“BLACK HISTORY AND
LENT”
The season of Lent began on
Valentine’s Day – a strange combination of love and ashes, the ashes made all
too relevant by the killing floor of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in
Florida. As I said in this blog space
before, we have turned ourselves over the gun-god Molech (Leviticus 20:1-5),
and he requires that we sacrifice our children to him, which we are continuing
to do. Perhaps this mass shooting will
make a difference, but I’ll be really (and pleasantly) surprised if it
does. The next hope on the horizon are
the 2018 elections, so register to vote, and question your friends and
colleagues to make sure that they are.
This intersectionality reminds me
that Black History Month and Lent almost always overlap on the calendar, and
that is appropriate, for the racism that called forth the need for Black
History Month is America’s original sin.
We saw the movie “MudBound” the other night, and it was powerful. It did end on a redemptive note, but set in
the Mississippi mud of the Delta right after World War II, it did remind me of
my growing up in Arkansas as the next generation after this one. The mud, the
racism, the struggles – all these spoke to me of my captivity to the power of
race. I had a restless sleep the night
after I watched it.
The movie focused on the return of
two men from World War II – one was African-American, and one was Anglo. Though they did not know one another prior to
the war, they bonded over their shared experiences. The African-American character, Ronsel
Jackson, displayed the attitude that many black soldiers exhibited when they
returned from World War II – they would no longer accept the “neo-slavery” that
continued to prevail in the South. They
had fought for freedom and equality in the war, and they would not accept the
inequality that continued in this country when they returned. These veterans formed the foundation for the
civil rights movement that burst out in the 1950’s. Their leadership and courage and
determination made the civil rights movement possible.
One such veteran was Amzie Moore of
Cleveland, Mississippi. His grandfather
had been held in slavery, and Amzie Moore had thought that white folks held the
power because they were supposed to have it. World War II taught him that people of
different racial categories were all human beings. He returned from the war determined to help
change things in Mississippi and the South. He was a federal postal worker, and
that gave him some job security as he began the work of equality and equity.
He joined Medgar Evers in the state
NAACP chapter, and he helped to recruit people in the Delta, including Fannie
Lou Hamer. It was dangerous work, and
Bayard Rustin, who would later organize the 1963 March on Washington, told
Moore that he was either very brave or very stupid. Moore replied that he didn’t think that he
was either one, but he was determined to work for justice. He met the legendary Bob Moses in a meeting
in Atlanta in 1960, and he encouraged Moses to bring the SNCC organizers and
students to Mississippi, which Moses and others eventually did, leading to the
Mississippi Freedom Summer of 1964.
Moore and other veterans formed the basis for the logistics of this
campaign and many others, and his home in Cleveland became a “safe” house. Those who stayed with him formed a “who’s
who” of the movement: Bob Moses, Martin
Luther King, Jr., Ella Baker, Thurgood Marshall, Stokely Carmichael, Andy
Young, Jesse Jackson, and many others.
Look him up and celebrate his life and witness!
“MudBound” called out Amzie Moore
for me, but it also called me out on another level. As I saw the movie unfold before me, I
thought to myself: “In those days, I did
not believe that African-Americans had an interior life, that they were not
human beings like me.” Though I gave up
that way of thinking many years ago, “MudBound” brought back my captivity to me
in stark fashion. The movie did a fine
job of portraying two families, one black and one white, intertwined with the
complexity of a changing racial landscape.
It is these kinds of things and attitudes that we are asked to examine
in the season of Lent – why we choose racism (and so many other powers) over
the love of God, why we had rather execute Jesus than be transformed by his
love. Let’s look in those scary places
in Lent.
No comments:
Post a Comment