Middle Eastern culture. Here there was no powerful
sense of sin and separation from the Divine, no collective yearning for a
transcendent Father or an individual overshadowing by the Holy Spirit as the
result of hard spiritual training, but rather, spiritual-physical, monodic immanence
in the culture of a people seemingly possessed by a spiritual power and a sense
of unity that moved them with elemental force. Writing in the late 15th
century, the esoteric writer Abbot Trithemius of Sponheim referred
to the beginning of the 13th century as the onset of the Age of the Mars (dated
by Trithemius 1171-1525), governed by the warlike Archangel Samael. European humanity suddenly and with shock
for the first time perceived the people
of the Far East in the form of the Mongols and their very martial
arts, and through contact with them, Europeans also learned about the land
of China and even Japan. Against these truly overwhelming forces of the Far
East, both the Middle Eastern Islamic and the Christian European cultures
seemed outwardly powerless as army after army, town after town, went down to
ignominious defeat or utter destruction: the Scourge of God seemed to be upon
them.
The effect of that shock was so great upon the European mind that
some Europeans spent the next 200 years trying to fathom what this cultural
phenomenon was and where it originated. It is indeed one of the greatest
ironies of history that this desire to understand and find the Far East was ultimately to lead
Europeans to America! However, despite some slender
contact with China and Japan in the early modern period,
referred to by Trithemius as the Age of the Moon Archangel Gabriel (1525-1879), it was not until
the onset of the Age of the Sun Archangel Michael (1879-2233) that more wide-ranging
contacts with the Far East really developed. During the early modern period between Trithemius' ‘Mars’ and ‘Sun’ epochs, the West (c.1600-1880)
got to know the truly ‘middle’ eastern culture of India (1), with which
previously, it had only come into direct contact as a result of the campaigns
of Alexander the Great.
The spiritual influence of India upon the West was considerable
in the 20th century, culminating perhaps with the hippy generation of the 1960s
and 70s who are now, middle-aged, in positions of authority in the western
world. Many are those in the West who, when they think ‘spirituality’, think
immediately of yoga, of TM (transcendental meditation), of Hare Krishna, of
Gandhi, Aurobindo, Rajneesh
or other Indian gurus, and who, when they need release from the pressures and
uncertainties of their busy modern lives, turn to ancient Indian philosophies
or gurus for solace and certitude. Compared to the seemingly monochrome and book-bound iconoclastic abstractions of
Judaism and Islam, the highly coloured Indian spirituality appears as all one of all-embracing feeling, of
warmth, even passion and sensuality – multiplicity in unity, ten thousand Gods
as One. For very many westerners who are comfortable with the idea of
pluralism, the spirituality of their own culture in the Christianity of the
churches or the cold rationalism of western philosophers and natural
scientists cannot compete with the spiritual efficacy of the heart that
still beats within the culture of India. Even Thought for the Day, the religious slot on the BBC Radio 4’s
flagship Today Programme, now has its
Sikh and Hindu pundits giving prognostications about the moral dilemmas of the
modern world.
As yet, Thought for the Day features
no such Taoist or Confucian pundit, but as we enter the 21st century, ‘the West’ – by which is
meant that part of humanity that has for centuries been profoundly affected by
Christianity, even if only of the Church – is facing an even greater challenge
to its identity than that of the ‘Middle’ East. 700 years after the culmination
of the meeting with the Islamic Middle East, which resulted in European natural
science, not to mention trends in art and music such as Gothic architecture and
abstract arabesques in music, and 700 years after that first brief contact with
a Mongoloid people, the West is now beginning to engage intimately with the
world’s oldest living civilisation – China, which now accounts for a fifth of
the world’s population, and with those cultures already profoundly affected by Chinese
civilisation – Japan, Korea, Tibet, Mongolia, Vietnam. Until recently, most
Western citizens only contacted these cultures at a distance, mostly through
the agency of war (Japan, Korea, Vietnam) and the contact was mostly one
way: East
Asia
imitated western socio-economic and cultural forms. In the 21st century, this
contact will increasingly be mutual – eyeball to eyeball.
