Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Worshipping the Rich, Demonizing the Poor

 In the past few centuries, personal financial success has - in different times and by various people - been attributed to:

  • God’s grace
  • Racial superiority
  • Hard work
  • Good genes
  • God’s grace (again)

Poverty has, on the other hand, been blamed on:

  • Immorality
  • Racial inferiority
  • Laziness
  • Unfit genes
  • Lack of faith in God

It should be glaringly obvious that the lie blaming poverty on the poor has nothing to do with religion, pseudoscience, empirical observation, actual science, or the pseudo-religions of the 21st century. Why else would evolutionists and creationists, believers and unbelievers, converge on the same doctrine? Why would they contradict each other on every other detail, but agree only on venerating the rich and scorning the poor?


Worship of wealth doesn't emerge from pragmatism, theory, science, or religious faith. It comes from the wealthy themselves.


Humbled

 In 2010 I attended the national conference of VANGO, the organization for  Vietnamese American Non-Governmental Organizations, in Houston. For me there was the hope that I could get some help raising money to bring four high school students from the Bronx on a medical mission with Project Viet Nam after having gone myself the previous spring. Those hopes went nowhere. So did my ambition of scaling this up from a pilot program with four kids who I knew well to something that would build internationalism among students without the resources to polish their college resumes with a trip to do service overseas. The closest I came that weekend in Houston was an enthusiastic CEO of another organization who suggested that we do car washes. I smiled and didn’t tell him about the Bronx.

For Quynh, the director of PVN, I think my purpose in being there was to showcase the safe-drinking-water initiative I had proposed. When we ended up going that spring she had recruited a hydrology engineer to work on wells along with my work introducing a water-testing curriculum to Vietnamese school kids at all grade levels. I think she may also have been showing off that she had a white American high school principal working with and for her. 


A lead speaker was a specialist on emotional intelligence and group process. He closed with an activity in which he gave everyone a river stone - polished by the water - and asked us to write on it the negative quality that was most holding us back. The instructions were to get rid of it within the next day of so, symbolic of discarding that quality. I didn’t do that; I held on to mine for many months. I kept it in the console of my car so I could look at it again and again to remind myself what was stopping my growth. I finally decided that looking at it wasn’t helping. This was not a surprise. What was a surprise was that a young woman from Houston wanted to talk to me about her own challenges. A bigger surprise was that the words she wrote on her stone were the same as those I wrote on mine: Self-Doubt.


There is a degree of self-doubt that has been helpful to me. It enables me to reflect. It keeps me from always believing that I am right. It has always let me apologize to children. When I was a principal it let me give permission to teachers to try things I was skeptical about. But it goes well past that. Today I finished reading a book about Chicana feminism in the 60’s and 70’s. I wrote the editor that I was humbled. Humbled by the courage and persistence of those women. Humbled by the shallowness of my understanding back then when I was following their work from a distance. Humbled by the work of the historians who are recovering their stories today.


But humbled isn’t really an adequate word; humiliated is closer. I compare my professional work and my movement work with theirs and I feel inadequate and wasteful: wasteful of time and wasteful of talent.


Yes. When they were doing all that work I was a few years younger. They were in the world with real people and I was in college. My movement work then was planning and carrying out campus demonstrations and participating in larger city-wide and national demonstrations planned by others. The closest I came to any significant work then was when I chaired the planning committee for a citywide rally to demand the impeachment of Richard Nixon and then when I MC’ed the rally itself. I was chosen by the politically-diverse group to do that because I consistently heard everyone and made certain that they were all heard, summarizing their views and delineating the similarities and differences. I suppose that is a skill. I know that it is a preference that is not shared by those who are more interested in ensuring that their own views “win.” A victory for me at that rally was keeping it to the agenda we agreed on and not letting anyone hijack it, including Representative Bella Abzug who tried to sneak another speaker on as she concluded her own remarks. It is not nothing but it feels small.


That was 1973. For the next few years most of my public political work was in an organization called PARE (People Against Racism in Education). Almost everybody in it was a teacher or a professor of education. Everybody was white. The leadership was aligned with a group called Prairie Fire, which was a kind of above-ground auxiliary for the Weather Underground. We got a candidate elected to a local school board who later served on the City Council and as Manhattan Borough President before losing the mayoral race to Rudy Giuliani in 1997. I suppose helping her get started counts as an accomplishment of some sort, but it feels small. 


