Such a wise, insightful, and powerful essay by
one of my longtime treasured teachers,
Michael Meade. Deep bow of gratitude.
By Michael Meade
This
is a hard time to be alive. It's a time of concurrent crises that can
stop life in its tracks at any moment. It's a time marred by the
spread of the deadly virus, but also scarred by the deadly effects of
systemic racism and punishing disparity. This is a time of continuous
funerals in the human heart.
In
the midst of the argument about wearing or not wearing masks to
protect each other, the public killing of George Floyd has unmasked
the ongoing tragedy of “man's inhumanity to man.” The callous
execution of yet another unarmed black man at the hands of police has
torn the skin off the age old wound of racism and revealed the
process of dehumanization, which continues to be the deep fault line
in American culture.
The
actual taking of a life, seen online by millions of people, becomes
symbolic of hundreds of years of crushing the lives of untold numbers
of people simply for being black or brown, or something other than
white. The heartless pretense of one group being superior to others
becomes symbolically embodied in a white police officer who coldly,
and almost casually, takes the breath of life from a black man being
pressed to the ground while calling out to his mother and pleading
for air.
The
moment of death comes after almost nine agonizing minutes of torture
that seems to reflect the long term history of institutionalized
racism that denies, not just freedom, but basic humanity to those
deemed to be, not simply “other,” but also less than human.
Because the killing was so cold blooded, because it was caught on
video, because it comes under the heavy hand of an administration
that exploits divisions by race and class and because it comes in the
midst of a pandemic that disproportionately claims the lives of
African Americans, Native Americans and Latino Americans, this
heartbreaking, life-stopping moment must become a cultural turning
point.
Racism
and the delusion of white superiority have had a chokehold on
humanity for ages. Systematically treating people as if their lives
do not matter depends upon believing that those being victimized are
less than human. The resulting despair that has been growing just
under the surface of life in America, has now been released and the
rage associated with it has been unleashed. To say this is not to
justify violent behaviors or looting, but to realize how those who
have been cast into the shadows of life can feel powerless to change
their fate, and can easily come to feel that there is simply nothing
left to lose.
“In
order for meaningful change or transformation to occur, there needs
to be a radical shedding of things that are not life-enhancing. And
one thing that clearly does not enhance life in America is ‘white
thinking.’”
The
notion of people being
white
is only a few hundred years old. It is a false idea that has become a
dangerous ideology. The problem isn't simply that some people
identify as white. Rather, the crux of the issues is that when people
claim the mantle of whiteness, they fall into the fallacy of white
thinking.
A
tragic aberration of meaning occurs when the idea of whiteness is
taken literally, so that people associated with
a color become defined by
that color. In a kind of psychological trick, aspects of the color
white, such as brightness, or purity or innocence, become the basis
for false claims of superiority for one group of people being above
all others. This false hierarchy of color causes those deemed to be
non-white to be cast into the shadows and be declared less pure and
therefore inferior, but ultimately, less than human.
Typically,
we use colors as metaphors to describe feelings and attitudes that
are common to all of humanity. Any person, regardless of skin color,
can become red with anger, green with envy or blue with sorrow. We
know that they are not literally turning into these colors. And yet
whiteness has become systematically literalized into self-defining,
exclusive terms of white people, white culture, and eventually white
supremacy.
Massive denial is part of the delusion of whiteness that not only sustains an ignorance of the past, but also tries to keep the long lineage of racial injustice from entering the present. Preserving the privilege of not having to feel the depth of suffering caused by the pretension of whiteness becomes part of the duty of police forces, who increasingly wind up protecting and serving the white fallacy that leads to a perversion of justice, in the name of justice. Then comes a moment when the suppressed history of pain and anguish breaks through the skin of culture and the repressed anger and agony erupts into the open, for all to see; hopefully for all to feel.
Tragically,
the voice of George Floyd repeating, “I can't breathe, I can't
breathe,” gives oxygen to a storm of repressed emotions and the
rage of long denied voices. The shock people feel in seeing that
moment includes the revelation of mass oppression and holding down of
the lives of untold numbers of people. The cost of the pretense of
superiority based on skin color can be found in the suffering and
death of endless numbers of people of color, but also can appears in
the increasing dehumanization of an entire culture.
Humanity
is not a cloak that people can put on when it is convenient to do so.
Humanity
is the word we use for people as a whole, as in all the people and we
the people. If some people are denied their part of the whole, that
leads to a deterioration of the whole and a diminishing of all the
people. The level of crisis that we are all in now cannot be fixed
with a simple repair. Rather, we are being called upon to use the
essential threads of our lives to weave a culture of genuinely
inclusive humanity.