…via Japan….
Japan’s modernisation in the 19th
century was led by the samurai class who had dominated the nation since that
same martial 13th century and so Japan has already been in the
vanguard of this East Asian wave for a century (and has been the most
westernised as a result). Japanese Zen Buddhism since the 1950s, martial arts
since the 1960s, Japanese architecture, fashion, food and business practices in
the 1980s and street culture and movies in the 1990s, not to mention the
all-pervasive karaoke -all these
have had a significant effect on varied
groups within western society: intellectuals, artists, scientists, as well as
street-fighting and computer game-playing youth. Japanese business and
managerial practices have had both salutary and negative effects on western
business culture. The example, much vaunted in the 1980s, of the ‘successes’ of
the Japanese education system has been almost entirely negative in the West as
politicians ignorant of the realities of Japanese educational practice
scrambled to get their own peoples to accept more government control of
education and to emulate high Japanese scores in maths and science tests that,
it was believed, would ensure economic victory in the saurian battle of
national economies so ardently fought by the Japanese business class. The
Japanese example contributed greatly to the introduction in the 1980s of Britain’s first ever standardised
National Curriculum in which the State presumed to tell teachers what to teach.
This was carried through by Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government which
trumpeted itself as the party of liberty and individual freedom. If teachers
themselves are shackled by government as to what they see fit to teach, how can
their pupils be educated to think freely? But such an absurdity was overlooked
by politicians who were mesmerised by the seeming success of Japan's economy. History, however,
moves on; despite Japan's faltering recovery in the
last couple of years, it is now felt by western business and media pundits that
the economic threat from Japan has receded. Typical of Mars,
the ever erratic planet, it has been Japan's military destiny throughout
the ages to have been spectacularly successful in dramatic attack, but not so
good in sustaining momentum. It was not Japanese martial skill but the tropical
storms of the kamikaze (lit. 'divine wind') that saved
Japan from Mongol invasions in 1274
and 1281. Having had its day in the sun in the 1970s and 80s and having helped
to set China and S.E.Asia on the road to a modern
capitalist economy by its investments, its loans, and its know-how, Japan is
now felt by many western observers to have been a passing 20th century
phenomenon, rather like a kamikaze itself, but now becalmed. All eyes are on China, and the coming decades.
…to China : Enter the Dragon
?
An aggressive, thrusting, and modernising China has violated the ancient and
static culture of Tibet in much the same way that China’s own ancient and static
culture was violated by an equally aggressive and modernising Japan between 1894 and 1945. This
enforced modernisation of Tibet has had the signal effect of
exporting Tibetan Buddhism throughout the West, where it is now the
fastest-growing form of Buddhism and the one that, for many of those westerners
interested in the topic, almost has a monopoly when it comes to ideas about
reincarnation and karma. For a sensual spirituality, go to the Indians; for
knowledge of reincarnation, ask the Tibetans; for an aesthetic, even spartan spirituality, turn to the Japanese – such is the
path for western spiritual consumers down the aisles of the Asian spiritual
supermarket. But for the ingredients for the main course, the culinary expert
is increasingly being felt to be China.
Taoism, the I Ching (the Book of Changes), the philosophy of
Yin-Yang, Chinese astrology, Feng Shui (telluric energies within the Earth and the
biosphere), Chinese medicine and its knowledge of chi, acupuncture, Tai Chi,
Kung Fu and other Chinese martial
arts, etheric life streams within the body – all
these ancient and profound forms of spiritual knowledge represent a powerful
magnet for westerners, artists and scientists alike, and constitute both a
great challenge and a great opportunity for Western culture. Artists are drawn
to the dynamic flexibility and purity of form in these ideas as much as to
their seemingly eternal verity; scientists focus on their non-theistic
impersonality that can often, though by no means always, be rendered in highly
abstract forms that are thought to support western scientific intuitions or at
least have something in common with them.
