Rev. Marcia Dyson

 

Recent Posts by Rev. Marcia Dyson

  • Love in the Time of the Haitian Cholera

    Nov 2, 2010Rev. Marcia Dyson

    haiti_map-150The Haitian people's will to survive, and thrive, is mighty. But they also need our assistance in battling crisis upon crisis.

    haiti_map-150The Haitian people's will to survive, and thrive, is mighty. But they also need our assistance in battling crisis upon crisis.

    I've always admired the haunting beauty and sad grace of Gabriel García Márquez's novel "Love in the Time of Cholera". But I never imagined that his title would conjure the force we'll need to fight Haiti's freshest suffering: an outbreak of cholera that threatens the loss of thousands of lives.

    It's fitting that the novel in which Márquez temporarily loosens the hold of magical realism is the one that symbolizes Haiti's plight today. There's little state magic to speak of, and the economic realities that this country faces are tragic and legion. But my God, the will and spirit of the people remains indescribably, well, magical, to say the least. I've gotten to know Haiti and its people a lot better over the last two years as I've served and traveled throughout the complicated outlines of this besieged geography.

    Haiti's present troubles may yet prove faithful to a script that seems passed down from on high: A small but mighty colony of oppressed black subjects will resist and rise just when nobody gives them a chance in hell to survive. That was certainly true of Haiti at its birth.

    In 1804, the nation roared into existence after a decade-long slave revolt fomented by Toussaint Louverture, which ultimately resulted in Napoleon getting beaten at his own game -- and the world's first republic winning independence from France.

    Haiti's will to rise was certainly challenged during U.S. military occupation of the country from 1915 to 1934, and its national urge to strength was surely suppressed as the U.S. exerted direct or indirect control of the Haitian economy from 1905 to 1947.

    And through a string of tyrants, incompetents and soiled idealists at the helm of the nation (some with American support, or at least with our willingness to look the other way while the country was lost and looted), Haiti's people have managed to keep faith, even though that faith has been unjustly savaged and satirized as "Voodoo" -- with the scare quotes in tow -- little more than a hodgepodge of hocus pocus and superstition.

    But that's the retail version of Vodou, pushed in the marketplace of ignorance and bigotry. In Haitian Vodou, practiced widely by much of the population, the spirits of the departed -- sa nou pa we yo, those we don't see -- don't fly away, but remain near to those left behind, permitting the suffering living the triumphant advantage of laughing in the face of death.

    That's not a fatalistic position, but a supremely hopeful one. After all, the living have had so much death to defy. Is Vodou any more unrealistic a remedy than, say, colonial exploitation and schemes of duplicitous rationality deployed by would-be saviors in military or ministerial garb?

    This doesn't mean that it's a pie-in-the-sky piety that isn't vexed by the mortal wounds of poverty and catastrophe. On the contrary: It's a source of spiritual resilience in the face of tragedy. The bipolar opposition between science and soul doesn't exist in Haiti, at least not in any reasonably concrete fashion. (For that matter, there isn't even a neat division between, say, Catholicism and the catechism of indigenous spirituality that flows effortlessly through the syncretic religious experience that is a noted strength of the African Diaspora.)

    Even as we respect the homegrown spirituality of Haitian residents, we've got to ramp up the material resources they so desperately need. After the January earthquake left the nation in shambles and rubble, and 300,000 souls lingering near the living, you'd think God, or at least nature, might leave the Haitian folk alone long enough to recover. Until that theological dispute can be resolved, the political and ecological elements, as well as the moral ones, must be engaged.

    We need to send more medical personnel and supplies to tamp down a fever of cholera that has pandemic written all over it. That's for sure. And we certainly need to send more money to responsible agencies to relieve the suffering. No argument here.

    But we also need to ask some tough questions. Beyond the cholera crisis, is there a crisis in political legitimacy in Haiti and the United States, where real fault may be found in the use, or misuse, of international aid money? Regardless of the source of the outbreak, it's likely that most Haitians see it as a plague of nature. But what role does man play in this tragedy, especially through shortsighted priorities that diverted needed attention away from structural responses to Haiti's suffering? For every bottle of water sent, an inch of water pipe could have been built. For every tent erected, a transitional house could have been constructed. Simple, yes, but sound, too.

    As U.S. taxpayers, are we aware of where this country's $1.15 billion pledge to Haiti is going? Do we know what sustainable deliverables are being guaranteed by contractors and suppliers? Finally, what of the African Diaspora's response to Haiti, especially from her benighted kin in America?