The
word
crisis
comes directly from the ancient Greek healers, who used the word to
describe a turning point in a disease. In this situation, the disease
is systemic racism and the treatment requires that the pain and
suffering be distributed to all parts of the whole. There can be no
healing, if certain groups of people are required to carry all the
pain and injustice in the system. An old proverb says, "If you
know what harms yourself, you then know what injures others."
Thus, the more a person feels the depth of their own humanity, the
more human everyone else becomes to them. Ultimately, there is no
neutral place when it comes to granting humanity to all people.
Another proverb warns that "not to aid those in distress is to
kill them in your heart."
Most
people are familiar with the call for wholeness in the African
proverb that says "it takes a whole village to raise a child."
But the second part of that proverbial thought says that "if you
don't fully welcome into the village, the young people who are on the
edge, they may burn the village down just to feel the warmth."
In terms of history, we have systematically failed to fully welcome
the essential diversity of the children of America. In terms of the
crisis of this moment, the fires have already been lit. The question
now becomes how we find humane ways to quell the flames and not allow
ourselves to become even more divided and alienated from each other.
“In
a sense, the world has been on fire for a while now. The climate
crisis and global warming say that, the fevers induced by the
pandemic say that, and now the fires incited by the history of
racism, injustice and exclusion say that.”
Even
if we could quell the immediate flames, we would still be facing an
overheated human psyche and an overheated world. The question of when
we can all go back to normal has been answered at another level.
There is no normal to go back to, nor should there be because what
many thought was normal was not humane enough, was not inclusive
enough, was not caring enough to allow people to live in meaningful
ways together.
The
word
despair
comes from the French root meaning “to lose all hope.” There are
reasons to lose all hope these days and yet, there is a second level
of hope. There is a deeper kind of hope not based in wishful thinking
or built upon false expectations that cannot survive encounters with
the harsh hand of reality.
This
deeper level of hope is not found by denying the presence of despair,
but rather by surviving it. The second level of hope only appears
after we have experienced hopelessness and our hearts are broken.
When life becomes darkest, the eye of the soul begins to see. For
this deeper hope depends upon the unique power of the human soul to
imagine, and therefore to create, to innovate and to renew life. And
when all hope is seemingly lost and all seems headed for disaster, it
is genuine imagination and a deeper sense of soul that needs to be
found again.
The
chokehold that white thinking holds on humanity depends upon the
automatic use of oppositional thinking. The pattern of “us versus
them” has become the defining story in modern life. As human beings
we live and we die in the context of the stories we tell ourselves,
about the world and our place in it. And at this moment in time, both
the future of the world and the sense of genuine humanity are in
question. The way forward requires that we find stories that take us
beyond the dehumanizing patterns of us versus them.
As
a mythologist I've studied stories from traditions and cultures
around the world. When it comes down to the nature of humanity, and
the essence of the human soul, there are two basic and opposite
stories that tend to persist. One story considers each person to be
an accidental being, who enters the world as a blank slate or empty
soul after birth. Elements of family, social factors and education,
shape and define that person's identity and in a sense the value of
their life. The blank slate story easily leads to ideas of social
determinism, in which entire groups of people can be not just denied
opportunities, but also be dismissed as being less than human.
The
other basic story of the human soul begins with the sense that each
person born brings something essential to life. In this story, each
soul is unique and each person is naturally gifted and imbued with
meaning and life purpose. In this kind of story, the role of society
becomes that of helping each person born to awaken to an inner dream
that gives their life meaning and purpose. This second story is the
most universal tale of humanity, in which each person, regardless of
race or color, background or orientation, comes to life bearing
gifts, and each can then be seen to have an inner nobility and
natural dignity. On that basis, no group can claim to be superior, or
more human because of race or appearance, because of history or
background. On that basis, those who deny the basic humanity and
dignity of other people only reveal their own lack of humanity.
History,
as people used to say, is written in the depths of the individual
human soul. And the deeply troubled time in which we all find
ourselves is a story still being written. If we insist on denying a
genuine sense of humanity to some, we can only continue to lose our
way and further lose our own souls. If we open ourselves to the
understanding that we are literally all in the same story, each
suffering in our own way, we may find genuine ways to help heal and
protect each other while restoring a sense of genuine humanity in
ways that bring more meaning and more soul and more beauty to the
world.
Please
go here for the original:
https://www.mosaicvoices.org/humanity-at-the-tipping-point
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