In meeting this cornucopia of East Asian wisdom, one senses that
the West, as it had to do 700 years ago when it engaged with the world of Islam
at the time of the Crusades, will have both to resist and to constructively
engage with different aspects of it. The East in general, from Palestine to Japan, tends to undervalue the worth
of the individual vis-à-vis the collective. The West cannot afford to be
overwhelmed in this regard by East Asian thinking today any more than it was by
Middle Eastern thinking in the 13th century. By that time, the main epoch of
the West's 'basic training' in rational and intellectual development was
drawing to a close; Christian Europe, schooled by Catholic monks and
scholars, had learned to think for itself. Since the 15th century, western
society has with great difficulty been trying to learn how to wed moral
conscience to that rational and intellectual heritage. If the rationalist
thinking of western philosophy is rooted in the logic of the head, a symbolic
and shadowy abstract head-knowledge largely based on Arabic translations from
the Greek, then Indian thinking can be said to be a thinking drawing on the
colourful and rhythmical complexity of the heart and lungs, while East Asian
thinking is pre-eminently one that reflects the metabolism and the organs below
the solar plexus. It is a "thinking" from
the guts, from the hara,
as the Japanese say – the place where forces of destruction and creation
pre-eminently take place in the human organism. It is thus endowed with an
unconscious will, with an almost magical and irresistible power that stems from
long past ages of human history when a subordinate's will would be directly
imprinted by his master’s speech. The Japanese have a word for the spiritual
power of speech – kotodama
(literally, the soul of speech). This is no mere western-style rhetoricising or beautification. It has more in common with
magical incantation. A faint echo of it can still be heard in Japanese temples
and shrines and even in the speeches of politicians in the Japanese Diet, where
indeed, it may be on its way, historically, to degenerating into empty
rhetoric, but the feeling for that willpower in speech and for the sacred magic
of speech can still be felt. Something of this ancient power of speech was
evident in the way Adolf Hitler sought to control the will of
his audiences in Nazi Germany. The feeling that this way of working directly
into people's unconscious will is no longer historically ‘legitimate’ was what
convinced so many westerners that Hitler's way was fundamentally wrong, even evil, since it was seeking to
regress the moral and spiritual progress made in the
West since the 13th century. It was seeking to negate individual moral
conscience and the value of the individual spirit.
Real and False
Crusades in the 21st Century
In this 21st
century there will need to be a new generation of western spiritual ‘Knights Templar’ – politically incorrect though this may sound – to
defend the key spiritual achievements of the West. These achievements are not,
of course, simply those of the churches, but rather, have to do with the very
concept of the individual spirit, which is unbound by any bodily or genetic
attachment. They also have to do with the fragile beginnings of the individual
conscience that has been developing since the 15th century. Traditional East
Asian thought hardly recognises the ‘I’, which, in Indian thought begins to be
visible. East Asian thought respects the ‘We’ that relates to blood and soil,
the spiritual being that is felt to be moving within blood, soil, climate, and
language – in other words, that is a direct experience of the people's spirit,
traditionally associated with their spiritual ancestors.
