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By Melissa Clark

The peace mission exposed Mikkel to Shinto rituals such as meditation. |
Several years ago, Mikkel Aaland on a quest for peace, placed Shinto
stones in South Africa, the Philippines, and Germany. Shortly thereafter,
South African apartheid came to an end, President Marcos left the
Philippines and the Berlin Wall came crumbling down. Mikkel admits
that these events along with the Cold War ending when his peace mission
was completed may well have been a coincidence. "Did my journey save
the world? I don't know," he says. "But it did save me."
Mikkel's five continent journey, which he refers to as an "unexpected
trip," began at a dinner party in San Francisco, while hearing a
story involving Shinto, Japan's indigenous religion. The innocent
conversation would eventually lead Mikkel to travel to the Philippines,
Japan, Puerto Rico, Brazil, Iceland, Berlin, South Africa, and the
Baltic Sea.
Shinto dates back to prehistoric times. Shintoists worship nature
as well as their ancestors. "It's hard to separate Shinto from the
Japanese because they are so interconnected," Mikkel said. After
the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, a Shinto priest had a vision
of how to battle the evil that engulfed the world. The priest broke
an ancient Shinto relic, a holy sword, into more than 100 pieces,
enclosing each piece in a stone. Shintoists would later refer to
these stones as gods, and began placing the stones in a protective
ring around the world. Shintoists hoped that by strategically placing
the stones around the world, "the forces of good would gain power
over the forces of evil."
Only 34 stones had been placed when Mikkel heard the story. And
though he admits being interested enough to inquire about the peace
mission, Mikkel said he certainly did not expect the Japanese group
to send a stone for him to place. But they did.
Mikkel received his first stone while visiting his family in Norway.
The Japanese group mailed Mikkel a package containing the stone.
"It looked like a piece of granite," Mikkel recalled. Reluctant
at first, Mikkel said he was undecided about whether or not he wanted
to participate with the project. After all, he had simply asked
about the project but had no idea his interest would commit him
to anything."
Mikkel
ventured to Florida waters to fulfill his role in the Shinto
peace mission. |
I don't know. I just thought it was a great story, I didn't know
it would come to this," Mikkel writes in his recently published
book, The Sword of Heaven.
"The god sat in my room for a week," but after giving it some thought,
Mikkel decided to participate in the mission. "I picked up the heavy
object, lay back down on the bed and found the letter that had come
with it. It was briefÉ It said that I should not take the god into
the bathroom because that was considered 'unclean,' and that I should
place it where I wanted, but preferably in water, the source of
life."
Mikkel wasn't quite sure where to place the stone until having
a conversation with his father. "You know the lake where your great
aunt owns a cabin," Mikkel recalled his father saying. "It's surrounded
by a national forest, and fed by an underground spring. Since Shinto
worships nature, put it there."
Mikkel followed his suggestion. "I pulled back my arm, then heaved
the stone god high in the air, over the granite, past the shore,
and into the lake. The water that shot up in the air seemed to explode
like fireworks. As each ring came toward me, the mirror image of
the trees was disturbed, making the water look like an impressionist
painting," Mikkel writes.
Mikkel returned to the Bay Area shortly after, and nothing could
have prepared him for what would happen next. When he arrived, he
found ten more stones on his doorstep. It was clear that the Shinto
peace mission would play a prominent role in his life.
First, Mikkel would have to decide where to place the stones. It
was important that he placed the stones in countries where there
were none. "I knew a god had been placed in the Panama Canal but
none in the Caribbean," Mikkel wrote about his decision to place
a stone in Puerto Rico.
But deciding where to go was only half of the battle. Upon arriving
in each country, Mikkel had to reflect on the exact placement of
each god. "You couldn't look at a tourist's guideÉand they didnÕt
come with instructions," Mikkel says about the stones. It was all
about, "finding the place thatÕs right."

Mikkel
traveled to the Philipines to place a stone in water at the
request the Japanese group. |
Mikkel recalls finding the perfect place for a stone at Playa Azul,
a beach in Puerto Rico. "I immediately took the Shinto god from
my pack and walked alone, a half mile, to where the sandy beach
turned into a rocky one. I jumped into the water, carrying the god.
Not more than a hundred yards from the rocks, I noticed a huge head
of waving coral, which reminded me of Hanukkah candles. I dove,
placed the god snugly into the head of coral and surfaced."
Mikkel placed his last stone in 1988, "At the point where the Rio
Negro and the Rio Solimoes meet and become the Amazon. "It seemed
a fitting spot to end my involvement with the Sword of Heaven."
The Shinto peace project completed about one year later. That's
when Mikkel began writing The
Sword of Heaven. "I needed to figure out why I did this,
Mikkel said about his participation in the mission. Mikkel describes
writing the book as, "a self exploration for me. It took me a long
time to sort it all outÉ sorting out what had motivated me. I was
very compelled to do it...I didn't have much of a choice."
It's possible the world will never understand how a dinner conversation
could turn into a five-continent odyssey to save the world. Maybe
Mikkel will never sort out the mystery for himself either. But with
the remarkable strides that some nations have made towards peace
since Mikkel's mission, perhaps we should just be thankful that
he completed the Shinto protective ring around the world, and be
hopeful of yet greater signs of peace in the future.
Click here if you're interested in Mikkel's book,
The Sword of Heaven. |