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"This is our tsunami," said Biloxi mayor A. J. Holloway.
In the New Orleans Superdome where the homeless were herded, the toilets overflow and the water rises to a meter outside; as food relief diminishes and the hospital electrical generators fail.
Remember the lesson of the tsunami. America showed its heartlessness to the world when Bush's contributions failed to match those of small countries in Europe. American volunteers flocked there in mass, only to be seen pounding their bibles and refusing food and shelter to anyone who didn't come to Bible Study.
Progressives can do better than this. Natural disasters demonstrate what we all know, progressive humanist and progressive Christian alike, that man doesn't live on his own but in the company of fellow human-beings for whom he has a responsibility. Tragedy strikes for obscure reasons, and tragedy, above all other incidents, ought to remind us of the constant peril in which each of us lives, of our need for one another to survive, of our duty to take up responsibility for the well-being of other human beings. Whatever our political philosophy, whether we think that overarching institutions or local fellowships ought to take responsibility, we all agree that responsibility ought to be taken.
Jesus said, "As you do unto the least of these you have done it unto me."
We all need to do a reexamination, facing this disaster, of how American cities rate in their responses. The New Orleans tragedy is demonstrating that we have utterly failed Jesus' commandment. Leaving the drowning city, we left behind the poor, the weak, the sick, and the incarcerated, to starve and drown among the toxic waters.
I put out a call for congregational action towards three groups that represent the least of our society. If we fail here, we demonstrate ourselves before the eyes of the world to truly have failed as a Christian nation, not even capable of caring for our own in their time of direst need:
- The poor and homeless who, left behind as their fellow-citizens have fled, have been starving in the Superdome while the structure was ripped apart. Think for a minute about those who try to plan ahead but can't, about the cramped shuttles leaving the city, about what it would be like not to have enough money for a bus ticket out when the warnings were sounded? You see doom coming, and you look around, and no one remains to help you. The city is evacuated and still you wait. Where were the churches that could have organized buses to transport the poor to safety?
- The prisoners evacuated today only after standing in rising water for hours. In advanced nations, we claim that our prisons are supposed to correct and not merely to torture. The man standing in rising water, thinking himself forgotten by his society for wrongs committed far in the past, abandoned, alone, and facing death in totally abysmal conditions -- how will he ever gain faith in society again? What could possibly reclaim him for society? Now, herding them into armored vans, transported to already crowded prisons in Texas, we sew the seeds of irredeemable anger and viciousness towards society. Church, activist, and state need to intervene to make reparations to the prisoners for the way they've been treated in this crisis.
- The sick and elderly who are in hospital, while the windows were blown out and the electric generators failed.
I am putting this out there as a wake-up call. The progressive churches of America aren't organized in a way that allows them to deal with disasters on a great scale. But we do have on our side the quick flow of information, the internet, the local networks of concerned activists, clergy, and lay people, and the growing realization in America that our government isn't able to care for the poor and disenfranchised.
Share this message, I ask you, to your congregations, your ministers, your charities, and let some response be heard. The responsibility for right action in this tragedy rests entirely with progressives, Christian and humanist alike: the radical right has disowned the crisis, claiming that Florida deserved to be hit by a hurricane. Don't let their reaction of armored poison prevail as the formatted response. Theirs is a message that kills mercy, wastes the soul, and annihilates civil society.
We have a better answer than that. Let Christ's message, of putting others' needs before our own, ring through the churches of America. Let's show that progressive Christians can do better than this. The survival of a Christian message true to Jesus' teaching is at stake, in America. The survival of a civil society capable of healing the wounds of economic division is at stake.
<a href = "www.crossleft.org">www.crossleft.org</a>
In the New Orleans Superdome where the homeless were herded, the toilets overflow and the water rises to a meter outside; as food relief diminishes and the hospital electrical generators fail.
Remember the lesson of the tsunami. America showed its heartlessness to the world when Bush's contributions failed to match those of small countries in Europe. American volunteers flocked there in mass, only to be seen pounding their bibles and refusing food and shelter to anyone who didn't come to Bible Study.
Progressives can do better than this. Natural disasters demonstrate what we all know, progressive humanist and progressive Christian alike, that man doesn't live on his own but in the company of fellow human-beings for whom he has a responsibility. Tragedy strikes for obscure reasons, and tragedy, above all other incidents, ought to remind us of the constant peril in which each of us lives, of our need for one another to survive, of our duty to take up responsibility for the well-being of other human beings. Whatever our political philosophy, whether we think that overarching institutions or local fellowships ought to take responsibility, we all agree that responsibility ought to be taken.
Jesus said, "As you do unto the least of these you have done it unto me."
We all need to do a reexamination, facing this disaster, of how American cities rate in their responses. The New Orleans tragedy is demonstrating that we have utterly failed Jesus' commandment. Leaving the drowning city, we left behind the poor, the weak, the sick, and the incarcerated, to starve and drown among the toxic waters.
I put out a call for congregational action towards three groups that represent the least of our society. If we fail here, we demonstrate ourselves before the eyes of the world to truly have failed as a Christian nation, not even capable of caring for our own in their time of direst need:
- The poor and homeless who, left behind as their fellow-citizens have fled, have been starving in the Superdome while the structure was ripped apart. Think for a minute about those who try to plan ahead but can't, about the cramped shuttles leaving the city, about what it would be like not to have enough money for a bus ticket out when the warnings were sounded? You see doom coming, and you look around, and no one remains to help you. The city is evacuated and still you wait. Where were the churches that could have organized buses to transport the poor to safety?