It could, of course, be
argued that people everywhere feel something of this – we all have some kind of
sense of what we mean by, for example, "Englishness" - but few
westerners feel it as intensely as East Asians, where attachment to blood
group, family and people runs very deep indeed. It is not a mere nationalistic,
intellectually devised ideology, as with the more intellectual European
rightists, who too often turn their hate-filled ideas against other peoples,
but something much less conscious, something that resides in the ancient force
of love for family, tribe and ethnic group that long ago was located in the
blood. It might seem strange to speak of love and then think of the samurai,
Genghis Khan, and Japanese atrocities in World War II, but there is actually no
contradiction. In the traditional East Asian community one lived in love, that
is, or was, unity with the communal All; one felt totally part of the
community; there was little individual alienation as in the West. One has to be
in East
Asia
to feel the remains of this communal love. Violence against others in East Asia is often violence against
members of other groups who are perceived to have offended against one’s shared
communal love. Western nationalism, by contrast, is all too often a reflection
of the hatred and isolation felt by individuals who lack conscience in Western society, and a
subconscious desire to get beyond this isolation into a substitute family. This
fear and loathing felt by individuals in the West is projected outwards against
others in the form of aggressive nationalisms such as we have seen in Bosnia and Northern Ireland, or on English, French, and
German streets. This is no value judgment; it is a reflection of a world
archetype: light, love, warmth and respect in the communal East; darkness,
fear, cold and hatred in the individualistic West.* The surprising result of
living within this East-West archetype is that the greatest examples of
collective pride and arrogance can sometimes be seen in communitarian East
Asia, while the greatest examples of compassion for others unrelated to oneself
can occur in the individualistic West. Just as there will need to be new, non-military
Crusaders, however, to defend the very precious, if still relatively few,
genuinely new
spiritual achievements of western culture, there will also need
to be the builders of bridges between the West and East Asia, new Templars perhaps – those who can find a way, as the Templars did, for Asian wisdom to illuminate the still
delicate western spiritual achievements without destroying them. These bridge
builders will need to speak without sentimentality, without political
correctness, but with a respectful directness, and with the interests of
humanity at heart, not those of any one particular ethnic group. If this
becomes possible, then humanity will be enabled to see how the problematic
culture of the West fits into the vast panorama of the evolution of human
consciousness, and that western culture truly has its own worth, and a reason
to exist and develop further, which is something that many Asian thinkers as
well as their western acolytes seriously question. Westerners may also gain
fresh insights from Chinese wisdom of the nature of the living world, the
nature of movement and dynamic flow. Despite the Chinese inclination towards
the concrete image, the practical and material, their age-old knowledge of flow
and movement in the natural world (especially evident in the Book of Changes, I Ching,
arguably the most profound non-theistic collection of wisdom) can play a part
in helping westerners to overcome the static sterility of western science which
tends to be body-bound and brain-bound, obsessed with calculation and fixative
quanta.
From the Near East and the Middle East, the West learned
astronomical and astrological star wisdom, as is only too clear not only from
the lives of Copernicus, Kepler, and Brahe, but also from Shakespeare's plays and the astrological
interests of Isaac Newton. It learned not only how to calculate planetary
distances and orbits round the sun, but also how the different planetary and
zodiacal influences were directly related to the various parts of the human
body. From East Asia, the West is about to learn something of "flow wisdom",
the knowledge of the living body and the living Earth, not the dissected dead
body and dead Earth. But as with the star wisdom of the Middle East, this ‘new’ biological wisdom
from East
Asia
will not be a Christianised wisdom. Unfortunately, a western science based not on death but
on life, such
as was represented by Goethe, Rudolf Steiner and others – has been unable to
penetrate western culture widely over the last 100 years for a variety of
reasons. Perhaps an East Asian knowledge of life force, if interpreted rightly,
will nevertheless contribute to developing perception of the life that
surrounds and upholds our world and all of us. Perhaps it can also help us in
the West to overcome our fixation on the Cross, on what is fixed to
quantifiable matter, and while it may not illuminate the nature of the Christ
Being and the Christ Event, it may indeed help to focus westerners' attention
on the nature of livingness and rhythm.
For its part, East Asia can learn from the West the knowledge of
the physical (mineral) body, the physical (mineral) world and of the individual
Ego that develops in relation to that minerality.
This wisdom of the individual Ego (which the Buddha himself possessed but East
Asia as a whole has yet to internalise) shows that one becomes an individual
only by becoming sick and alone and that paradoxically this sickness and
individuation is actually a necessary – indeed essential – part of humanity's
journey on this physical plane. While some East Asians and Chinese were drawn
for a period to Indian Buddhism’s call to free oneself from this physical
world, their cultures in general are very much drawn to the qualities of
earthly life. What those who were spiritually ready for it received from
Buddhism was its teaching of love and compassion in this physical human life, a
life that is often so painful. This Mahayana Buddhism of the post-Christian
centuries, eventually rejected in its homeland of India, spoke to the hearts of many in China, Korea, Japan, Tibet, and Mongolia and was received like a soothing balm.