    Sure, we brag about Louverture; we even sing the praises of the TransAfrica Forum and other groups that champion Haitian self-determination and effective governance. But in truth, we leave the economic and moral heavy lifting to white celebs like Sean Penn, Mia Farrow and George Clooney. Where are our black celebs -- besides Wyclef Jean -- in the fight for Haiti? What about the rest of us? Where do the sun-kissed children of the black experience stand in times of greatest crisis for our people in Haiti?

    We need black love in the time of Haiti's cholera. We need the spirits of the departed ancestors to rally the will of the people to survive. We need the revolutionary spirit of Louverture and other slaves to course through our veins. And we need the sacrificial energy of black American brothers and sisters to circulate all the way to Haiti. Otherwise, we are in peril of losing our souls and condemning our brothers and sisters to even more rubble and disease.

    Marcia L. Dyson works with the Fondation Lucienne Deschamps in Port-au-Prince, which is dedicated to education and the training of teachers.

    A version of this post originally appeared on The Root.

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  • Lessons from Black History: Don't Ask, Don't Get

    Feb 22, 2010Rev. Marcia Dyson

    white-house-150One year after the historic election of Barack Obama, and in honor of Black History Month, we asked leading African-American thinkers to reflect on lessons we must bear in mind in order to advance principles of social and economic justice in public policy.

    white-house-150One year after the historic election of Barack Obama, and in honor of Black History Month, we asked leading African-American thinkers to reflect on lessons we must bear in mind in order to advance principles of social and economic justice in public policy. The Reverend Marcia Dyson calls for black constituencies to reject the "don't ask, don't get" policy of the Obama Administration and demand that their voices be heard.

    Last year, during Black History Month, African Americans celebrated with great pride Barack Obama's election as the first black President of the United States. Obama sought to enlist blacks and all citizens in his army of hope -- even as too many Americans wrongly believed that Obama's victory ushered in a post-racial America.

    Most blacks scoff at the idea of a post racial nation -- after all, the fingerprints of race are everywhere, from sports arenas to church sanctuaries. A growing number of blacks now feel that perhaps we were only deemed as useful for our votes; all but gone are campaign promises to address our specific needs, like more jobs, better education and important help with the mortgage crisis.

    Many of my black brothers and sisters are now murmuring and beginning to feel that the President's ascent to the most powerful station in the nation has done little to get them off their posts of despair. Many black folk walked on rice paper to keep from tearing into the fiber of the President's disturbing avoidance of race in America. It may be that Obama's presence in the White House has overshadowed the problems of a people who survived the "peculiar institution" of slavery. Although the President should keep all Americans in view, it appears that he has lost sight of the problems of most blacks. Other groups -- GLBT, Latinos, Native Americans, even the sometimes amorphous "middle class" -- have asked, and received, particular attention from the Obama Administration. Black folk have largely lagged far behind.

    Black leadership has witnessed a "don't ask, don't get" response from the Obama Administration. Such a snub has caused some members of the Congressional Black Caucus to join forces with celebrities like Danny Glover in leading a metaphoric but increasingly vocal march on Washington.

    These activists and politicians realize that most presidents, from Lincoln to Lyndon Baines Johnson, and most recently William Jefferson Clinton, had to respond to the social demands of their black base, resulting in the end of slavery, the passage of the civil rights bill, the voting rights act and the fair housing act.

    In 2010, black constituencies should even more vigorously knock on the pearly gates of the White House -- not simply to get a seat at the banquet table of opportunity, but to preserve our dignity and to be treated with the same respect as other groups of American citizens. As the Bible reminds us in James 4:20, "You have not, because you ask not..." If we don't ask, we surely won't get the privileges and benefits we rightly deserve.

    Roosevelt Institute Braintruster and Rev. Marcia Dyson is an affiliate with the Center for Social Justice, Research, Teaching and Service at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.

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  • 'Terra Moralis': Why truth, accountability, and justice must guide the FCIC

    Jul 14, 2009Rev. Marcia Dyson

    markets-and-morals-2Reverend Marcia Dyson, a Roosevelt Institute Braintruster, outlines the principles that must guide the inquiry into the financial collapse.

    markets-and-morals-2Reverend Marcia Dyson, a Roosevelt Institute Braintruster, outlines the principles that must guide the inquiry into the financial collapse.

    "There is no respect of persons with God." (Romans2:11)

    Amidst all the noise and bluster about seating a commission to investigate the causes of our financial ruin, let's not forget the fundamental moral and spiritual principles that should guide their search for the truth. And in the spirit of the bi-partisan approach being heralded, these principles aren't the province of one religion or moral tradition; rather, these ideas are the fault lines that trace beneath the common ethical ground all good citizens should occupy. Call it 'terra moralis'.