- The prisoners evacuated today only after standing in rising water for hours. In advanced nations, we claim that our prisons are supposed to correct and not merely to torture. The man standing in rising water, thinking himself forgotten by his society for wrongs committed far in the past, abandoned, alone, and facing death in totally abysmal conditions -- how will he ever gain faith in society again? What could possibly reclaim him for society? Now, herding them into armored vans, transported to already crowded prisons in Texas, we sew the seeds of irredeemable anger and viciousness towards society. Church, activist, and state need to intervene to make reparations to the prisoners for the way they've been treated in this crisis.
- The sick and elderly who are in hospital, while the windows were blown out and the electric generators failed.
I am putting this out there as a wake-up call. The progressive churches of America aren't organized in a way that allows them to deal with disasters on a great scale. But we do have on our side the quick flow of information, the internet, the local networks of concerned activists, clergy, and lay people, and the growing realization in America that our government isn't able to care for the poor and disenfranchised.
Share this message, I ask you, to your congregations, your ministers, your charities, and let some response be heard. The responsibility for right action in this tragedy rests entirely with progressives, Christian and humanist alike: the radical right has disowned the crisis, claiming that Florida deserved to be hit by a hurricane. Don't let their reaction of armored poison prevail as the formatted response. Theirs is a message that kills mercy, wastes the soul, and annihilates civil society.
We have a better answer than that. Let Christ's message, of putting others' needs before our own, ring through the churches of America. Let's show that progressive Christians can do better than this. The survival of a Christian message true to Jesus' teaching is at stake, in America. The survival of a civil society capable of healing the wounds of economic division is at stake.
<a href = "www.crossleft.org">www.crossleft.org</a>
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Unsu...
Re: Katrina: Call to Action
Wed, August 31, 2005 - 11:22 AM<<Progressives can do better than this>>
On a practical level, what can we do -- other than open our wallets to the Red Cross, etc?
Bush has his bloody, criminally negligent hands all over the New Orleans crisis. From his gutting of the Corps of Engineers Lake Pontchartrain levee maintenance budget in order to divert Army funds to Iraq
www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/...lay.jsp
to his mis-allocation of the National Guard to Iraq www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/c...2_pf.html
to his his smear campaigns against climate scientists and his refusal to acknowledge the problem of global warming
www.guardian.co.uk/life/scien...885,00.html
despite its scientifically demonstrable connection with the ferocity of new hurricanes
web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2005/hurricanes.html
But again I ask: what can we progressive Christians do specifically to help in this situation? Is any church or parachurch group mobilizing to do anything? The immediate problem is that nobody is allowed into the New Orleans area. They are trying to move everyone other than authorized personnel out. But those refugees and prisoners are being moved somewhere. Somebody should monitor that.
I feel pretty helpless. This thing is personal, too. My girlfriend owns a 175 year-old place in the French Quarter. And I have friends there, who I hope got out when the getting was good. -
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Re: Katrina: Call to Action
Wed, August 31, 2005 - 3:33 PMOn the CrossLeft discussion site, Kety has pointed us to the Methodist Social Action group, which is sending in both donations and volunteers with actual, physical buckets.
But beyond that, those of us before our laptops need to take this opportunity to pull together a network out of the hundreds of distressed, isolated, righteously angry progressives. Because among them there *are* many churches with buses, many volunteers with time, and many potential donors with resources. But they aren't speaking to each other yet, and those who have the buses and buckets aren't necessarily those who, like the denizens of CrossLeft and SocialRedemption, are the best and the most energized for putting out the message and the vision. Remember that information travels quickly, and that the more we believe that the message will carry, the quicker it will unite us.
I've been writing with the leaders of the Christian Alliance for Progress and Cross Walk, both huge unifiers of church leaders, asking them to put out this call for action. They all feel distressed, but haven't known how to respond, and even a simple mandate to care for the three most neglected groups gives them a more solid vision how to direct the willing lay leaders and congregations.
I encourage the rest of you to talk to whatever contacts you have among clergy, congregations, activists, or organizers, and help them think through what needs to be done.
I encourage anyone who isn't in contact with such groups to help us spread the word among the activist and political community here, to draw loud attention to the dissonance between Bush's ridiculous claim to represent any form of Christian polity, and the truth that Bush's regime represents a mockery of every value Christ exhorted. The false regime of injustice needs to be reformed, and the progressive reformers need encouragement. Never doubt for a minute that articulating that message, calling attention where attention has been void, serves in its own way as well as those with the buckets themselves.
Jim, my family is from Louisiana, and my boyfriend's family homes are close to being washed away. I understand, believe me. -
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Unsu...
Re: Katrina: Call to Action
Wed, August 31, 2005 - 4:14 PMI just noticed that in addition to the Red Cross and the Salvation Army, the following two mainline denominations (not known for beating disaster victims over the head with Bibles) are mobilizing and taking donations to help:
Episcopal Relief & Development: 1-800-334-7626 or www.er-d.org/
United Methodist Committee on Relief: 1-800-554-8583 or gbgm-umc.org/umcor/emerg...icanes/2005/
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Re: Katrina: Call to Action
Wed, August 31, 2005 - 4:18 PMUnbelievably, this was Bush on Tuesday:
news.yahoo.com/news -
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Re: Katrina: Call to Action
Wed, August 31, 2005 - 10:16 PM<<Unbelievably, this was Bush on Tuesday>>
Well - he was on vacation ;0) -
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Unsu...
Re: Katrina: Call to Action
Wed, August 31, 2005 - 11:27 PM<<on vacation>>
Or permanently out to lunch.
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