In 1274, the year of the death of St Thomas Aquinas, the distance
travelled by the Mongol armies, the area ruled by Kublai Khan, was almost the
same as that over which were found adherents to the teachings of Mani (216-276), who had died a
thousand years before. In the third century Mani had founded the first truly
Eurasian religion in the Christian era. He saw it as syncretic
and cosmopolitan. The Christ, he taught, was at the centre of a colossal struggle between
spiritual light and spiritual darkness, and the aim was to enlighten darkness
and evil from within, not to destroy it from without. So conditioned are people
today by centuries of misinformation and negative propaganda from
ecclesiastical authorities (notably St. Augustine) and scholars that the words
'Manichaeism' or 'Manichaean'
are used almost exclusively as derogatory terms for narrow minded and simple dualistc
thinking by many who may know little or nothing about Mani
and what he taught. But nothing could be further from the truth when it comes
to Mani himself, whose teaching was complex and multi-faceted. He was put
to death in the Sassanian Persian city of Gondishapur in 276, a city which some 400
years later would become a hothouse of Eurasian intellectual and scientific
endeavour. Located near the modern city of Dizful in the border region where Iraq and Iran fought their long deadly war in
the 1980s, it was also the city from where the black and white game of chess was
introduced to the West.
A long and complex esoteric thread leads from Mani through to Wolfram von Eschenbach’s Parzival in the 13th century. In Parzival Wolfram created an
archetypal figure who, while still representing the martial chivalric hero
beloved of that feudal age, anticipated the modern human being, able to marry
conscience with reasoned thinking. Parzival’s
conscience enabled him to re-cognise the mighty and invincible Eastern warrior Feirifis as his brother, part of himself. Through the darkness
of struggle against the other, through engaging with him, the westerner Parzival and the easterner Feirifis
reach the light of mutual recognition: they truly see each other. This
spiritual seeing Eschenbach called the land of Anschau (literally. ‘seeing’
or ‘beholding’ in the spirit). In the 21st century of the Christian era, Manichaeism, the Christianity of Eurasia, may be about to
arise again in a new form, as those in different Eastern and Western spiritual
streams seek to find common spiritual and cultural 'ground' and overcome the
isolating chasms of misunderstanding and ignorance that keep them apart.
Westerners will strive with East Asians, East Asians with Westerners. There
will be those short-sighted or malevolent people in both cultures, no doubt,
who will seek to turn this striving into physical war and bitter enmity. One
sees signs of this already in the statements of such as foreign policy
specialist and former Presidential adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski (in his book The Grand Chessboard, 1997). Brzezinski has for some years now been urging policymakers
and media hacks to look upon Central Asia as the chessboard of the 21st century
where the crucial power games will be fought out and where the USA will vie
with China and Russia for control of the vast resources of what he calls the
“Heartland of the world”, consciously echoing the British imperial geopolitical
strategist Halford Mackinder
100 years ago, This is Brzezinski's view of the Eurasian continent, a view he of
course considers to be 'realistic', but only genuine insight into spiritual and
historical realities – in short, individual and cultural self-knowledge – will
serve to illuminate spiritual blinkeredness or sheer malevolence.
If
sufficient insight is forthcoming in this cosmopolitan Sun Age of Michael, then we can hope that by the end of this
era (c.2233, according to Trithemius), the Brzezinkis will not have succeeded and enough East Asians
and Westerners will have arrived in Anschau together
to create the basis for harmony in the future destiny of the Eurasian
continent.
Endnotes:
1. Mesopotamia, Palestine, Arabia
and Egypt are more accurately described by the now
largely obsolete term 'the Near
East'. However,
since the terms Near and Far East are Eurocentric, perhaps West Asia, Central Asia
(including the Indian subcontinent), and East Asia might be more appropriate.
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