racism: December 2007 Archives

juxtaposition: riding walls

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Within minutes of each other I watched and listened to Steve's rousing (northern) seasonal greeting from (as he says) "a happier time, before Vietnam, the Civil Rights, and all the "horrors" of our "modern" world," and Tamer's reminder of other realities: snapshot of a modern horror.

Meanwhile, the economic news is better in Bethelem this year, tourism has increased since a sharp dropoff after the second intifada in 2000. The increase of visitors is, however, a qualified "good": the occupation is as real as ever.

a peacemaker with grit

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My buddy Steve has sent two announcements the last few days concerning U.S. Representative Julia Carson (1938-2007).

Confronted with barely-veiled racial prejudice in the halls of Congress by a peer who did not recognize her, Carson queried, "What's your point?" Thus sums up the Indianapolis Star, in a special report called "A warrior for the city."

I paid no attention to state politics the years I lived in Indianapolis, being invested in the cultural and linguistic politics of the Deaf Community (which was a pioneer in the revolutionary bilingual-bicultural movement in Deaf Education), and working on issues of access and ableism in the lesbian community. Hence, I learn of "Julia" in retrospect, and am particularly drawn to the news story because of its invocation of "war" by labeling her a warrior.

"Her weapons of choice are blunt talk and a dollop of charm," the Congressional Quarterly's Politics in America once said of her.

Weapons. Words as weapons counterposed with "charm." I am not disputing these characterizations nor their utility as skills, what I am puzzling over is if/when we can learn (or teach ourselves) to speak of such determination and ferocity in a way that honors the power of negotiation, period. (Tary and I started a conversation about "centering" a few weeks ago.)

"A lot of people get elected to positions and forget that they serve all the people," said John M. Thomas, former president of Community Action of Greater Indianapolis. "She never forgot that."

Steadfast memory. Conviction. Blunt talk. These are the tools and skills of those who seek foundational peace, of those who intend with each word and every action to change the most basic operations of our institutions from subtle mechanisms of privilege/discrimination to equitable and just treatment of and for everyone.

I do wish I had known her. :-)

on invisible persons

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"Let me ask you a question back," I told him.

"Has it ever occurred to you to wonder if the history we teach our children is a lie?
After a moment of stunned silence, he said, "Good Lord, Jason. I hope you're joking."
"Why?"
"Surely that's manifest."
"It isn't to me."
"You've been there, Jason. We were there together. It's all lies and bullshit till graduate school. Why else have graduate school?"
"That's very cynical."
"Is it?"
"Suppose I were to tell you that the lies don't stop in graduate school?"
After Dachau
Daniel Quinn
2001 (p. 182)

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