Thursday, September 17, 2015
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
[walking in the shoes of another - Timothy Kurek]
Timothy Kurek talks about intentional empathy and the year he spent walking in the shoes of another:
Timothy has also written a book called The Cross in the Closet.
Timothy has also written a book called The Cross in the Closet.
Friday, September 11, 2015
making a difference, one baby at a time
Our white friends to the south managed to do it. Jim Crow laws which enforced racial segregation in the southern states were in place until the 1960's. As the Civil Rights movement brought about legal changes, the state and local laws regarding segregation were overturned. In some ways, however, not that much changed and the U.S. situation evolved to what is known as the new Jim Crow, which is seeing (among other injustices and inequities) high percentages of black people (black men in particular) end up in for-profit prisons and many other barriers in place to prevent equal participation in society.
Here in Canada, one of our historical evils was the Indian residential schools: Aboriginal children were forcibly removed from their families and put into residential schools, forbidden to use their own languages and not allowed to practice their culture. Abuse was wide-spread. This took place roughly from 1876 to the late 1960's. The recent Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission calls it cultural genocide.
Understandably, Indian residential schools are done with. However, that doesn't mean that those in power suddenly believe that Aboriginal lives matter.
Around the end of the Indian residential school system, the Manitoba government began "systematically apprehending aboriginal children starting in the 1960s and placing them with non-aboriginal families — a practice known as the ’60s Scoop." (source). Read more here and here. Thousands of children were taken and placed in foster and adoptive homes. Just this past June 2015, the Premier of Manitoba apologized on behalf of the province for the 60's scoop. Yes, this is Canada - the Canada we don't here much about.
But is it over? And now what's happening in Manitoba?
Child and Family Services workers are seizing an average of one newborn a day, without assessing the parents or their ability to care for their baby, according to Cora Morgan, First Nations Children's Advocate. She says,
“In this system, you are guilty until you can prove you’re innocent. They’re not going in and investigating to see if there is another side of the story. They’re not going in there to say, ‘How can we help you?’ … They just take the kids.” (source)
You can imagine the effects on a baby of being removed from its mother, put in care for the key months of attachment, and then handed back. And the cycle continues...
Read more about the seizures of babies.
Read Christi Belcourt's indictment of Manitoba's child welfare system.
Estimated numbers:
The numbers of children in the system are staggering – it is estimated that there are today anywhere from 60, 000 – 70, 0000 Native children in foster care in Canada , a much higher proportion than the 20, 000 children taken in the horrific Sixties Scoop, where 20, 000 children were taken and placed into adoption or in residential schools, those institutions meant to “kill the Indian in the child”.
categories:
exclusion,
indigenous,
violence
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Wednesday, September 09, 2015
false apology poems - an explanation
Her poems follow the format used by William Carlos Williams (1883 - 1963), who wrote the following:
This Is Just to Say
I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox
and which
you were probably
saving
for breakfast
Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold
—William Carlos Williams
If you've read any of the false apology poems that I've written, they are neither innocent nor humorous. They are dark and satirical, and are intended to bring the attitudes of white supremacy out into the open. Forgive me.
I welcome any comments and thoughts you might have about them.
See the whole list of false apology poems.
Friday, September 04, 2015
[mc1r photo project challenges how we see race]
Thom Dunn, in a recent Upworthy article, asks:
Despite making up such a small percentage of the population, most of us have the same stereotypical image in our heads when we think of redheads: light-skinned, freckled white people with curls of flaming hair and a fiery temper to match.
Aside from the obvious issue of assigning a temperament to someone based on hair color, there's one other weird conclusion here: Why do we think that all redheads are white?
(source, emphasis added)
Michelle Marshall, a photographer based in London, has been taking portraits of redheaded people who are black or biracial. Dunn's article features some of her portraits interspersed with some of Marshall's thoughts.
Read the whole article -- easy (and beautiful) to read and thought-provoking at the same time.
Visit Michelle Marshall's website for more photos.
Friday, August 28, 2015
an apology from the Portsmouth Police and the Hampton Roads Jail
In memory of Jamycheal Mitchell, age 24, found dead in his jail cell at Hampton Roads Regional Jail on August 19, 2015, four months after being arrested for allegedly stealing $5 of food.
This is a false apology poem in the style of William Carlos Williams.
we just want to sayHungry?bad choice thattaking a mountain dew snickersand zebra cakejailed in aprilyou wasted awaytaking up spacewaiting for a hospital bedForgive usfor wasting tax dollarswe should have executed youat the scene of the crimepoem by rob g
This poem seems more harsh than some of the others. I think I'm feeling particularly angry today. Don't know how our black brothers and sisters cope with it, and especially as they know that any given day might be their last, just because they're black.
This is a false apology poem in the style of William Carlos Williams.
