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We Can Be and Be Better
WEB
DuBois and Living in and with History
A
sermon Offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Lafayette
Winter
2002
By
Rev. Hilary Landau Krivchenia
WEB Du Bois, wrote:
“I have had an early
and deep appreciation for the fact that to live is a serious
thing.” Du Bois wrote
this on October 3, 1890 as a student in a Harvard English class.
I said last week that humor was one vital way we attain
self-understanding – and live more deeply into who we really are.
This humor co-exists – it must – with this core
seriousness. Oh – I
love that deep laugh and that strong song – rising above pain,
broken winged and a little awkward that lives in the human heart.
However, it is this seriousness that allows us to see our humanity
-- to live deeply, to take in the richness of yourself – that
universe within you – to know the fullness of the world around
you, of all who inhabit this world with you.
Maya Angelou, African American poet, wrote:
Too proud to bend,
Too poor to break When I think about
myself My folks can make me
split my side, I laughed so hard I
nearly died, The tales they tell
sound just like lying,
They grow the fruit
But eat the rind,
I laugh until I start
to crying, When I think about my
folks.
Thank the poet.
So I invite us all
again back into the race game – and deeper – into the serious
business of identity – of knowing ourselves – of understanding
our identities and the aspects of which our identities are made –
and then – and then – of moving toward that future which is
possible among people who know themselves – histories printed into
cells and memories, hopes rising on paper and in prayer. This is our
time – every moment is our moment of invitation to this awakening.
Our hope and comfort is our awakening together – and
awakening one another.
Adrienne Rich, Jewish,
lesbian:
But there come times
– perhaps this is one of them –
when we have to take
ourselves more seriously or die;
when we have to pull
back from the incantations,
rhythms we’ve moved
to thoughtlessly and disenthrall ourselves, bestow
ourselves to silence,
or a severer listening…
Bless poets and
songwriters and storytellers for their courage -- they call the
soul, onto paper, into the air into awareness.
They open the door – it is our choice to follow their words
and move between their words -- deeper -- into that hidden world
where we may find ourselves. It’s black history month – but who cares the month – it
is time to know ourselves. In
part, I hope large part, this is why we come here – to this place
– to know ourselves. Sociologists,
psychologists, philosophers, administrators, veterinarians,
ministers, poets, novelists, insurance brokers, weavers, realtors,
biologists, ornithologists, reformers, musicians, mothers and
fathers, store clerks all have definitions of what identity is.
I’d be curious to pass around a paper and have you each
write a short definition of identity. Perhaps at another service. Today – I will say from a
distant star or close up under a powerful microscope no matter our
race we are little different – but at arms length and through the
lenses of personal and social history we inherit and create
differences -- small and some large.
You are and I am and who we each are arises in relationship
and in contrast. For
whatever ultimate oneness we may be part of – imminent,
transcendent, interdependent, empty, or woven and glittering –
whatever oneness we may be part of
-- we are still these precious individuals – people who
learn identity and uniqueness, learn to belong to some groups and
not to others, to bear histories, and pass them on.
Where this has been one of our greatest weaknesses it ought
to be our power – a great and shared power.
So I invite you to retrace with me and rather condense the
pilgrimages of two great men along the paths of identity. One sermon
or many could not really do justice to the richness of their lives
but these two men’s reflections on identity changed the world.
I invite you as your retrace their steps of consciousness to
discover yourself – in your responses: thoughts, feelings, and
memories. We will find
ourselves in one another.
One definition that I have heard of racism is that racism is
prejudice plus power. But
the work of racism is more tangled than that.
Oh, there is power – but it slips from hand to hand like a
fish. There is power
but it darts out of sight -- changes sides for a moment – takes a
disguise. Racism is a
tear in the web of life, a rift in identity, an inability to sense
– beauty, music, and love – an inability to have the power of
wisdom.
I have spoken before of the Rev. Theodore Parker – a
Unitarian Minister and abolitionist whose home was on the
Underground Railroad – the preacher who often wrote his sermons
with a pistol on his desk to protect the fugitives hiding with him.
I hope that we seek, rather than weapons, tools, of
the heart and mind to support liberation – tools to transform
consciousness. The
abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison attended Parker’s services and
it was Garrison who attended one of the early speeches of Frederick
Douglass – a slave who had escaped to freedom and whose
transformation of consciousness remains as bright a guide as any
sign along the underground road to freedom.
Garrison wrote: “I think I never hated slavery so intensely
as at that moment; my perception of the enormous outrage which is
inflicted by it, on the god-like nature of its victims, was rendered
far more clear than ever.”
Douglass was born a slave in February of 1818 – though he
never really knew his actual birthday or the year for certain.
