‘THE BROWNING OF AMERICA”
I had
intended this blog for last week, but the Anglo events in Las Vegas last
weekend caused me to change to our Molechian worship of guns. Because of our deep and powerful worship of
guns, I now understand why the death penalty was prescribed for those who
worshipped Molech (Leviticus 20:1-5) and who sacrificed their children to
Molech. I don’t agree with it, but I
understand the urgency. We all feel it
now in the USA – we are sacrificing our children every day to the god of guns.
I had
intended to write on the impact of Hispanic and Latinx heritage in our society
as part of Hispanic Heritage month. And,
indeed the terrible slaughter by an Anglo man in Las Vegas (Hispanic feminine
version of “the meadows”) happened in territory previously owned by Mexico and
ceded to the USA in 1848 as the result of our imperialist war, part of whose
motive was to expand slavery. Molech
makes his case.
I remember
seeing my first Hispanic people when I was in middle school. We called them Mexicans (and much worse names
too), and they began to show up in downtown Helena on Saturdays to go shopping,
as did everyone else on the big shopping day of the week. I could not figure
out why they were in Helena, but the farming kids let us know that they had
come to work in the fields. They came
because African-Americans had been driven out by mechanization and by the
oppressive working conditions and the huge system of injustice. It was our first time to engage another
racial group other than “white” or “black.”
It would take me years to realize that these folks were part of a
developing network of people from Mexico and other parts south of the USA, who
were becoming the primary work force for harvesting farm crops in America.
My next
conscious engagement with Latinx folk was in the early 1970’s when I
participated in the boycotts of grapes and lettuce in support of the United
Farmworkers in California. I was living
in Nashville at the time, and I remember going to the stores there to ask store
managers not to carry California grapes or lettuce unless they were certified
UFW grown. In the non-union, “right to
work” South, they looked at me and the others as if we were from outer
space. Cesar Chavez and Delores Huerta
co-founded the United Farmworkers movement in 1962 in California, but of course
the work of Ms. Huerta has largely been forgotten. A new documentary called “Delores” seeks to
correct that, so go see it to get a sense of the history of “brown” people as
well as the power of patriarchy and the determination of oppressed people to
find justice. It also outlines the cost
of such work.
While I was
pastor at Oakhurst, I was reminded of the costs and the depth of captivity in
myself and in others. Thanks to PCUSA, to
Caroline and some of our members, we became involved early on in the movement
of the Immokalee Workers in Florida, an organizing movement to raise wages and
working conditions for tomato pickers in central Florida. They stayed at our church several times on
their way to Chicago and other places north to seek to develop support for
their boycotts of Taco Bell, Pepsi, KFC, Burger King, McDonald’s, and others –
their request was to seek 1 penny more per pound of tomatoes picked. Our church participated in the boycotts. Their
union was almost all dark-skinned people, most of Hispanic descent, but some of
African descent. They usually brought 50-75 people on these trips.
On one
occasion, they stayed in our church and in North Decatur church over
the Easter weekend of 2007.
Not a great weekend from an ecclesiastical point of view, but they were
leaving after worshipping with us on Easter – many thanks to Loretta Jefferson
and Buddy Hughes who coordinated our efforts!
They were headed to Chicago to drum up support for their boycott of
McDonald’s. Sometime on Saturday, their organizer called me to ask if they
could stay over on Easter Sunday night too.
My heart sank – Holy Week is especially demanding on pastors and
churches, and I knew that we would all be exhausted. I checked with Loretta about it, and she said
“Sure – we’ll work it out.” The
layperson once again teaching the clergy, but I was still grumpy about it. A full sanctuary on Easter Sunday, with so
many Hispanic folk and with translators for part of the service, helped raise
my spirits. Still grumpy, though!
We fed them
lunch on Easter Monday, and they were on their way. On Tuesday their lead organizer called me and
thanked me profusely for letting them stay over an extra day. I felt guilty for my grumpiness, but then
she added: “We were involved in secret
negotiations with McDonald’s at the Carter Center, and because of your
hospitality, McDonald’s agreed to our demands on Monday – thank you so
much!” So, I gulped and was reminded of
God’s grace and power – sometimes even in grumpy soil, the fruit comes!
In this
time of celebrating Hispanic/Latinx heritage, let us all be mindful of the browning
of America, with folks of African and Hispanic heritage changing American
culture profoundly for the better. And
Hispanic folk do many other things than farm work! There is obviously great
resistance to this browning, and the
election of Donald Trump as president is part of that resistance. So, let us all examine our individual and
collective hearts and find that soil where the fruit of God’s grace can grow
and blossom in us all in the browning of America.
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