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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry

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MLK, Trayvon and Jesus

Posted: 04/03/2012 5:46 pm

April 4 is the 44th anniversary of the martyrdom of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. This week is Holy Week. So what do Trayvon Martin, Dr. King and Jesus have in common? No, this question isn't the beginning of a bad joke -- the answer is hopefully apparent. They were all killed in the midst of a political climate that justified fear and legalized hate.

This is a better question: What are we with the majority hue (though, as a reminder, we white folks will be a minority in just a few decades!) going to do about it? At what point do we stop clucking our tongues, saying, "It's a shame," and go on with grocery lists and yard chores as if it doesn't matter? Do we just pretend "It's a black thing," while we watch various news sources remind us that black on black violence is more prevalent than ignorant, trigger-happy "neighborhood watch" folks gunning down teenagers armed with Skittles and iced tea?

Really, truly, no longer do we get to be "neutral." As the Archbishop Tutu wisely noted during the Apartheid struggle, "If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality."

Most of us who live in white neighborhoods pretend that it doesn't affect us. But yes, it does! As the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."

When I think that I get to relish "white privilege" while my black sisters and brothers get subjected to unfair arrests and inequitable education, then I am participating, de facto, with the very system that oppresses. So, enough justice talk. I know, we all get tired of hearing it, right? Especially when it doesn't affect us. And I know that a lot of folks are presuming that Trayvon will eventually become last-page news until we don't have to deal with it anymore.

So, how about this story? In 2005, Albert W. Florence was driving in New Jersey. He was detained for a fine that he had paid (and he had the paperwork to prove it). In the course of being detained, he was strip-searched two times. As he reports he was told to "turn around" while he stood naked in front of guards, "Squat and cough. Spread your cheeks." This story was reported again when, this week, the Supreme Court determined (with a 5-4 vote) that this was legal. (Remember: no arrest record, no indictable offense and strip search is legal.)

As I kept hearing the story, my gut knew that Mr. Florence was black, and as I researched the story I found out that my suspicions were correct. He kept the paperwork of having paid the fine because he knew what it is to be "driving while black." Sadly, I have a unique perspective as a white person on such issues in New Jersey. Years ago I was driving with my best friend (a dark-skinned black man) from Princeton Seminary on the way to New York City. The New Jersey State Police had set up a seat belt and sobriety check. My lights were all working, my license and registration were in order, we were not speeding, we had not consumed alcohol and we both had our seatbelts on. However, the five and six officers detained us for 45 minutes. Repeatedly they came to my window and said (with a flashlight shining on my face) "You sure you're OK?" and then shining the beam on my friend's dark face, "You sure don't look OK," as they kept the other hand on their gun. We felt frightened and sickened -- and knew there was nothing we could do. My friend was furious and he wanted to make an issue of it on the side of the road -- and I pleaded with him not to, because I was afraid we would both end up dead.

That's just one of thousands of stories. It's not prosecutable -- idiocy and ignorance aren't prosecutable. So we were just quiet. I don't talk about this story very often. But this past weekend as I told the story to a friend I felt my face flush and my heart beat fast, 20 years and several states away. The fear, sorrow and horror are still there.

So, back to this week: at what point will it matter to us with lighter hues what happens to those with darker hues? At what point do we realize that, in our silence, we have kept our foot on the mouse's tail? The words of Pastor Martin Niemoller, who spent time in two concentration camps (including Dachau) are good to remember:

First they came for the communists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Jew.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left to speak out for me.

Before Jesus was arrested the apostle Peter said, "I am ready to go to prison with you, even to die with you!" And Jesus said, "Before the rooster crows tomorrow morning, you will deny me three times." And when Peter did, indeed, deny Christ, he went away and wept bitterly. Christ was clear that we are called to love God with our all and our neighbors as ourselves. In our silence, while people like people like Mr. Florence are victimized we do not love our neighbors as ourselves.

In his speech "Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution," the Rev. Dr. King said:

"Let nobody give you the impression that the problem of racial injustice will work itself out. Let nobody give you the impression that only time will solve the problem. That is a myth, and it is a myth because time is neutral. It can be used either constructively or destructively. And I'm absolutely convinced that the people of ill will in our nation -- the extreme rightists -- the forces committed to negative ends -- have used time much more effectively than the people of good will. It may well be that we will have to repent in this generation, not merely for the vitriolic works and violent actions of the bad people who bomb a church in Birmingham, Alabama, or shoot down a civil rights worker in Selma, but for the appalling silence and indifference of the good people who sit around and say, "Wait on time." Somewhere we must come to see that human progress never rolls in on wheels of inevitability. It comes through the tireless efforts and the persistent work of dedicated individuals. Without this hard work, time becomes an ally of the primitive forces of social stagnation. So we must help time and realize that the time is always right to do right."

 

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49tales
lucem sequimur
09:02 PM on 04/10/2012
well I thought this was a beautifully written article and you have a new fan

there is an environment of fear, anger and hatred in the times of Jesus, Martin Luther King, and Trayvon Martin

while I don't call myself a Christian, I'm more Agnostic right now, my understanding of what Jesus taught is love, compassion and empathy.