I also helped with elections in Washington Heights and in Brownsville. In the Heights, the Orthodox rabbis were sending their congregants out to block-vote for hacks against progressive parent candidates and some of those voters, whose own children attended yeshivas, were happy to take a palm card from my Jewish self, assuming that I was endorsing the same people their rabbis were. In Brooklyn I was a poll watcher because the money in school budgets was enough to get people very committed to controlling the local boards. I was threatened at gun point by some hired hood. The monitors from the Justice Department took my report and I suppose they wrote it up somewhere. I don’t think our involvement in either of those elections made any big difference. 


Worse was when we went to Canarsie where some high school kids from Brownsville and East New York had been rezoned in order to integrate the overwhelmingly-white South Brooklyn schools. We were given a narrative about a violent white community and the need to protect Black teens. But when we got there what I actually saw was a minority of racist white parents who were trying to enforce an unpopular boycott - to bully the rest of the white people to keep their kids home - while most of the white parents just wanted to accompany their kids through the pickets so that they could attend the first day of school. That felt to me like a giant missed opportunity to bring together the great majority of white kids with the arriving Black kids. 


I was finally expelled from PARE because I raised a series of questions about the factuality of their claims that the reason we were a white organization was because we were supporting a movement of Black and Latin parents, parents who we never actually saw. I also challenged their view that racism had to mainly be fought in ourselves, rather than in its systemic control of the schools. So I look back on all that without any sense of accomplishment at all. I wrote up the experience and I think two or three people read that.


Then there was my work in what I guess people now call the movement to build a party. Our circle was small, but its membership was impressive to me. Most of the comrades were Black or Puerto Rican and they included former leaders of the Young Lords Party, SNCC, and the Health Revolutionary Union Movement. I cannot say there were no accomplishments. We established a working print shop in order to provide concrete aid to exiled revolutionaries from Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Iran, and Ethiopia. I’m proud of that. We also provided support to the movement for Puerto Rican independence, both practical and with our own literature. But, honestly, most of our own publications were dense polemics with other circles. In retrospect they feel entirely insignificant. I devoted immense amounts of time to typing them up, time which I will never get back. 


I once represented us at a conference in California of similarly-sized circles from Alabama, Missouri, and North Carolina, as well as Oakland, LA, and San Diego. The outcome will give a sense of the emptiness of that work, too. After a couple of days of exchanging views and experiences everybody agreed that some ongoing common work might help us find unity going forward. But some circles insisted that it must be a common study, as opposed to, say, work on international solidarity, or women’s rights. Okay. Then one circle said they would only participate if the study was on the three-worlds theory, which the Party of Labor of Albania had recently denounced the Communist Party of China for holding. I said that we would not be bullied into something by a group saying they would only continue if they got their way, especially when it was about something that wasn’t terribly important to the actual work of stopping exploitation or of transforming the lives of oppressed people. When I got back to New York and reported, the comrades agreed. We had already had an internal split over our refusal to make that same question the absolute living center of our time and attention. And within another year or so we had all drifted apart. 


In the late eighties I spent months writing up a summary of all that work. It included a history of the entire revolutionary movement in the United States as well as my take on all the organizations and trends of the 70’s, so far as I had seen them. I think two other people read it. I suppose it was worth writing because it helped me clarify some thoughts that I needed to abandon.


I look at all those meetings and wonder what was accomplished.

Meanwhile, I was teaching high school. Even in my worst moments of doubt I can’t write that off as a failure. There are simply too many former students telling me what a tremendous difference I made in their lives. But I keep asking myself, “In what way?” I imagined myself, first and foremost, a teacher of social studies. I imagined myself raising generations of kids who would be skeptical of the official story, who would dig deeper, who would even be original thinkers. And many of them did remarkable work. 


I am proud of the girl - now a 48-year-old mom of two - who thought the 911 system was a scheme to ignore emergencies and arranged a class trip on a school holiday (and got her classmates to go!) to the phone center. She concluded that the system would work better if callers would take a breath and be more cooperative with the questions the operators ask. I am proud of the three boys - now fathers in their early forties - who reimagined Langston Hughes’s poem “I Am the Darker Brother” as being about younger siblings, which all of them were. I can go on… and on.


