Interfaith Insight - 2020
Permanent link for "Love in a time of pandemic" by Kelly James Clark on May 12, 2020
We welcome back Kelly Clark, as we continue our series from the
Kaufman Interfaith Institute staff. Kelly has led grant-funded
international projects developing interfaith conferences and writing
with contributions from Jewish, Christian, and Muslim scholars from
over 10 countries, primarily in the Middle East. He is the author or
editor of over 20 books including his recent book, “Stranger,
Neighbors, Friends,” that is the focus of two current online book
group discussions.
When I was a little boy, in the early 60s, my father directed The
Community School at Lincoln Elementary School in Kalamazoo. Lincoln
School was in Kalamazoo’s predominantly black north side, literally
just over the tracks from Kalamazoo’s predominantly white south side.
My brother and I spent a lot of time at Lincoln school — every weekday
in the summer and, during the school year, at least one evening a week
and most Saturdays. We played basketball, raced around, took swimming
lessons, and just hung out with Charlie and Leroy and Debbie and
Jimmie and Earl and Curtis and countless others. It was a magical
place to grow up.
While I was aware of the substantial white-black differences in
housing and clothing, I wasn’t aware that all U.S. cities were deeply
segregated ensuring a life of poverty for most black people. I do
remember the north side’s joyous celebration when the United States
finally passed the Civil Rights Act in 1964.
I would only later hear that the north side was the ghetto (like
a zoo for black people), and that blacks were suited to slavery and
poverty. I recall hearing a host of dehumanizing names, names that
“justified” white people’s historic mistreatment of blacks.
I remember taking a Boy Scout camping trip to northern Michigan
and having to drive through the north side. Before we crossed the
tracks into the north side, our driver, one of the dads, insisted that
we roll up our windows and lock our doors and not look anyone in the
eye because, he said, you don’t know what they might do. I recall his
relief when we had safely passed through the threatening north side.
I remember thinking, “How can he say this? He doesn’t know
Charlie and Leroy and Debbie and Jimmie and Earl and Curtis, and
countless others.”
Charlie, by the way, would go on to earn his Ph.D. and become
Magic Johnson’s agent; Leroy a prominent educator in Grand Rapids;
Jimmie a distinguished Navy veteran; Debbie a devoted teacher of young
children; Earl a vice president at Upjohn; and Curtis a boxing coach
who teaches impoverished children the meaning of discipline and
success. And countless others.
But fear closed my driver’s windows and doors, preventing him
from seeing Charlie and Leroy and Debbie and Jimmie and Earl and
Curtis and countless others as individual human beings like him, with
hopes and dreams for a better future.
He saw Charlie and Leroy and Debbie and Jimmie and Earl and
Curtis and countless others as just “one of them” — less than fully
human, living in their self-imposed ghetto.
But he is not alone.
Fear, I’ve come to learn, does that to all of us.
It not only makes us think the worst of others, it makes us blame
and scapegoat others. And if we can blame “them” for crime, say, or
drugs, then we can “justify” harming them.
Sadly, though it is four-plus decades since the Civil Rights Act,
we continue to harm black people with racially-biased police, juries,
prisons, and even vigilantes. As just one example: It took nearly two
months and a great deal of public pressure for Georgia authorities to
charge two white men with killing Ahmaud Arbery, a black jogger.
And fear is rearing its ugly head again. The coronavirus has
created fear of isolation, of financial ruin, of destroying America,
and even of losing life itself.
As a result, fear is driving many of us, as we might expect, to
blame and scapegoat others.
When bad things happen, we want to know why and we want to know
who to blame. And, if it’s not obvious, fear drives us into the nooks
and crannies to find the why and the who.
And then to harm the perpetrator(s).
The problem is this — bad things are happening because of
COVID-19 for reasons we don’t know (or, more likely, for no reason).
There’s no why and there’s no who to blame. There’s just COVID-19.
But there’s little satisfaction in kicking a virus, just as
there’s little satisfaction in kicking a chair after one stub’s one’s
toe on it.
And, just as we really want to know who put the darn chair in our
toe’s way (and punish them), we want to know who has put that darn
virus in our way (and punish them).
But COVID-19 is not anyone’s fault.
It’s not the fault of the Chinese. While it did originate in
China, likely transferred from a bat, it could have originated
anywhere. And we should no more blame the innocent person who first
contracted the virus (or that person’s country) than we should blame
the U.S. for the 2009 Swine Flu (with up to half a million deaths
worldwide) or the 1918 Spanish Flu (with upwards of 50 million
victims), both of which may have originated in the United States. And
while we may dehumanize the Chinese as bat-eaters, we, after all, eat
factory-farmed meat and raw oysters.
Blaming the Chinese has led, as one might expect, to harming
Asian-Americans (aka, Americans); hate crimes towards Asian-Americans
are surging in the U.S. and around the world.
Likewise, it’s not the fault of Republicans, Democrats, Anthony
Fauci, immigrants, blacks, Big-Pharma, the Chinese military, the U.S.
military, the deep state, Jews, Bill Gates, Mexicans, Muslims or the media.
It’s just an inexplicable, purposeless, non-human mutation.
But the fear of the inexplicable is driving us to blame and to
harm and to divide.
At precisely the time when we need to encourage and help and unite.
The Christian Scripture, which understands the deadly and
powerful force of fear to inspire false beliefs and to inflict harm,
says “Perfect love casts out all fear.”
But, since none of us is a saint, we are more liable to embrace
its more natural opposite: “Fear casts out all love.”
And then we’re on to blame and harm and division.
Don’t let fear win by inculcating in you false beliefs and
inspiring in you the desire to inflict harm. And if fear and anger and
hostility are festering inside you, again as is perfectly natural,
tell your better self that you do not want to be that kind of person.
Choose, instead, love.
You won’t become instantly loving, of course. It never works that
way. But you have to start somewhere. Start by avoiding those nooks
and crannies that you know will incite your fear. Turn off the
fear-mongers on the radio or television, don’t click on that juicy
headline, and avoid reading the posts and tweets of those who just
confirm your fears.
Listen, instead, to inspiring music, talk (from a healthy
distance) with people who look different from you, donate money to
those who have none, and read of love and courage and hope.
There’s enough to fear already — for our country and for our
lives. Don’t let false fear close the windows and lock the doors of
your heart.
We need to come together now, when things seem the worst, so that
we can work together later when things will really be the worst — when
the virus has wreaked all of its havoc, when the last person dies and
is buried alone, and with the economy in shambles. We need to
cultivate love now, to overcome our fears, so we can face these new
fears together and better.
And then let all-embracing love inspire us to work together with
shared hopes and dreams for a better future.
Posted on Permanent link for "Love in a time of pandemic" by Kelly James Clark on May 12, 2020.