Keep writing, it gives me hope knowing people like you are out there :)
12:40 PM on 04/07/2012
yet more of the dribble...Zimmerman is not without fault....but all the facts are not in. the press has done nothing but to hang this on racism...white Hispanic...would someone give me a break. sociological experiments actually hold no water with me or others. most are destined to find outcomes favorable to the experimenters agenda. the fact is millions of legal guns exist...yet only a few are used to kill anyone...most are bought illegally. used illegally such as the fiasco of Obama-Holder's "Fast and Furious". here in Arizona we have very liberal gun laws and there is no carnage in the streets...however pastors who have no clue of life on the streets can only voice their concern over some group they want to connect to the well worn ignoratio elenchi poverty makes bad people. having lived in poor countries i never saw that but i have seen self-centered reprobates....who care nothing but for themselves
05:40 AM on 04/06/2012
In the Trayvon Martin Case, George Zimmerman violated the Civil Rights of Trayvon Martin by chasing him down the street with a gun. Americans have the right to walk down the street without someone, unprovoked suddenly seeing them and begin chasing them with a gun. In New Orleans after Hurricane Katerina policemen chased several residents and shot them and were prosecuted under Hate Crimes Law.
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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry
06:48 AM on 04/06/2012
Thank you for your comment. The challenge, of course, is that in the "Stand Your Ground" law, even if you"feel" threatened you can take deadly action. Sadly, as several sociological experiments have demonstrated, in our society people "feel" threatened by black men without provocation or cause.
11:03 AM on 04/07/2012
Even though some people “feel" threatened by black men without provocation or cause, this is not a justification to act out as Zimmerman did. It is a crime to see an unarmed black man walking on the sidewalk and without provocation chase him with your gun until there is a confrontation and you shoot him. It seems to me that Florida judges’ desire to apply the “Stand Your Ground Law”, ignore all crimes leading to fatal confrontations and dismiss the cases after the murders citing this law. I believe that they are waiting to dismiss the Trayvon case as well. This is why the federal government must get involved. At least one Civil Rights Violation was committed here before the fatal confrontation and in several other past fatal cases too.
07:09 PM on 04/06/2012
Nice to know you were hiding in the dark and saw all this taking place.

Shows how easy it is to build a lie from smoke...
06:02 PM on 04/05/2012
This article is the blabbering of a "band waggoner" one whose favorite team is the present Super Bowl winner and nothing more. There is so much left out of this article when it comes to social justice, it is staggering in what is not said. To be sure Jesus' and Dr. Martin Luther King's deaths were on a completely different level than Trayvon Martin's ,they were all acts of violence . To equate Trayvon Martin's death with the former is like trying to equate Craker Jax with Cornflakes.
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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry
06:53 AM on 04/06/2012
I did not equate the deaths--every death, like every life, is different. But "all are precious in His sight" as the Sunday School song goes. I agree that much is left out of the article that is constrained by space limitations. I have offered more on social justice in other articles and in comments here.
04:23 PM on 04/06/2012
I accept your explaination. God Bless .
GRANDMAPATRIOT
obviously a senior patriot
02:06 PM on 04/05/2012
oh boy...this is absolutely gone too far.
12:11 PM on 04/05/2012
To get a feel of what went on the night Trayvon Martin was killed, you need to listen to that 911 call made by a neighbor. The fatal shot is heard in the background.
Just listen to it.
You don't need any experts.
You don't need to know anything about this case.
You don't even need an open mind.
But you need to listen to that heart-wrenching call.
Then draw your own conclusions.
All you need is your ears and a heart that’s not made of stone.
http://soundclick.com/share.cfm?id=11548279
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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry
06:53 AM on 04/06/2012
Thank you for your post.
11:24 AM on 04/05/2012
What you just said is a contrived strategy of utter absurdity.
Do you really think the readers would actually believe something
like that?
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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry
06:58 AM on 04/06/2012
It would depend on the reader's social construct and exposure to various perspectives--as well as, in Jesus' words, "ears to hear." I think perhaps a different question is--would you want to be a Black Man in this society? I do not think that Mr. Martin would have been shot if he was not African American. I do not think that Mr. Florence would have subjected to the humiliation he endured if he was not African-American. This perspective is substantiated by Justice Department findings on the number of people who are stopped when "driving while black" and the number of illegal searches African-Americans encounter.
05:17 AM on 04/05/2012
Obama is the racist.
04:32 AM on 04/05/2012
This has nothing to do with race. It has only blown up because people want it to be about race. I came across 7 other stand your ground act related events where the "Zimmerman" of the case got away. In those cases there was a case where an "African american" got off.

