For years, I’ve willed and participated in efforts to make
my house a space for meaningful dialogue.
Since the end of 2017, I’ve had the joy of having Bina as a housemate, who has
significantly increased the level of commitment to dialogue within the house. We recognize our unique opportunity in New
York to bring people from different backgrounds together under one roof to
share in meaningful dialogue, community and fellowship with one another.
The New York Dialogues started on January 20, 2018 and the second one was held April 8, 2018. Each dialogue has a theme; April's was Gun Violence, Race & Gender Issues.
The New York Dialogues started on January 20, 2018 and the second one was held April 8, 2018. Each dialogue has a theme; April's was Gun Violence, Race & Gender Issues.
About 10 people gathered together and shared thoughts we had
prepared in advance. Sara opened with a candle-lighting; recognizing that
prayer does still matter, despite the emptiness felt in many previous Black
Lives Matter vigils. Our hope for today is for meaningful change to come out of
our discussion.
Other thoughts shared:
·
Poetry: Black Man in America: An Endangered
Species?
·
Corporate power within the gun industry and its
thirst for wealth, going so far as to even resist safety features, including
childproofing, because it fears it will make cost more expensive for a price
sensitive market
·
The U.S. is a signatory on the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, which
means we can drag the U.S. to an international court of justice. Nations were
called to create national programs of action.
·
The UN declared guns are killing people all the
way back in 2001
·
How news agencies systematically choose photos
that demonize migrants by showing them in large groups versus humanizing them
by showing close-ups and eye contact of individual human beings
·
How the world spends $1.4 trillion on weapons
industry and how 55 cents of every dollar we pay in taxes goes to U.S. military
expenditure
·
Breaking down the concept of “good guys with
guns”
·
How one participant’s parents pulled him out of
public school in Georgia after the public schools started arming teachers after
the Columbine shooting, because the parents realized that if there was a
breakout of shots, Black boys might be most likely to be shot first
·
80% of victims of gun violence are women and
children
·
Every minute 20 people are displaced in the
world, so 28,000 people are displaced every day
·
There may be somewhere between 2-4 million Syrian
refugees outside of Syria, but 8 million refugees inside Syria, who no one ever
talks about
·
Books shared included:
o
Uncommon Valor by Melvin Claxton and Mark Puls
o
The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
o
Lethal But Legal: Corporations, Consumption and
Public Health by Nicholas Freudenberg
·
Reflections: While there is a systemic nature of
corporate power, and cycles of violence, there are also reminders of goodness.
And when we appeal to someone’s inherent sense of good, we can overcome violence.
·
We can process our pain through creative means. Syrian
artist Rashwan Abdelbaki from the Artistic Freedom Initiative
shared his art. I was particularly moved by the Last Supper, First Wall painting.
©Rashwan Abdelbaki
Titled: Last Supper .. First Wall
العشاء الأخير .. الجدار الأول
200 x 330 cm
Acrylic On Canvas
NYC 2017
#RashwanAbdelbaki #Art #Painting #NewYork#Virginia #NY #VA #Damascus #Rome #Beirut#Dubai #London #Vermont #Italy #Syria #Lebanon#UK #USA
Titled: Last Supper .. First Wall
العشاء الأخير .. الجدار الأول
200 x 330 cm
Acrylic On Canvas
NYC 2017
#RashwanAbdelbaki #Art #Painting #NewYork#Virginia #NY #VA #Damascus #Rome #Beirut#Dubai #London #Vermont #Italy #Syria #Lebanon#UK #USA
(At first I thought he said "First World"...but
really the meaning isn't much different, as it is in a "First World"
country like the US that our president wants to build a wall.) I am
particularly moved by this piece, because of the striking irony of the
prisoners sitting behind a wall, at the table of the Last Supper. My tradition
of Christianity/Catholicism teaches that the Last Supper was one where Jesus
shared with us how we can partake in His divinity through sharing in His Body
and Blood - a carnal image for sure, but one of ultimate sacrifice, and one
that reminds Catholics of the beauty of the incarnation every time we celebrate
the Mass at church. If those of us who truly believe that Jesus was
communicating about the divinity we can all share with Him in - that each human
being has a spark of the divine and deserves all the dignity and respect in the
world - then what does a painting like this tell us about how well those of us
who are Christians are living out this message? What would Jesus say if he were
alive today and saw this painting? Because the message the painting
communicates seems to me to be pretty much on the mark. There are many
practicing Christians and others who are oppressed, who are prisoners in their
own lives, stuck behind walls or silos of ignorance and fast-paced society that
separate them from human compassion. To me this painting represents the base
communities such as those that liberation theology stands for: Christians and
others who respect Jesus' message, crying out to be heard, to be seen, to not
just be regarded as "other" and treated brutally and often even
killed, but instead treated as unique and dignified human beings who deserve to
be listened to. I pray we can use this and other meaningful art such as this to
spark dialogue for true inclusivity, hope, and change.