Megamarch
My thoughts on the March, Immigration, and
Racism
Last Sunday was Palm Sunday. In our church that
day, children waved palm branches back and forth as we sang our opening
hymn.It's widely believed by Biblical
scholars that the Palm Sunday crowd that acclaimed Jesus with cries of "Hosanna"
was not made up by the elites of that society, but by the marginalized. The
elites wanted Jesus to make everyone shut up and go home. Elizabeth Morris Downie has this to say about
the crowd:"Those crowds turned
out because they sensed somehow that the realm of oppression, cruelty and
poverty which was all they had ever known was being overturned. Something new
was at hand, not yet fully visible, still vulnerable, but clearly calling them
to life. This new realm called so strongly that they dared to cry out, dared to
be seen in public in such a
procession..."I thought about that a
lot Sunday after church, as Dennise, Maria and I took part in the "MegaMarch"
downtown...a march organized in support of the rights of immigrants, and in
opposition to wrongheaded immigration reform. It can now be said with confidence
that somewhere around 500,000 people flooded the streets of downtown Dallas on
Sunday. That's not only the single largest protest in the history of
Dallas, it's the single largest protest in the history of
Texas.Dennise skipped church
(don't tell...) to get down there early, and meet the other elected Latino/a
officials who would be marching at the head of the parade. I'm proud to tell you
that she was able to help lead the march, locked arm in arm on the front row,
alongside our very good friend, Rafael Anchia (below, he's off screen, just to
her left in the second picture...) on one side of her, and our friend Roberto
Alonso on the other. Also leading the line were Hector Flores, Domingo Garcia,
Dr. Elba Garcia , Pauline Medrano, Steve Salazar, and one of Dennise's mentors,
Adelfa Callejo.From left: Bill Callejo,
Pauline Medrano, Adelfa Callejo, Hector Flores, Domingo
Garcia Continuing
along the line: Domingo Garcia,(Roberto's son?), Roberto Alonzo, and Dennise
(Rafael Anchia is just out of
frame) (stills
from Channel 23)Maria and I arrived a
little after 1 pm, only to realize that the march was well underway at that
point. In fact, we'd learn later that the police and organizers had actually
started it early, because there was no more room for folks to line up behind
them.Miraculously, Maria and I were able
to meet up with two other folks from our church, Ron Wilhelm and Marilaine
Jones. I say "miraculously," because we were clearly surrounded by thousands of
people, but somehow ended up within 100 feet of each other at the start of the
march!There were probably more members
there, but we were never able to hook up with them. We marched in line for
almost three city blocks before we ever reached the STARTING POINT of the march.
Here are a shot I took from my camera phone. As you can see, we're several
blocks from the starting point of the march (the Cathedral on the right), and
it's wall-to-wall
people: It
went on like this for as far as you could see. In fact, Dennise called us on her
cell phone about five minutes later, to say that she was already at city hall.
That's when I knew this thing was going to be HUGE. Because her call meant that
the entire parade route was packed with people, from start to finish, and
beyond. Here is a link to a
story that ran on Channel 8. (Registration required) Here are more
pictures.We marched down most
of Ross, passing First Methodist on the way. The good folks of
that church had set up with water and gatorade for the marchers. I saw my
friend, Jay Cole, who is their minister of outreach. And I saw their Senior
Pastor John Fiedler, fresh from preaching twice that morning, out in front of
the church on the street with his shirt sleeves rolled up, dipping out cups of
water as fast as he could. Made me proud of all of
them.We made a turn at the other end of
downtown, traveling down one of the North-South streets. (The name escapes me
now...) About then, the line divided into two waves that marched back down
Commerce and Jackson Streets, toward City Hall. We got to City Hall, and stayed
there for about an hour, leaving at around 4 pm. And even as we left, we could
see folks STILL streaming into the area around City Hall for the first
time...the march was still going on....THREE HOURS after it
started!!!Everyone in the crowd wore a
white shirt, to symbolize peace. And almost everyone of the huge crowd waved
American flags. I have never seen so many people in one place, and never seen so
many American flags in one place.And, to
anyone who is reading about this march and more than a little afraid of the size
and scope of it, hear this: half a million people marched through downtown
today, and there was not one single arrest. Not
one.There were families of several
generations walking side-by-side. Lots of those. (In fact, family was a major theme of this rally) There
were mothers pushing baby strollers. Lots of those too. There were lots and lots
of young people everywhere you looked. But nobody was throwing punches, or
smashing in store windows. No one was swimming in the pool at city hall, or
speaking words of violence.Just half a
million people there, to support America not badmouth it. They were there to
show how much the love this country, not destroy
it.No one there, that I could see, had
anything bad to say about white people or America. All they wanted was to be
seen...to be acknowledged, to be affirmed as part of the American landscape.
They wanted to show how they contribute to our society. In fact, we saw workers
from the Magnolia Hotel, marching down the street in their work
uniforms...straight from work, they
came.As we approached the stage at City
Hall, we saw that there was a huge replica of the Statue of Liberty on the
stage, and the song Neil Diamond's "America" was playing on the loud
speaker.All in all, an absolutely
amazing
day....-------------------------------------------------Although
the bill has died in the Senate, those who support it are still alive. And they
might well introduce something like it again. So, let me speak to parts of the
bill that were most controversial to me personally. The bill out of the House
would have made it crime to give aid to an immigrant who was here illegally.