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
[voice of witness]
"Voice of Witness (VOW) is a non-profit dedicated to fostering a more nuanced, empathy-based understanding of contemporary human rights crises. We do this by amplifying the voices of individuals most closely affected by injustice, and by providing curricular and training support to educators and invested communities."
To date, they have published thirteen books of oral histories, with stories from Palestine, Chicago Public Housing, Columbia, and more.
Check them out!
Read this excerpt from Refugee Hotel online:
Or check out your local library -- the Edmonton Public Library, where I live, has three titles from Voice of Witness.
categories:
books,
embrace,
human rights,
margins,
prison
Thursday, August 20, 2015
[re-imagining disability]
Portraits of L'Arche Daybreak members by Warren Pot. See more of them here.
Related to this, Professor Pamela Cushing discusses how photographs tell a story, and can also accomplish ethical work and confer the dignity of full personhood on their subjects.
Here's an excerpt:
However, photos can also accomplish ethical work. They can influence how we think about people who are different from us. Formal photos like portraits can be particularly transformative since they disrupt public expectations. The subject of a portrait is recognized as worthy of being photographed. The format implies that you are worthy of contemplation and commemoration. So the very acts of staging and taking the photos symbolize their membership in a valued group – those who ought to be gazed at.
(source, emphasis added)
Read her succinct and interesting post here.
categories:
disability,
embrace,
portraits
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
[... space that protected and cared for the most fragile bodies]
Richard Beck, in his series discussing "The Gospel According to Ta-Nehisi Coates" (particularly in reference to Coates' book Between the World and Me), says this about what Jesus' kingdom looked like:
Jesus, by contrast, created communities centered around giving care to the most vulnerable in his society. Jesus carved out of Empire space that protected and cared for the most fragile bodies. That's what Jesus did as he moved from town to town, he created a community where the most oppressed and marginalized were welcomed and cared for. Communities of care that were open to agents of Empire, tax collectors and Roman soldiers, who were willing to work to buffer fragile bodies.
And this is what the early church did as well. The church carved out of Empire communities of care. Imperial Rome knew Christianity to be religion popular with women and slaves because of how these communities buffered their fragile bodies from the ravages of Empire.
To my eye, these communities of care carved out of Empire are what Jesus meant when he said "the kingdom of God is in your midst."
(source, emphasis added)
Read the rest of the article (the really good stuff is in the latter half of the post).
Read the series from Part 1.
Saturday, August 15, 2015
an apology from NJ State Troopers and the Mercer County Sheriff's Office
For Radazz Hearn, age 14. Shot seven times on Friday, August 7, 2015, by New Jersey state troopers and Mercer County Sheriff's officer for running away. In stable condition in hospital.
we just want to say
You went off at a run
in your sweatpants
red as blood
and reached for a ?
our instinct said gun
we shot seven times
to protect the neighbourhood
from thugs like you
Forgive us
for not liking you black and red fashion
it clashes with white folks'
sense of decorum
poem by rob g
Read an apology from the Waller County Sheriff's Office.
This is a false apology poem in the style of William Carlos Williams.
Read an explanation of false apology poems.
Thursday, August 13, 2015
august field trip to a church in London
I arrived about ten minutes late to find the door locked, not a great surprise considering the east-end-of-downtown location of the church and that it was evening, and rang the bell. A moment later, a friendly black woman wearing a colourful tie-dye shirt opened the door, introduced herself as Veronica, and welcomed me in.
She led me into the sanctuary - the rented space seats at least 400 just on the main floor, and there were only about fifty people present. I took a seat and discovered I had arrived just in time for the start of the sermon. Bruce, the pastor, was articulate, friendly and engaging. The service went on from there, not that different from what I experienced growing up Baptist and then attending Anglican churches as an adult. Prayer, Bible readings, hymns and contemporary songs (all familiar to me), sermon, communion, announcements. Across the board, the content was as evangelical as it gets.
In fact, if someone showed you a videotape of the service, leaving out announcements and a few identifying details, you might reasonably think this was any one of the many evangelical churches across our country. In reality, it's the London congregation of the Metropolitan Community Church, a denomination that had its "origins serving gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people" and which has now "become an inclusive and affirming congregation that actively welcomes all people".
Dare I suggest that this church is more evangelical - more full of good news - than evangelical usually gets?
In many churches, there are limits as to who is embraced, barriers keeping some out, conditions one has to meet, beliefs people have to agree with to take part. Here, everyone is welcome, all are embraced, the doors are flung wide open. That's good news! And here, in line with Jesus' model of going to those at the margins of his society, this church is about those at the margin of society - and everyone else - being welcomed and embraced.
