I went to the "Breakfast of
Champions" Thursday morning at Rogers Herr Middle School where young
people were awarded for the excellence and improvement. At that breakfast,
several sixth graders shared their "I Have a Dream Speech" they wrote
in celebration of Martin Luther King day. One little guy said, "I have a
dream that one day I will be an architect, and build a hotel under the
water." Another little girl said, "I have a dream that every child
can come home from school, and there will be food on the table." Other
sixth graders shared their dreams:
·
"That
every child can be safe at school, and free of bullying"
·
"That every child will have a parent that
lives and cares for them"
·
"That there are more places to help
mentally ill people"
·
"That we will stop polluting Mother Earth”
·
"That people will not be treated
differently because of what country they are from"
·
"That we would be one world and one big
country so there would be no more war"
·
"That teachers would be treated like
bridges to the future"
·
"That we would not be strangers, and we
would be brothers and sisters as we are in God's eyes"
·
"That I could become an architect and
build a hotel under the water"
·
"That everyone would be treated with
respect"
·
"That we would treat animals with
kindness and not kill them"
·
“That people will stop using drugs and
alcohol”
·
“That everyone would be treated with respect”
·
“That all races will love each other as
equals”
I
was moved, almost to tears, as I heard these beautiful children share their
beautiful dreams. I felt so lucky and blessed to have my son sitting with all
these children, of so many colors, dreaming together.
After,
the breakfast of champions I went to court where I represented young African
American men charged with murder. After that, I went to a gathering of more
than three hundred Durham community members who gathered at a Faith Summit on
Poverty in Durham at Union Baptist Church on Roxboro Road.
At
this Summit I learned that 27% of children in Durham live in poverty. That is
below about 20,000 a year for a family of four. That is about 14,000 children
in our community who live in poverty. And there were so many people at this
gathering who believe we can end poverty for our children. In large groups, small
groups, presentations, information sharing, we learned what so many people are
doing already to help lift our children out of poverty. There are so many
dedicated people working for poor folks, many of them are in our Meeting. They
shared a dream that where you are born in Durham will not determine your
opportunity to thrive in this world.
We
heard from people like Bahari Harris of Empowering Walltown Youth, describing
their summer and mentoring programs for children in Durham. We heard from Dr.
Susan Blackmon Yo Durham, describing a Year of Opportunity for Durham Teens (Yo
Durham) who learn and serve and succeed. We heard from Tasha Melvin, with
Circles of Support for families transitioning from homelessness to homes. We
heard from members of First in Families, our Betsy MacMichael's organization,
who help form circles of support for families with people with disabilities.
All these people shared optimism that we can end Poverty in Durham.
Some
of the reasons for optimism is that the Durham economy is growing. There are
jobs coming to Durham. (The trick is to help people in Durham get these jobs)
We also have a tremendous amount of social capital, people willing to help each
other. We have a tremendous intellectual capital, with all the geniuses at the
Universities in our midst. We have strong faith communities willing to lead the
privileged part of our community into fellowship with those with less
privilege. With these assets we can lift
our children out of poverty.
The
needs in our community emerged in themes throughout the day. People need a
living wage for their work. People ought to be able to work all day, and that
be enough to provide the basic needs for their families. People need reliable
public transportation to get to work. People need safe housing. Families with
children at risk for violence need support parenting and advocating for their
children to get the most resources they can in schools.
We
also heard from Dr. Barber who described the structural and institutional
inequality that is violence in the form of poverty. He shared experiences from
his statewide tour learning about poverty in North Carolina. He shared how
families living in the woods would sweep up before they came in, and then share
their food. (In comparison, he also how
less hospitable legislators in the General Assembly had him arrested)
His
comments echoed Dr. Martin Luther King's critique of capitalism, and the great
inter-related evils of economic exploitation, racism, and militarism. These problems are still present, and are
maybe even worse than they were in Dr. King's time. More people are in poverty. More African
American men are in prison.We are more militarized than ever before. The
violence around us springs from the radical inequality between rich and poor,
which is the legacy of our history of racial oppression.