    The first principle is telling the truth. This principle seems so obvious that it shouldn't even warrant an honorable mention on our list of commission virtues. And yet, isn't that why we're in the mess we're in now? Bankers couldn't tell the truth to potential homeowners about the prime, and sub-prime, mortgages being doled out. A lot of black folk got the short end of the mortgage stick -- that is, a sub-prime loan -- because bankers didn't tell them the truth that they qualified for a prime loan. Wall Street bankers lied to us, and to each other, about just how bad things were looking, but greed blinded them to the risks they callously asked us to assume. Investment bankers fleeced even high profile clients of their cash and made off - or is that Madoff? - with billions of hard-earned dollars. But it's obviously easier to throw Bernie Madoff in the clinker than it is to arrest a corrupt system. But arrest it we must, and the only way to prevent its criminal forays in the future is to demand from this commission the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help them God! If the Hippocratic Oath is "first, do no harm," the oath of this commission must be, "first, tell no lie."

    The second principle is accountability. After we find the truth, we've got to hold those who made the foul-ups accountable for their behavior. This is something the very rich are not used to. The Hebrew Bible says in Proverbs 14:20 (in the New International Version) that the "poor are shunned even by their neighbors, but the rich have many friends." The point of the commission should be to reverse that trend: the poor should not be shunned, and the rich shouldn't have any friends. Since the bulk of the burden has already been shouldered by the poor -- the masses of American citizens -- then those rich elites whose decisions, determinations and designs got us into this predicament must suffer the consequences of their choices. Isn't that what political and social elites constantly preach to the poor? Now it's time for them to take their own medicine.

    Justice is our third, and arguably greatest, principle. This is not said out of a sense of vengeance. This is where God, government and gadflies converge and stand firm on terra moralis: we're all concerned that we all get our just due. Every major religion, spiritual practice and moral tradition is obsessed with the perfection and performance of justice. Even pop culture isn't immune; twenty years ago, a landmark American film was made by the director Spike Lee, entitled Do The Right Thing. That's as clear a summary of the imperative to justice that I've seen. The commission must do the right thing by extolling the virtue of justice, and our government must do the right thing by doing what is right by the people. The political order is a reflection of either the creativity, or chaos, of our moral order. As social critic Michael Eric Dyson has famously said, "Justice is what love sounds like when it speaks in public."

    If we are real patriots who love this nation, then we will let justice speak and be our rallying cry. I, for one, now raise my voice.

    Braintruster and Rev. Marcia Dyson is an affiliate with the Center for Social Justice, Research, Teaching and Service at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.

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  • Mondays with Marcia: Michael Jackson thrilled the music biz, blazed the trail of racial acceptance

    Jun 29, 2009Rev. Marcia Dyson

    michael-jackson-racial-diversity-200

    There comes a time

    When we heed a certain call

    When the world must come together as one,

    There are people dying

    And its time to lend a hand to life,

    The greatest gift of all.

    We Are the World

    michael-jackson-racial-diversity-200

    There comes a time

    When we heed a certain call

    When the world must come together as one,

    There are people dying

    And its time to lend a hand to life,

    The greatest gift of all.

    We Are the World

    It is a bittersweet coincidence that Michael Jackson, dubbed by Elizabeth Taylor in 1989 as the King of Pop, died in the month of June, celebrated since 1979 as Black Music Month.

    Michael Jackson emerged not long after black folk, including musical artists, shook free of the chains of legal segregation. Jackson and his brothers formed The Jackson 5, and were signed to Motown in 1968, the year Dr. Martin Luther King was assassinated. They were one of the first musical groups to experience the newfound freedoms promised with the mid-‘60s passage of historic civil rights legislation. The Jackson 5 and other prominent black musical artists blazed a path for the acceptance of black culture in the homes of white Americans. After all, the Jackson 5 were not viewed as a threat to American society, but seen as cute kids who could fit into any wholesome family. They even had a cartoon series beginning in 1971.

    Michael Jackson did for the music industry what Michael Jordan did for the NBA: He brought in revenue beyond his wildest dreams and the dreams of those record companies which benefited from his prodigious gifts. As you read this article, Jackson’s record sales on Amazon.com and iTunes are undoubtedly going through the roof.

    Before his untimely death, Michael Jackson proved he still had his mojo working: He sold $85 million worth of tickets for 50 concerts in London to have begun next month, a sum that was expected to offset a whopping $400 million debt.  During his career Jackson sold a mind-boggling 750 million albums worldwide. Although he appeared to be awash in childlike innocence, Michael Jackson could be shrewd and calculating when it came to business ventures.  Indeed, Jackson was more like a sharp-nosed hawk who swooped down and captured his prey when he closed in on one of the grandest catches in music history: The Beatles Catalog worth tens of millions.

