Today is the 8th
anniversary of the earthquake in Haiti. Today the world is enraged that the
president of the United States yesterday asked why we should accept more
immigrants from s----hole countries of El Salvador, Haiti and Africa rather
than from places like Norway. Monday is Martin Luther King Day. What will you
be doing that day?
We have known of Trump’s
racist outlook from his many previous words and actions. But it is not enough
to say someone is racist. This lens of viewing some of God’s created, beloved
people as inferior and of no worth has consequences. It creates policy in the
United States and globally for years to come.
Words matter. Relationships
matter. Consider how many Africans arrived in the U.S. during the Atlantic
slave trade. (Does Trump not know Nigerians don’t live in huts?) Consider the
hundreds of thousands who died in the Haiti earthquake, and the spirit of the
people of Haiti, (See the book, A
Witness: The Haiti Earthquake, a Song, Death, and Resurrection by Renee
Splichal Larson, whose young husband, Ben, was killed in the earthquake) And
did you know that Haiti helped us in the U.S. Revolutionary War?
The Jan 15th
issue of “The New Yorker” magazine cover artwork features Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. “taking a knee” in prayer, arms linked with NFL football players. What
will you be doing and saying MLK day? Where will you be?
To be focused only on
the obscenities of Donald Trump is not enough. We are called to be vigilant of
the policies (those in the news and not) being put in place. We are called to
deeply understand the issues and their intersection. We are called to be astute
to global implications. We are called to care. Yes, about people’s fears, so
they can be freed from their deep prejudices.
We are called to care for those who have suffered and suffer still. And
we are called to have the courage to speak, lest disdain and dismissal of nations
and peoples become the norm in speech and policy. Do we have the kindness and
courage and wisdom for that? What will you say today? What will you be doing on Martin Luther King
Day?
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