The problem is that none of them can. When I bring up these things, with a few exceptions, they don’t remember the significant and original intellectual work they did in my classes. They remember my encouragement. They remember my consoling words when they were down. They remember grace that I don’t believe I have. They talk about wanting to model themselves on me. They almost never speak about academics. One woman who is near fifty remembers me standing in the gap because her dad, a former Black Panther, was locked up from the time she was thirteen. But she doesn’t remember that I brought another former Panther in to address the class when he was finally released from prison because of massive irregularities in his original trial. She doesn’t remember that I had him speak privately to her about her dad, whom he knew well.


I know this sounds whiny. I know that having a strong positive impact on three generations of young men and women matters. I know that I should feel good about a highly regarded counselor who tells everybody that she learned it from me. I know that a school administrator who repeatedly credits me as mentor is a good thing. It’s just not what I set out to do. I wanted to teach the history that isn’t in the books. I wanted to raise up kids who would transform the world.


That plan to allow urban youth the opportunity to do international service crashed and burned in the absence of any funding. Even my Plan B died. I was going to bring my pilot group of four by car to participate in a Native youth leadership camp in New Mexico. The execs, who had previously interviewed me for a position on their board, never got back to me.


I wrote two books of historical fiction about the US in the early 20th century to teach the stories that have been erased to readers. But if the number of actual readers reached fifty I would be surprised. I am hurt by the sheer numbers of former students who excitedly purchased those books but never read them.


This week I read that book on Chicana feminists who accomplished so very much and I held up my life against their lives and found it wanting. I wrote the editor to thank her. She wrote back immediately and appreciatively. But every word of her response felt like critique of my compliments: It isn’t her work; it is collective work that she participates in with colleagues and with the subjects. They aren’t recovering the work of the 60’s and 70’s; they are continuing it. They don’t participate in the isolation and competition of the academy; they subvert it. I am so excited to hear this. I am so chastened by it.


Monday, March 20, 2023

The Great LHS Walkout

 Some of my high school classmates are fond of describing us, the Class of 1970, as The Class That Walked Out. I have strong memories of that day and it comes up often for me. My short story, "The Sun Shone So Brightly," in my collection Stones from the Creek, is about a mine strike. But the scene in which all these underground miners stand celebrating their resistance under a sunny sky is drawn from my experience walking out of Livingston High School. The protagonist of that story, Joey Quintana, is threatened by a foreman: "You see all these men walking out? Every one of them is going to be fired. But if you walk out, you're a dead man." I wasn't threatened with death. The school administrator just told me that the other students who walked out would be suspended, but that I would be permanently expelled. There's more, but I think it just reinforces my self-aggrandizing view, and that's what I want to dispel here.

A few weeks ago I wrote a post here about becoming a teacher because of the frustrations of my schooling. On the subject of the walkout I wrote:

An eleventh-grade boy stood up in front of the cafeteria before class with a paper and said that he wanted to share some thoughts. Immediately every cafeteria door flew open and the male teachers ran in. (Who knows how long they had been waiting to put on this bully-boy display?) Some of them grabbed that junior boy and hustled him out, but most of them just started pushing everybody outside into the parking lot. 

I promised to get back to that story someday, but this is not that day. Because even a cursory reading of this short quote tells you that the great LHS Walkout began as more of a push out by paranoid adults.

Compare our walkout to the East Los Angeles walkouts of 1968. I'll start with the issues. The East LA high schools - Garfield, Lincoln, Roosevelt, Wilson - were three-quarters Chicano and the issues were all about racism. The buildings themselves were inferior and so were the academic facilities, such as libraries, labs, and even textbooks. The teachers were mostly white and their expectations for the students were low. The shop classes had obsolete equipment. Students were paddled for speaking Spanish. And the disrespect of faculty for the kids was just notorious. One of those teachers had no problem publicly stating:

Most of the Chicanos have never had it so good. Before the Spanish came, he was an Indian grubbing in the soil, and after the Spaniards came he was a slave. It seems to me that America must be a very desirable place, witness the number of "wetbacks" and migrants both legal and illegal from Mexico.

