“NEIGHBORS OR FASCISTS?”
While we
were traveling in Boston after our trip to Princeton, we went to see the Mr.
Rogers movie entitled “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” It was powerful and moving. The approach of seeing the “other” as
potential neighbor rather than potential enemy obviously has deep resonance in
these Trumpian days when the ”other” is not even remotely close to being seen
as neighbor (unless they are Vladmir Putin).
In these days, the “other” is definitely seen as enemy. Mr. Rogers urged a different approach, and I
have seen many comments on this movie, all wishing that we had his voice now in
the midst of the strife and the stoking of the primal fears that are within us
all.
This year
is the 50th anniversary of his first show, and the movie did a fine
job of showing the evolution of the show and the thought of the man behind
it. What struck me the most about the
movie, however, was its narration of its first week, a week in which we are
introduced to the ruler of the neighborhood, King Friday the 13th. It is the summer of 1968, and violence and
changes and struggles are rampant in American culture. In light of this, King Friday the 13th
orders that a wall be built around his castle to keep the “bad” people out and
to keep any changes from occurring. He
also orders signs to be posted: “No
Changes!! No Changes!!!”
The result
of this wall-building on Mr. Rogers’ show in 1968 was not the safety and
tranquility that King Friday the 13th sought, but rather an increase
in fear and a dissolution of trust between the neighbors INSIDE the wall. It was eerily prescient of the time in which
we now live, and one could only marvel at the genius of Mr. Rogers, whose
emphasis on being neighbors caused him to understand how much we would resist
this idea of neighborliness, no matter the era in which we live. The idea of seeing others as “neighbor”
requires that we bump up against the categories which the world uses to
separate us – race, gender, culture, nation, sexuality, income level, and I
have to sadly add, religion. Israel’s
passage of the Jewish state law, Trump’s and the pandering Republicans’
emphasis on the danger of the “other,” Europe’s rise of anti-immigrant
political groups, the radicalizing of some Islamic groups, white Christian
support of separating children and their families at the border – these and
many other developments point to the power of fear to push us towards seeing
the “other” as enemy rather than neighbor.
Walls go up in response to fear,
and I wish that I felt that Donald Trump had the wisdom to see the deep irony
of the former Republican hero Ronald Reagan telling the Soviet Union to tear
down the Berlin wall, while Trump seeks many more dollars to rebuild that same
wall on the Mexico border.
I don’t think
that the Trumpsters are capable of this, but King Friday the 13th
had the wisdom to tear down the wall and to start a newer and better way of
relating to others. I’m hoping that a
stinging political defeat this November will make President Trump recalibrate
as King Friday the 13th did. Yet, there are two problems with my hope. First, there is no guarantee of a stinging
political defeat in November. It will
require a huge voter turnout, and I hope that I am wrong, but right now I’m
wondering if we can do it. Please prove
me wrong by registering to vote yourself, getting your friends, colleagues and
neighbors to register – and get them to do the same for their circle of
friends. Then work to make sure that you
and all of them vote in the November 6 election. Vote for moving us back towards seeing one
another as neighbors rather than as enemies.
The second
problem with my hope is that I am not certain that Donald Trump will be as wise
as King Friday the 13th. I’m
not sure that he will change his course, no matter what happens in
November. Yet, even so, if the
Republicans lose control of one or both legislative houses, there will be
significant roadblocks to what Trump can legally do. Many of my friends believe that unless those
legislative changes are made, we are well on the way to fascism. I don’t want to believe that, but I must say
that the lack of courage of Republicans to stand up to Trump gives me
pause.
It makes me
wish all the harder that we could turn to being neighbors, that we would learn
that the approach of King Friday and Donald Trump (who seems to wish that he
could be king) to build walls and
separate us makes for disaster rather than peace and security. As Octavia Butler poses in her powerful book
“The Parable of the Sower,” do we want to be neighbors or fascists? We’ll know soon enough, and the waiting is
terrifying. To paraphrase the quote
attributed to John Wesley, let us work as hard as we can, for as long as we can,
with as many people as we can to move us towards being neighbors rather than
being fascists.
Thoughtful, agree with your Hope and Plan to Keep Shoulder to the Wheels. Howard
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