Friday, July 3, 2020

SojoMail - Symbols shape us

SojoMail
What’s been the message of Confederate monuments and flags? It depends on who you are. If you’re a Black teenager in the South, each day passing a memorial to someone who committed treason in order to keep your ancestors enslaved, how might that make you feel? If you’re a white American who still points to the “heritage” of the “lost cause," it might further ingrain your denial of the brutality of slavery and how racism continues today. A nation that still honors Confederate signs in public places signals its belief that Black people are less important than white people, that Black people’s trauma can be disregarded. Confederate flags signal to the public that it’s okay to keep ignoring the worst and ugliest sins of our past, while trying to create an impenetrable barrier to a different and better future.
Let’s be very clear: Tearing down symbols is not enough. Changing statues can never substitute changing policies and practices based on skin color, which still undergirds this country’s systematic racism. But symbols do send clear messages about personal and national memory — and about future possibilities.
The surging, nationwide movement in defense and support of Black lives, sparked by the killing of George Floyd, has led to a renewed debate over the symbols and signals of white supremacy that persist throughout the United States — Confederate monuments and flags, but also statues, streets, buildings, military bases, and other spaces and objects memorializing historical figures known for their treason, racism, and oppression. Confederate statues, as well as statues of Christopher Columbus and other colonizers, have been sprayed with graffiti and, in some cases, torn down by groups of protesters in recent weeks. A number of mayors and governors have announced their intention to remove these symbols of racial oppression and hate.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE
E-mailForward
FacebookShare

ADVERTISEMENT

 
Our Latest
The virus doesn’t care about our politics or our party loyalties.

The Courage to Listen: Faith Communities' Mission to Protect Black Life and Reduce Harm
"If you have people straining to live under the weight of a system that seeks to constantly dehumanize, then it doesn't matter how much training the police will get."
The moral question is not what we meant to do. 
Before I learned my town’s true history, I cared about racial justice.

ADVERTISEMENT

 
From the Magazine
When Ordinary Time Is Anything But (by Valerie Bridgeman)
Reflections on the Revised Common Lectionary, Cycle A.

ADVERTISEMENTS

The 2020 U.S. presidential election is on the horizon, but racist voter suppression and new challenges stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic mean the right to vote is under attack. If you care about our democracy, now is the time to act.
Through curated conversations and online resources, SojoAction is working to better equip and mobilize our supporters to engage in transformational change. Sign up for SojoAction Alerts sent directly to you.

No comments:

Post a Comment

SojoMail - Preparing for the coming king (no, I don’t mean Trump)

View this email in your browser This week: Preparing for the heavenly king, resisting conspiracy theories, and learning to love, even when i...