Livingston High School was an overwhelmingly white school in an affluent suburb. I will not make any claims for the quality of the education, because I think it was lousy. But the expectations were that most of us would go to college and that many of us would enter the professions. Yes, the teachers disrespected us, but with the privilege of adulthood, not with the contempt of white supremacism. Yes, like the East LA high schools they frequently kept most of the bathrooms locked and rotated which ones were open. But our issues were issues of privilege: we wanted changes to final exam policy, a more relaxed dress code, and the right to circulate our own publications, independent of administrative censorship. As the joke from a few years ago had it, first world problems.

Then there is the preparation (or lack of it.) The leading students in East LA met together for months laying the groundwork for the protests with surveys, petitions, and presentations to the school board. Then they met for weeks preparing for the walkouts themselves. Some of us in Livingston had brought proposals to the principal, to be told the matters had to be brought to the school board, then sent back to the principal by the board. We ran a student candidate for the Board of Education.* We brought a suit against the superintendent of schools. But when it came to the walkout itself, well, we never planned one. We did plan and carry out a public meeting to report to the student body about the lack of progress with any of our proposals, and about the contempt with which they were received. But the walkout itself began with teachers shoving students out of the building when it merely looked as though another public meeting was beginning.

And, perhaps most important, there is the difference in official response. LAPD had undercover officers in the student leaders' planning meetings. When the students walked out they were met with absolutely massive violence, beatings, and arrests. Thirteen leaders were charged under sedition and conspiracy laws and faced 66 years in prison. And us? We were in the faculty parking lot next to the cafeteria listening to music and speeches when the chief of Livingston Police walked up from his headquarters across the park, about five minutes on foot. He was smoking a pipe, in a relaxed mood, and unaccompanied by any of his officers. I realized even that day that angry faculty and administrators - and even some parents - had undoubtedly demanded that he bust our heads and arrest us. But he was police chief in an affluent white suburb and you don't keep that job by beating the townspeople's precious children. He chatted with kids he knew, assessed the mood, and strolled back to his office. 

The next school board meeting was moved from their public hearing room to a middle school auditorium, with the overflow crowd filling the cafeteria and listening over the PA. Sure, there were plenty of authoritarian types who were enraged that we had been allowed to get away with a display of defiance, but none of us were arrested. The suspensions we had been promised on the day of the "walkout" were quietly reduced to a single day - the day of the walkout itself - and then never heard of again, despite all the threats we heard every day in school about "your permanent record that will follow you for the rest of your life." I was proud to have been threatened with expulsion, as I mentioned above. It made me happy to be viewed as a menace by authoritarian assholes. But that was the last mumbling word I heard about it. 

In fact the only police action at all was against my dad, at that big public school board meeting. One of the loudmouths libeled the secretary of the student government, and she rose to a point of personal privilege in order to respond. She had attended American Legion Girls' State and she knew that Robert's Rules gave her priority. The board, of course, ignored her so my outraged dad stood up and very loudly demanded that she be heard. The chairman of the board asked the officers to remove him, and they did.** 

I hope I am adequately making a point about the privilege that encircled us, even as we protested a school regime that was disrespectful and antidemocratic, but that never tried to reduce us to super-exploited gardeners and chamber maids. The thing is that I was only partly aware of it at the time. Watching the HBO drama "Walkout!" about the East LA student protests and reading teacher Sal Castro's book Blowout! helped me appreciate the differences. Then, last year, I learned about the 1970 student walkout in Uvalde, Texas. Yes, that Uvalde, Texas that the whole world heard about last spring because of the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School. But unlike our walkout that same spring, it lasted six weeks! Like the East LA students, the kids at the Uvalde high school were overwhelmingly Chicano. The immediate trigger for their walkout was the firing of Josue Garza, a fifth-grade teacher who was one of the very few bilingual Spanish speakers in the entire district. As in East LA they were demanding equal resources in the predominantly Chicano schools. They were protesting punitive disciplinary practices against Chicano kids that included frequent suspensions, paddling, and even fines. And, as in LA, they got extreme responses to their protests. Many of the participants were held back an entire school year. The valedictorian of the senior class was never allowed to graduate. And when they gathered near the school the Texas Rangers posted snipers on the roof.

My intention in writing this is not to disparage our protest at Livingston High School. As I wrote above, our education was authoritarian, antidemocratic, disrespectful, and - I believe - mediocre, too. The response to our protest was an attempt to reimpose the kind of strict control that we had been objecting to all along. But if you consider the differences you will see that Texas and California had been imposing a system of lifelong subordination on people of Mexican descent. And they were prepared to bring the full violence of the state apparatus against the students to maintain that system. 