No one complained then.
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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry
07:00 AM on 04/06/2012
To understand the enormity of the anger regarding this case one would need to understand the history behind the anger. I would be curious to know of the cases to which you refer.
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Timothy Bladel
We need better central planning, not less.
04:23 AM on 04/05/2012
Up happens if the evidence shows Trayvon attacked Zimmerman, even if Zimmerman asked him what he was doing. The idea that only blacks get profiled is just silly. The police a trained to look for those who break laws, and I was one who broke laws, they could see it in how I dressed, in how I acted, even if they didn't know for sure, they guessed, and were correct. Rights were wrong, then I went walking on my way, if they were right I went to jail. I would not attack anybody, even if they shouldn't of bothered me. We just don't know what happen yet, but that hasn't stoped those sho need this narrative to further their agenda. Odd thing is, AS A fiscal conservative, I like Obama, but disagree with his politics, I don't like Romney, and I think he's a fraud. I may not even vote, but I will still be callers racist and I'll be profiled by liberals railing against profiling. That's irony for you.
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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry
07:02 AM on 04/06/2012
To say it is "just silly" reveals lack of recognition of the many studies that substantiate racial profiling by police. And I hope you vote . . . it's a treasured gift and privilege that many have died for to utilize.
12:20 AM on 04/05/2012
OMG. Tell the "reverend" that their are all kinds of new treatments for Alzheimers. The Trayvon as an innocent victim has already been THOROUGHLY debunked, and no one's buying that "Blacks are victim's of racism" crapola anymore.
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Bella Lee
10:42 AM on 04/05/2012
Trayvon was only guilty of looking guilty
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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry
07:08 AM on 04/06/2012
When you look at access to education, inequitable access to housing, and the disparity in household incomes it would be difficult not to see the challenges--and the racism.
11:58 AM on 04/06/2012
Thank you for replying to people's comments. It makes it feel more like a conversation rather that just a shout from a crowd.

The challenges you specify are really functions of economics and not of race. If those challenges were a function of race many of the wealthy blacks would have those same challenges, wouldn't they?

You speak of profiling in one of your other comments. Shouldn't the people who feel they are being profiled be against profiling? In a Sept 11 poll asking Americans if Middle Eastern LOOKING people should be profiled at the airports, resulted in 45% of whites and 65% of Blacks in wanting profiling.

People forget there were two groups of people that trudged through the civil rights era. The first group only had to identify racism while the second group had to change. There are many examples (although never magnified) of that change taking other than poll results. I think, if the progress made by the second group was ever recognized by the first group would go a long way on improving race relations.

I'm hoping to see an article by you highlighting examples of the white community judging a black person by the content of their character or the black community judging a white person by their skin color. If you have trouble thinking of one let me know, I have plenty.
researcher
researcher
09:18 PM on 04/04/2012
the worst is yet to come.

third world is coming to america and americans see it not.

the two party system will make sure third world comes to america while they promise to fix america but americans dont have to change.

the last president that said americans needed to change was voted out of office. so americans elected a wanna be cowboy owned by GE and wall street.
08:54 PM on 04/04/2012
OK, I'm privileged because I've worked hard. And was given that work ethic by my parents. I also stay out of trouble, and certainly was given that discipline by my parents. I've earn respect in my community and on the sidewalk by my attitude and how I carry myself, as well as the respect I give others. The Golden Rule works. Now, my question to Rev. Ruth: What race am I?
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Rev. Ruth Hawley-Lowry
07:10 AM on 04/06/2012
Indeed, the Golden Rule is a gift! To all . . .
08:49 PM on 04/04/2012
I think both races & any in-between occasionally get that unique treatment for no reason, except the powers-that-be CAN. Things were rough for blacks fifty years ago & whites worked hard to get past the racism, including the civil right struggle, affirmative action - it was hard for higher-qualified whites to take a back seat on their own education in favor of race, but they did it, integration, better schools, better paying jobs, etc. We wanted equality. It was generations prior that were satisfied with the status quo. Since then, there are more racially mixed marriages, more college educated blacks, more Hollywood & big Athlete money-makers, more CEO's & managers, and many politicians. There haven't been any unusual problems with our races, until our government decided to create division & brought out Sharpton & Jackson to do 'their thing'. As far as Trayvon. The facts actually are not in yet & we shouldn't be judging or making death threats. Every day that has passed since the murder of Trayvon, there are hundreds of murders all over our country. Some black on black, some black on white. All mostly ignored by media. White on black is more unusual & gets all the attention. Let the courts do their job. We are not vigilante's in this modern age. For every murdered person someone weeps forever at the loss.
12:30 AM on 04/05/2012
This was a sad event from all angles. I am surprised that I have to mention that the men involved were black and hispanic. Other than that elephant in the room, your letter was thoughtful.
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dbrett480
08:44 PM on 04/04/2012
I'm not sure what the Treyvon Martin case has to do with the Supreme Court case you mentioned. Many liberals (yourself included) have no idea about that actual case. The officers that run and administer the jails are not responsible for the traffic stop or the subject's arrest. They are responsible for running a jail in as safe a manner as possible. And that includes ensuring no drugs and weapons are brought inside the housing units.