Interfaith Insight - 2021
Permanent link for "Coming together, signs of hope" by Doug Kindschi on February 2, 2021
“When day comes we ask ourselves,
where can we find light in
this never-ending shade?”
So begins the poem read at last month’s inauguration by the
22-year old Amanda Gorman that captured the nation’s imagination. She continued:
“And yet the dawn is ours
before we knew it
Somehow we do
it
Somehow we've weathered and witnessed
a nation that isn’t
broken
but simply unfinished.”
Can we “find light in this never-ending shade” that for many has
become the darkest midnight?
Can we come together to repair and
heal a nation whose work is “unfinished?”
Hope alone is not enough. We must also face the failures and
divisions of the present and past. It begins with the greatest
pandemic in over 100 years. This past year was “the year global health
went local,” wrote Bill and Melinda Gates in their annual foundation
letter. They described the world that has been connected by a network
of germs and microscopic particles that “like it or not” brings us all together.
While the virus does not recognize country borders or political
parties, it does not affect everyone equally. The Gates letter notes
that the COVID virus exposed pre-existing inequalities, gaps that were
always there, “but we just didn’t want to see them.” Their letter
continues, “People with less are faring worse than those with more.
Essential workers are facing greater risks than those who can work
from home. Students without internet access are falling behind
students who are learning remotely. In the United States, communities
of color are more likely to get sick and die than other Americans.”
Black Americans are reported to be three times as likely to get the
COVID virus as whites, and they as well as other minorities have less
access to testing and the vaccines.
The Gates letter doesn’t give up hope but sees “an important
opportunity to turn the hard-won lessons of this pandemic into a
healthier, more equal future for all.” They do recognize that this
will likely not be our last pandemic challenge. They write, “We don’t
know when the next one will strike, or whether it will be a flu, a
coronavirus, or some new disease we’ve never seen before. But what we
do know is that we can’t afford to be caught flat-footed again. The
threat of the next pandemic will always be hanging over our heads —
unless the world takes steps to prevent it.”
Recent political division also contributes to racial disparity
and even racial and religious bigotry. The recent attack on the U.S.
Capitol revealed again increased anti-Semitism in our country. The
shocking images from that attack included pictures of someone wearing
a Camp Auschwitz shirt and another wearing a reference to “six million
was not enough,” both references to the Nazi extermination camp and
the millions murdered during the Holocaust. This is only the latest
example of the long history of connections between white supremacist
groups in America and anti-Semitism and pro-Nazi ideas. Last week was
the International Holocaust Remembrance Day marking the anniversary of
the liberation of Auschwitz on Jan. 27, 1945.
That insurgency attack was not only an affront to Jews, but also
to Christians who were offended by the unholy mixture of references to
Jesus by the violent crowd. Sr. Christine Schenk, who worked for 20
years as a nurse midwife and is now a columnist for the National
Catholic Reporter, wrote of her alarm about the Jesus flags and
frequent references to Jesus as they stormed the Capitol. She wrote,
“I could barely take in that this was happening at the citadel of my
country’s democracy — let alone that the perpetrators would justify
their violent behavior by invoking the name of the Prince of Peace.”
Sr. Christine called for civic communities to join with
communities of faith and religious leaders to condemn the violence and
“work to end the rampant rage and division that have overpowered our
nation.” She offered this prayer:
“Grant us, O God,
A vision of your world as your love would have it:
A world where the weak are protected, and none go hungry or poor.
A world where the riches of creations are honored and shared so
everyone might enjoy them.
A world where different races, cultures and creeds live in peace
and harmony, with equal regard.
A world where peace is built with justice and justice is guided
by love.”
The Sister’s professional career, combining health care with
her religious commitment, reminds us of the important connection
between these two aspects of building a healthy community. It is also
a reminder of the two events dealing with religion and health coming
up later this month on Feb. 22, offered in conjunction with the Office
of Vice Provost for Health at Grand Valley State University. (See
infobox for details.)
Returning to the Inauguration poem by Amanda Gorman, she
referenced the passage from the Hebrew prophet Micah, asking us to
envision the day that “everyone shall sit under their own vine and fig
tree. And no one shall make them afraid.” It is the same passage that
President George Washington referred to in 1790 when writing to the
Jewish community in Newport, R.I. They had expressed concern about
whether in the new nation Jews would be safe and respected. Let us
claim that promise from Washington and the vision from Gorman.
Her poem concludes:
“It's because being American is more than a pride we inherit,
it’s the past we step into
and how we repair it…
our people diverse and beautiful will emerge,
battered and
beautiful
When day comes we step out of the shade,
aflame
and unafraid
The new dawn blooms as we free it
For there is
always light,
if only we’re brave enough to see it
If only
we’re brave enough to be it
Posted on Permanent link for "Coming together, signs of hope" by Doug Kindschi on February 2, 2021.