A final note: I mentioned above that we sued the school superintendent for the right to distribute independent literature.*** We brought that case late in 1968. It wasn't finally heard until I was a freshman in college, the fall of 1970. But consider the case the Uvalde students brought against their school system in 1970, for racial discrimination. It was eventually settled in 2008, thirty-eight years after it was brought. It wasn't settled until 2017, when the parties agreed that the terms of the settlement had been met. Do I really need to say more?

_______________

* That candidate was me; again, a story for another day.

** A side note: My dad had known that man since we first moved to Livingston fourteen years earlier and we had been in one another's homes. To this day I don't know what to make of that.

*** I discuss this suit briefly in another context at the post linked above.


Thursday, March 2, 2023

Do justice, love mercy, walk humbly with the Lord

There is a meme on the internet that purports to derive from “the Talmud” saying: 

“Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world’s grief. Do justly, now. Love mercy, now. Walk humbly now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it.”


It appears to have two sources.


One is Micah 6:8:

הִגִּ֥יד לְךָ֛ אָדָ֖ם מַה־טּ֑וֹב וּמָֽה־יְהֹוָ֞ה דּוֹרֵ֣שׁ מִמְּךָ֗ כִּ֣י אִם־עֲשׂ֤וֹת מִשְׁפָּט֙ וְאַ֣הֲבַת חֶ֔סֶד וְהַצְנֵ֥עַ לֶ֖כֶת עִם־אֱלֹהֶֽיךָ׃

Which I will translate as, “He has told you, o Man, what is good and what the LORD requires of you: Do justice, and love kindness, and walk humbly with your God.”


The second is Pirkei Avot (2:15), the Sayings of the Fathers, which is a collection of aphorisms and proverbs in the Mishnah:

רַבִּי טַרְפוֹן אוֹמֵר, הַיּוֹם קָצָר וְהַמְּלָאכָה מְרֻבָּה, וְהַפּוֹעֲלִים עֲצֵלִים, וְהַשָּׂכָר הַרְבֵּה, וּבַעַל הַבַּיִת דּוֹחֵק: הוּא הָיָה אוֹמֵר, לֹא עָלֶיךָ הַמְּלָאכָה לִגְמֹר, וְלֹא אַתָּה בֶן חוֹרִין לִבָּטֵל מִמֶּנָּה


Which I will translate, “Rabbi Tarfon says, ‘The day is short, the work is great, the workers are lazy, the pay is good, and the Master of the House is demanding.’ He used to say, ’It’s not on you to finish the job, but you aren’t free to abandon it.’” 


Tarfon is very clear that “the job” is the study of Torah. In fact his very next words in this passage are, “If you have studied much Torah you will be given much reward.” But I am taken with the idea that “the job” is exactly what the prophet said: Do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly.


In the next chapter of Micah (7:18-20) the prophet asks: Who is a God like You, forgiving sin, pardoning transgression; who has not maintained His anger forever against the remnant of His people because he desires kindness? He will take us back in mercy, blot our crimes and hurl them into the depths of the sea, keeping faith with Jacob and loyalty to Abraham as You promised our fathers in days gone by.


Micah tells us that God “desires kindness” (חָפֵ֥ץ חֶ֖סֶד הֽוּא) and that he requires us to “love kindness” (אַ֣הֲבַת חֶ֔סֶד) I am translating the Hebrew “chesed” as “kindness.”


Rabbi Moses Cordovero (1522-1570) wrote an entire treatise on that second quote from Micah, (“Who is a God like you…) which he described as Thirteen Attributes of Mercy (Rachamim), and which he argued we should learn to practice in our own lives. He had plenty to say about kindness. 


He said that the secret of kindness is to love God so completely that you could never leave His service because that love surpasses everything else in your heart. But he also suggested some practices with other people. These are some of them.

  • Provide a child with everything from the time of its birth
  • Visit and heal the sick
  • Charity to the poor
  • Welcome strangers 
  • Make a wedding for a bride
  • Reconcile people who have become estranged

(Tomer Devorah, Southfield, MI, 1993)


So those are some ways of being kind. But don’t forget, Micah also said that God wants us to walk humbly with Him.