Dr.
Barber also reminded us that poverty is at the Center of God's agenda. He reminded us that God identifies with the
poor. I mean, Jesus was born in a barn. He hung out with fishermen and
outcasts. He told us that when we feed
the hungry, clothe the naked, welcome the stranger, heal the sick, or visit the
prisoner we are with God. (Matt: 25:31-46).
He also reminded us that God blesses the poor: "Blessed are you who
are poor, for yours is the Kingdom of God." (Luke 6:20-21).
Why
would the poor be in the Kingdom of God? Because poor people, sick people,
outcasts, and children understand the fragility of life. They understand our need for each other, our
fundamental interconnectedness. They know that we are with God when we are
loving and caring for each other.
That
means that our myth of self-reliance, this false story of rugged individualism,
is a lie leading us away from each other, and away from God. This belief that
we can do it alone, is self idolatry.
We
come to our Quaker meeting to seek our personal relationship with God. We find
inner peace, and meditate. We want to be kind, and be simple. But if our spiritual path stops here, we have
not truly found God. If our spiritual
path does not take us into the lives of the poor, the sick, the outcasts, then
we are suffering an absence of the Divine. We are also affirming the status
quo, with all its inequality, exclusion, and violence. If this is where we
stop, then our silence is not worship. Our silence is violence. Complicity.
Dr.
Barber reminded us of the consequences of ignoring the poor. He reminded us of
the story of Lazarus. (Not the one who rose from the dead, but the one who was
a beggar). Lazarus begged at the door of the rich man who completely ignored
him. All Lazarus wanted was some crumbs from the rich man's table, but the rich
man did not even see him. When Lazarus and the rich man died, Lazarus was
comforted and the rich man was tortured in Hell. Now, all the rich man wish was
that Lazarus would touch some cool water to his lips. Pretty harsh. But God
said no, you were warned by the prophets that you must care for the poor. He
asked if he could go back to his brothers and warn them, and God said no, they
have the prophets.
The
real sin here is our failure to see the poor. Dr. Barber called this
"ATTENTION VIOLENCE." And the
Hell is real, because it is separation from God. The missed opportunity to
share in the divine is Hell; and, the
rich guy missed this opportunity every day he walked past Lazarus.
It
is in our love for each other that God becomes manifest. We are God's gifts to each other. When can be
with God when we can sit in the presence of boundless grief with victims of
homicide, when we can share the table with someone who is really hungry, when
we can share a roof with someone without one, when we can share a jail cell
within a truly lonely prisoner, when we can give a ride to the immigrant mother
who fears deportation every time she gets behind the wheel of a car. We can experience the divine when we can
share time with a disabled person who struggles mightily with tasks we take for
granted. When we can sit in the presence of each other, not in guilt, but with
love. We can share the joy of the opportunity of experiencing God
together. These poor, sick, outcasts can
save us from the hell of our blind privilege, and we can help ease our suffering.
The
folks at the Faith Summit were clear that we are not meant to work FOR the
poor, we are meant to be WITH the poor. It is what Oscar Romero called
"accompaniment," and Durham's own Marcia Owen calls "being
with," instead of "being for."
We can find God by caring for each other, being with each other. We are
not showing up with solutions, programs, professional expertise to fix problems. We are showing up as children of God
to be with our suffering brothers and sisters.
This
is the path to the divine. It is together that we find God. "We are caught
in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny.
Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly." (Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr.)
And
so we have many opportunities to continue our journey into the lives of our
suffering brothers and sisters. In our Meeting we have community action groups
to end poverty, to help victims of gun violence, to advocate for the environment, to assist
immigrants. We are called by God to enter into real relationships with folks
who suffer, and to ease suffering with our presence. And so I say to you Friends, "Get thee
to a community in action group."
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