Thursday, April 24, 2008

Talking about Race
Much has been made in the news and the debates about some inflammatory remarks made by the former pastor of Trinity UCC church where Barak Obama is a member. The Rev. Jeremiah Wright is a widely popular preacher who has preached many sermons at Trinity UCC (The Nation’s largest UCC congregation) and in other churches and conferences across this country. Hundreds of them have been videotaped. I personally have a video of his keynote presentation at a conference I attended. Kathleen has heard him speak on several occasions. Out of his hundreds of sermons some few have contained language that white folks have considered over the top, as when at Howard University, to an almost entirely African American gathering a few days after 9/11 he said that instead of singing God Bless America he would say, “God Damn America.”
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We ask “How in the world could anyone not love America?” “Why in the world would anyone want to harm and humiliate the United States on a major scale?” “Aren’t we the greatest and most free nation in the whole history of human civilization?”
All Americans do not agree that the United States is the greatest nation on earth, the most moral, the most prosperous, and certainly not the nations which is most just and fair and careful of the rights of its citizens. We have been poisoned by our history of chattel slavery, and by pervasive racism that persists over 150 years after the end of slavery. Many African Americans are more than bitter, often angry because of the limitations and insults that they have lived with all of their lives. Fifty years after Brown versus Board of Education we still have segregated schools. School systems like Hartford which serve the minority community do not provide education equal to what is offered in suburban schools. The horrifically low graduation rate for Hartford’s youth would not be tolerated in any suburban school. On April 17 I went to an event at the legislature highlighting the health disparities in our state. I was shocked at some of the facts presented. In our state per 1000 live births of white babies five die before the age of one, over 14 out of 1000 Blacks babies die in the first year of life. Ten percent of white adults are uninsured in the state, 21.4 % of Black adults are uninsured. For Pediatric Asthma the hospitalization rate for whites is 90, it is 263 for Blacks. The same kind of disparities exists for poverty, education, housing etc. Blacks are behind in every measure of social and economic health as a result of persistent and pervasive racism.

But white folks do not get it; even those of us who have had African American friends for many years still do not get it, because we do not personally experience these disparities. Our African American friends seldom share their experiences and their rage with those of us who are white. We can dismiss the few stories we hear about our friends being detained for driving while black as the result of a few bad cops. In Memphis I picked up a book entitled Gracism, The Art of Inclusion by David Anderson, an African American Pastor. He said he was detained three times on his first day on his job as associate pastor at a predominantly white church in a ritzy Chicago neighborhood. Those of us who live in white skin don’t get it! We do not hear about more than a fraction of the discrimination and insults that our African American, Latino and Muslim friends experience daily.

Our society will not change if we continue to remain silent and pretend that racism is not a problem in this country and that we are not racists. Other people may be racists, but we want to think we are not, and we are. Racism and the myth of Black inferiority have poisoned all of us, what ever color our skin is. Barack Obama broke the conspiracy of silence that has gripped America; now it is time that the rest of us join in the conversation about race and racism.

Monday, April 07, 2008

A Week in Memphis



Kathleen and I spent the past week in Memphis, TN. Actually we spent Monday and much of Saturday at O'Hare Field, the Chicago Airport.

The Racial Ethnic Multicultural Network of the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education was meeting there for an Annual Meeting, and Kathleen’s associate was meeting a committee to receive full certification as a CPE Supervisor. She did receive this certification, which was cause to celebrate on Beale Street where we ate Barbecue and listened to Blues. Memphis is famous for both.

The conference was centered around remembering Dr. Martin Luther King who was gunned down in Memphis on the balcony of the Loraine Motel on April 4, 1968, forty years ago. We heard a panel of REM founders all talk about how Dr. King’s life and ministry effected them, attended seminars, worshipped and participated in City Wide Events remembering Dr. King.

He had gone to Memphis in 1968 to support the garbage workers who wanted union recognition (AFSCME), decent wages, and to be treated with dignity as men. They claimed that the city of Memphis was treating them like dogs and their signs read, I AM A MAN.



A few more pictures from the March.
On Friday we joined hundreds of others in walking the route the marchers took on April 4, 1968 with Dr. King at the lead. It was 6:01 PM that evening that shots rang out and Dr. King fell dead on the balcony of the Loraine Motel. The march ended at the Motel where everyone spoke. Both Jessie Jackson and Al Sharpton passed us by in the crowd and we saw John McCain on the Motel Balcony. He now wants to apologize for voting against making Dr. King’s birthday a national holiday. A little late, don’t you think?

We toured the National Civil Rights Museum with included the Loraine Motel, STAX Records Museum, and attended a huge gala celebration where Harry Belafonte was Honored (and spoke 20 or 30 minutes). He was supposed to make a brief response, but took the time allocated for Dr. Joseph Lowry, who gave him a very hard time, but them spoke briefly and to the point.

If there were any Clinton supporters on the platform that night they were certainly undercover, most of the speakers were clearly supporting Barak Obama.

The food, by the way was awful, overdone tough steak. A terrible choice to try to serve a big crowd. The tickets were $100 full price, although REM had a much cheaper price by buying multiple tables.