The service itself was anti-climactic. It didn't have the showiness of seeker churches, the cool of hipster services, or the fervor of an old-fashioned tent revival. Sorry to break it to you, but it wasn't fabulously gay either. Embrace of all of God's creation with a focus on Jesus doesn't make for an exciting church; it makes for a local body of Christ where "come as you are" is real rather than a trite saying, where "just as I am" applies to everyone, where our common need for Jesus' love and God's mercy levels the ground beneath us, where we meet together to praise God and together learn what it means to be apprentices of Jesus.
One thing did stand out about the service, something that in my years of church life I've not seen before. During communion, after the priest or helper gave the bread and wine to the parishioner, they also gave a blessing. Not a simple "Lord bless you and keep you" or similar phrase and then on to the next person. Instead, they put their arms around each and every parishioner and said a prayer of blessing, different for each person.
Seeing this, and as it came closer to my turn to receive communion, I wondered if I as an outsider would also be given a blessing. I was, and part of it included these words: "May the love you experience here travel with you wherever you go."
Amen.
She led me into the sanctuary - the rented space seats at least 400 just on the main floor, and there were only about fifty people present. I took a seat and discovered I had arrived just in time for the start of the sermon. Bruce, the pastor, was articulate, friendly and engaging. The service went on from there, not that different from what I experienced growing up Baptist and then attending Anglican churches as an adult. Prayer, Bible readings, hymns and contemporary songs (all familiar to me), sermon, communion, announcements. Across the board, the content was as evangelical as it gets.
In fact, if someone showed you a videotape of the service, leaving out announcements and a few identifying details, you might reasonably think this was any one of the many evangelical churches across our country. In reality, it's the London congregation of the Metropolitan Community Church, a denomination that had its "origins serving gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people" and which has now "become an inclusive and affirming congregation that actively welcomes all people".
Dare I suggest that this church is more evangelical - more full of good news - than evangelical usually gets?
In many churches, there are limits as to who is embraced, barriers keeping some out, conditions one has to meet, beliefs people have to agree with to take part. Here, everyone is welcome, all are embraced, the doors are flung wide open. That's good news! And here, in line with Jesus' model of going to those at the margins of his society, this church is about those at the margin of society - and everyone else - being welcomed and embraced.
The service itself was anti-climactic. It didn't have the showiness of seeker churches, the cool of hipster services, or the fervor of an old-fashioned tent revival. Sorry to break it to you, but it wasn't fabulously gay either. Embrace of all of God's creation with a focus on Jesus doesn't make for an exciting church; it makes for a local body of Christ where "come as you are" is real rather than a trite saying, where "just as I am" applies to everyone, where our common need for Jesus' love and God's mercy levels the ground beneath us, where we meet together to praise God and together learn what it means to be apprentices of Jesus.
One thing did stand out about the service, something that in my years of church life I've not seen before. During communion, after the priest or helper gave the bread and wine to the parishioner, they also gave a blessing. Not a simple "Lord bless you and keep you" or similar phrase and then on to the next person. Instead, they put their arms around each and every parishioner and said a prayer of blessing, different for each person.
Seeing this, and as it came closer to my turn to receive communion, I wondered if I as an outsider would also be given a blessing. I was, and part of it included these words: "May the love you experience here travel with you wherever you go."
Amen.
Sunday, August 09, 2015
an apology from St. Louis Police Department Officer Darren Wilson
In memory of Michael Brown, killed August 9, 2014 by SLPD Officer Darren Wilson.
(Photo by AP)
i just want to say
Newly graduated from high school
you stole from a convenience store
walked down the street
with your friend
I shot you twelve times in the front
now you are dead and I am hated
how inconvenient for me
that I came by and did my duty
Forgive me
those cigarillos
would have killed you in the end
anyway
poem by rob g
Read more.
This is a false apology poem in the style of William Carlos Williams.
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
[asexuality]
Eliel Cruz, a speaker and columnist, has started a series with The Advocate called, #21AceStories. It's intended to amplify the voices of asexual individuals and increase understanding and acceptance about a little known sexual orientation. 21 asexual people around the world were asked, "What's the biggest misconception about asexuality?" Their answers fell into different categories, for which visual graphics were created and are being released in a series of four installments (1) (2) (3). Cruz also previously curated #27Bistories, which similarly addressed misconceptions about bisexuality.
Saturday, July 18, 2015
an apology from the Waller County Sheriff's Office
For Sandra Bland. Pulled over July 10, 2015 for a standard traffic violation (failure to signal). Dead in a cell July 13, 2015 at the Waller County Jail, Texas.
we just want to say
You were angry
dangerously black angry
to the point of
not signalling
we dragged you out of the car
face down
you were angry so angry
you killed yourself in jail
Forgive us
for interrupting your dream
of driving yourself
off a bridge
poem by rob g
Read more about On #SandraBland And The Life-Threatening ‘Angry Black Woman’ Myth
This is a false apology poem in the style of William Carlos Williams.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)