That House bill specifically referenced churches and clergy, and said that they
too would be subject to a arrest should they aid illegal
immigrants.Imagine what this would mean
for our friends over at North Dallas Shared Ministry! Imagine how much
THEY might be in jeopardy each day! Or imagine what might happen to any minister
anywhere who hopes to aid someone coming in off the
street!Such legislation is
anti-Christian. That's right. You heard me say it...anti-Christian. I challenge
anyone to point out the scripture where Jesus tells us to only help those from
your home country. You know my email address...find it and send it to me. Go
ahead.In fact, several times in the Gospels, the local folks
get really ANGRY at Jesus precisely BECAUSE he tells them to help those who are
from foreign lands!!Imagine if this law
had been in effect at the feeding of the five thousand. You know that story...five thousand men --so, it was
probably twenty thousand total-- gathered by the shores of Galilee. They are
hungry. They are tired. It's late in the day. And so, the Bible says, Jesus "has
compassion" on them. And through the miracle of the fish and loaves there is
enough food for all.Odds are that, among
twenty thousand folk, there were a few that were immigrants from foreign
countries. I mean, just do the math! There was no admission gate. Folks just
came out by the lake shore. Can you imagine the scene? Just after Jesus gets
done feeding these people, the authorities
arrive:"Um...I'm sorry
Jesus...we're going to have to take you in....you've just given fish and bread
to some illegal Samaritans. You have the right to remain silent...anything you
say can be used against
you...."Outrageous!Or,
imagine that there was a wall between Samaria and Israel. (You will remember
that one of the other provisions of the House bill was to build a wall to
separate the US and Mexico). Had there been a wall between Samaria and Israel,
there might not have ever been a "Parable of the Good Samaritan." And, of
course, the whole POINT of that parable is to remind us how our "neighbor" is
often the person we despise...the person from a different country and race...the
person we think we have nothing in common
with.But beyond the bad ideas of these
proposed bills, we must confront an ugly truth. The ugly truth is that Latinos
and Latinas arebeing used in this debate as
political footballs for the upcoming election. This issue is being raised now
for the same reason that the issue of gay marriage was raised before the last
election. Because some people in our society know that spreading fear and
dividing people
sells.----------------------------Can
you tell I feel a little passionately about all
this?Well, I do. There's nothing like marrying
someone named "Garcia" to help crystalize the issues for you. It becomes about
your family. It becomes the stories of people you love most dearly in the
world.So, I want to tell you some of my
own frustration these last two weeks, and some of the things I have heard said
about Latinos and Latinas. For example, I have heard radio commentators
encouraging us to remember that most Hispanics are not illegal immigrants. Which
is, of course, true. Most Hispanics aren't immigrants of ANY KIND. Most
Hispanics are proud and contributing members of our society, and people of deep
and abiding faith. AND! Some of them have been here longer than
you....Which reminds me of a
story.When Dennise was in Junior High in
Irving, she had to take Texas History, as we all do in Texas public schools. And
she came home one day and her Mom, "Ma, we're learning about the Alamo in
school!"To which her mother said, "Oh!
You had relatives that fought at the
Alamo."So, the next day, Dennise
returned to school and gleefully told her teacher, "I had relatives that fought
at the Alamo!!!"To which the teacher asked
her, "Which side?" Well, Dennise had never considered this. As an Irving girl
her wholelife, she'd never thought about
"which side."So, she went home to ask
her mother, "Ma, which side?"To which
her mother told her, "Oh, Mija, the side that
won."There are Hispanic families here in
Texas that predate any of the rest of us. Some even once fought on what we
assumed then was the "other" side. But they have been proud Americans for
decades.The other thing I have heard in
the past week are ugly stories about how Latinos and Latinas do not assimilate.
There are ugly things being said about people who speak Spanish as a first
language, and the claim is being made that they'll never learn
English.Let me say this: I do not know a
SINGLE Hispanic family where the parents do not want their children to learn
English, learn it fast, and learn it well. Not one. In the families I know, in
fact, they sometimes do not even speak Spanish to their children, in the hopes
that the children will assimilate
faster.When my father-in-law, Richard
Sanchez Garcia, was a boy in West Dallas, he made a mistake that he didn't know
was a mistake. He went to his neighborhood Dallas Public School and he spoke
Spanish one day. For this grave sin, a teacher locked him in the closet for the
rest of that day.He never forgot that
lesson. And when he had his own children, he chose to not teach them Spanish at
home, to the point that they had to pick it up by osmosis...at family gatherings
around the tamales and menudo. Eventually they did pick it
up.But, paradoxically,
thirty-years-later, when his own son, Richard Garcia Jr, got to school (not
knowing more than a couple hundred words in Spanish) they took one look at his
brown skin and put him in a Bilingual Education
class!!There is a lot of ignorance about
Latino/a culture out there. And I certainly do not claim to know all there is
about the culture myself. But I DO know enough to know this: The race card is
being played by certain politicians, and it's been played here to
divideus all against each other. And we should
not stand for it.Maybe you have seen the
pictures of the young people protesting in the past weeks, skipping school in
many cases (something, by the way, I can't condone...). And I know what some of
my friends have been thinking. They've been thinking "Look at all those
unassimilated brown folks!!"But nothing
could be farther from the truth. As Macarena Hernandez wrote in the Dallas News last
week, most of those kids are the children and grandchildren of immigrants. They
speak English quite well. They have iPods, and they buy their clothes at The
GAP. In some ways, this fight over immigration is not evern their fight. But
they are, in fact, standing up for their parents and their grandparents. They
are, in fact, living out one of our great commandments:
Honor thy father and
mother.Sunday
was a day that honored all
Americans.And, as a person of faith, it
was a day that reminded me a lot of Palm Sunday. Because, in every way
imaginable --both at church and this afternoon-- that's what Sunday
was.(Some of these same stories and
thoughts can be heard in the mp3 version of last Sunday's sermon, available
here.)
Posted: Wednesday - April 12, 2006 at 01:21 PM
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Published On: May 05, 2008 04:47 PM
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