As we move into the sequence of Good Friday, Holy Saturday and Easter, Christians may be quick to skip ahead for the alleluias that await, however, some may prefer the fuller three days (i.e. Triduum). In the midst of the desolate gap between Cross and Empty Tomb, Christians can take this time to reflect on the heaviness of a broken world where death comes brutally and without much rationale for many people throughout history and in the headlines of the day, if said deaths are deemed newsworthy by mainstream media. (I am reminded, yet again, of how a terror attack in Europe can sometimes gain great attention, yet quickly, those who seek peace and justice for the greater world will highlight the news stories of other tragedies elsewhere in the world that do not necessarily make it into the 11 o'clock news or even on one's Facebook feed.)
Douglas,
Kelly Brown. Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 2015.
In
Kelly Brown Douglas’ new book, readers are plunged into the depths of today’s
headlines immersed within the thick sediment of U.S. history and its European
legal and cultural biases. She unravels
the threads of today’s justifications for the “not guilty” verdicts too often
issued in civil trials after an armed citizen shoots another, with few in power
acknowledging the racial motivations or objectification fueling the snap
judgments of one party (often an armed white male) at the ready to “stand their
ground”, the humanity of the other person (often an unarmed black male)
conveniently discarded.
Written by Episcopal priest and scholar Kelly Brown Douglas with the shooting of Treyvon Martin fresh in mind and read by this reviewer with the names of the many others to be likewise killed by incidents laden with a bias quick to be downplayed when scrutiny and outrage follow, Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God is aptly titled. In US history, African Americans have been treated far longer as chattel property or inferior peoples to be systematically controlled or willfully disenfranchised. The result is an oppressive continuo of rhetoric, downplaying the inhumanity of cultural and legal values that have embedded and encoded a racial stratification in overt and covert ways. Such a history where black lives are treated as chattel, let alone lives that matter, Douglas observes, “continues to cheapen black life” (p. 88).
As
a mother, Douglas shares her first-hand fears for her child’s upbringing in
this context, becoming a young African American man and the various ways a
mundane experience like driving down the street or walking in an unfamiliar
neighborhood could rapidly escalate into a similar tragedy if a police officer
or private citizen makes a snap judgement where the laws of the land enshrine
and valorize violence based on gut feelings or culturally embedded political
and racial privilege of one over against another.
The
country’s history of Manifest Destiny, American exceptionalism, and racial bias
is explored in Douglas’ book, drawing out history perhaps hidden or
conveniently left unrepeated, where Supreme Court decisions of the past created
an entrenching of racial and social superiority and political decisions by
local, State and federal authorities ghettoized entire sections of American
citizenry. Douglas links the Anglo-Saxon
roots of our country’s legal tradition to a tradition where “land, life and
race” become sacred, yet only for those with the most power and capacity to
enforce such privilege.
In
the recent decades, theologians have joined in the question of “otherness”,
examining the ways in which some human beings justify the treatment of other
human beings to meet a theological, economic or social set of values. Held sacred by some and profaning the human
dignity innate in every person, such practices of keeping others “other” raise
the question of complicity for the Church, especially as we tend to be more
focused on regaining footholds within political establishments than working to
dissect their corrupt biases in favor of building a more beloved community.
In
the second part of the book, Brown reviews various ways the black church
tradition provides theological grounding in the midst of marginalization and
oppression. In her latter chapters,
Brown recounts lyrics from the spirituals and biblical narratives as well as
the testimony of persons who knew firsthand enslavement and emancipation. She engages theologians (black liberationist
and womanist) who have appropriated this lived history into powerful critique
of Church and society, linking the life, death and Resurrection of Jesus with
the effort to dismantle subtle practices and outright violent acts of racism in
an era too often blithely declared “post-racial”.
Brown
calls for a greater moral framework to guide a future worth pursuing, where
memory, identity, participation and imagination (pp. 220-26) can be tools that
liberate from a history steeped in exceptionalism that undermines the very
notion of a nation seeking liberty for all or the Church too often seduced by
its need to be part of the Establishment that it forgets its true grounding.