    In 1983, under pressure from Jackson’s record label, MTV wisely decided to feature the gloved one’s “Billie Jean” video, making him the first African-American to successfully challenge the music channel’s apartheid. Michael Jackson helped to revolutionize the music video industry – his long-form videos helped to situate the music video as a critical promotional tool and thus helped the music video to secure a category on most music award shows. He also brought millions into MTV’s coffers, which benefitted by adding black artists who, like Jackson, went on to become hugely popular. And Jackson’s 1982 album Thriller changed the music industry forever and became the best-selling album of all time, selling an incomprehensible 104 million copies to date.

    Michael Jackson’s humanitarian side shone through on his collaboration with Lionel Richie in writing the song “We Are the World,” which raised over $63 million in aid for Africa. While he boosted the music industry’s economy at a crucial time in the mid-80s, Michael Jackson’s ultimate gift to humanity remains his incredibly diverse body of musical creativity. Michael’s contribution can be summed up in some of the wisest words uttered by former President George W. Bush in recognition of Black Music Month in 2005: “This powerful, moving, and soulful music speaks to every heart, lifting us in times of sorrow and helping us celebrate in times of joy.” For Michael Jackson, that is so true. And for those of us who loved you and your work, as you sang, Michael, you are “Gone Too Soon.”

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  • Pill Hill

    Jun 23, 2009Rev. Marcia Dyson

    pills-200Rev. Marcia Dyson wonders how long the 40 million souls without health care will have to wait for real reform.

    pills-200Rev. Marcia Dyson wonders how long the 40 million souls without health care will have to wait for real reform.

    When President Obama announced in Chicago his plans to overhaul our unwieldy heathcare system, it reminded me of the southside Chicago neighborhood where I resided as a teen. It was dubbed "Pill Hill" because of all the physicians who lived in the community. Obama offered his prescription for what ails the nation's healthcare delivery in an address to the annual meeting of the American Medical Association. "I need your help, doctors," Obama pleaded. "We just do what you tell us to do." That's great if you can get a doctor's appointment. But over 40 million folk are left out in the cold and can't score a warm hospital bed or a visit with a local physician. A great deal of heat -- though little light -- is generated in most debates over American healthcare reform. In fact, our nation's Capitol has become the quintessential Pill Hill, even as the rest of the country has got one big headache as we discuss the future of healthcare.

    Obama's plan will inevitably conjure memories of Hillary Clinton's 1994 DOA national healthcare proposal. Even legendary Detroit Congressman Conyers hasn't been immune to attack of his single payer proposal in House Bill 676. In fact, even as Conyers' bill has been rendered a legislative cadaver, the organs of his proposal were gutted and have been donated to alternate programs and were transplanted in more modest healthcare insurance proposals. But no matter how you surgically slice it, something must be done about a country that lags far behind other developed nations in providing its citizens health care.

    Part of the problem in healing our healthcare system is contending with the philosophy that fuels the conservative, pro-business forces that oppose true reform. In 1960, Ronald Reagan, soon to become the patron saint of modern conservatism, gave a speech warning the nation of the coming plague of socialized medicine. Reagan's monotone voice rang the alarm of this "contagious" possibility of government takeover. I suppose one has to have a sense of humor to grasp the irony of Reagan's subsequent deregulation of the airline industry in the early 80s, which left those same taxpayers in the lurch and made many of us sick as we were forced to bail out an industry that Reagan had significantly weakened. The utter hypocrisy of government officials who would deny tax paying citizens the same advantages of the "socialized medicine" they enjoy -- subsidized by taxpayer money -- only underscores the need for just reform and an equitable share in health benefits that should extend to all citizens.

    Another problem with the healthcare reform debate is that it is needlessly abstract. Examples abound of just how out of whack our system is. For instance, a student at North Carolina's Bennett College can't reach her true potential because her seat in class was removed when the grandmother who supported her efforts realized she couldn't afford high prescription costs and college tuition. In another case, Sheila Osted-Holt is a victim of environmental racism in Dixon, Tennessee. She has had to wait for funds from a lawsuit (the company went bankrupt so they wouldn't have to pay money won in a class action lawsuit brought by black citizens) for her second mastectomy and constructive surgery. Also, the tens of thousands of victims of hurricanes Rita and Katrina, many of whom used to live in the 9th ward of New Orleans, lack necessary funds to secure professional help in pursuing mental health. Finally, one knows a system is messy when a cardiologist has a personal medical emergency and his own hospital debates his insurance as he lays in anguish from kidney pain.

    I could go on about this issue, but I just got a migraine. Does anyone have an Excedrin?

    Braintruster and Rev. Marcia Dyson is an affiliate with the Center for Social Justice, Research, Teaching and Service at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.

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