His identity was defined by those around him and it was a
minimal identity of servitude, suffering, and erasure – but, in
the course of his life he freed himself by degrees and revealed the
great human within – perhaps made greater having had to make
conscious so much of that which had been denied and erased.
As most slaves, he was separated early from his family.
He was about the age of my youngest when he was owned by a
Colonel Lloyd. The
practice on Lloyd’s farm was to dump boiled coarse corn meal into
a wooden trough and then call out to the child slaves to come and
get it. Ysaye Barnwell
of Sweet Honey in the Rock wrote this:
¯“For
each child that’s born a morning star rises and sings to the
universe – hm, we are!” Barnwell’s
is both song and plaint. Now
look back at the farm and the children running to the trough to
scrape for food. With
hands or shingles or oyster shells they would race to scoop up the
mush. Douglass was
transferred from owner to owner during his childhood and it was
during one of these transfers that one of his mistresses began to
teach him to read. She
was a kind woman who astonished Douglass with her goodness – at
least for a time. He
wrote: “I scarcely knew how to behave towards her.
The crouching servility, usually so acceptable a quality in a
slave, seemed to disturb her. She
did not deem it unmannerly for a slave to look her in the face.”
A new sense of himself began to dawn.
When her husband stopped the lessons saying that “Learning
would spoil the best nigger in the world.” Douglass recognized, he
said, the “white man’s power to enslave the black.
From that moment,” he wrote, “I understood the pathway to
freedom.” A pathway
to freedom. I think of
the casual way schooling is offered to children in so many places
– with no sense that the soul is getting wings and then I think of
twelve year old Frederick who would carry extra bread as he ran his
errands to bribe the white children playing in the streets to teach
him – a little here -- a little there.
Douglass was in his early twenties when he made his escape.
He fought through the Civil War.
After, he fought for black suffrage.
He became friends and co-workers with the mothers of feminism
– with Susan B. Anthony, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
He attended the historic first women’s rights convention in
Seneca Falls, in 1848. Yet,
when the 15th amendment came up he refused to join it
with a demand for universal suffrage because the sufferings of women
were less visible to him. He
said “When women are hung from lampposts then I will know that the
urgency for their vote is as great.”
In 1870, he was instrumental in the passage of the 15th
amendment securing the vote for black men.
We, looking back with our 21st century eyes, know
that no amendment has power if the hearts of those who must enforce
it have not been amended as well and real black suffrage was many
years in the future.
Reconstruction was not only betrayed in the legislation of
the nation which promised land, education, rights, and support for
freed black persons – it was betrayed by a white population which
lived with its own struggles and anxieties – clinging sometimes to
power and sometimes – well – I get ahead of myself.
Reconstruction was a process that needed to be internalized
among all people. It
was William Edward Burghardt DuBois born also in February – on the
23rd – in 1868 who internalized and expressed reconstruction
profoundly and eloquently. In
Great Barrington, Massachusetts, where the custom was to exchange
calling cards as a way to introduce oneself – your name and
address on a business card. A
teenaged boy received a lesson in identity – a young DuBois
recounted years later: “The exchange was merry, till one girl, a
tall newcomer, refused my card, -- peremptorily with a glance.
Then it dawned upon me that I was different from the others;
or like, mayhap, in heart and life and longing, but shut out from
their world by a vast veil.”
Reconstruction was a social and a spiritual process – it
asked for new consciousness as well as new legislation.
A child of the North – Du Bois was one of a handful of
black children in a white school and he had faith in the power of
words and of ideas – a power he could use.
Still this is a story of identity that arrives as a wounding.
But Dubois was a complex and resilient boy just as he grew to
be a complex man – he wrote further,
“I had thereafter, no desire to tear down that veil; I held
all beyond it in common contempt, and lived above it in a region of
blue sky and great wandering shadows.
The sky was bluest when I could beat my mates at examination
time – or even at foot race. with the years, this contempt began to fade; for all the
dazzling opportunities were theirs, not mine.”
DuBois was an exceptional person and he did excel and win
honors and attentions – he was ravenous for learning – in part
because, he said – “education always will have an element of
danger of revolution. Men
strive to know.” He
attended Fisk University and there found an affirmation of his race,
just as the Fisk Jubilee Singers would bring African-American music
into its own and out into the world.
¯“Michael
Row your boat ashore, Hallelujah, Michael Row your boat ashore,
Hallelujah – the river Jordan is chilly and wide, Hallelujah, milk
and honey on the other side, Hallelujah.”
As a child, I remember singing that song with my activist
parents and I remember the notion of the muscle in the work – to
get to the other side –, which for me was never heaven – but a
world of justice and freedom. Du
Bois opened doors that had been barred to other persons of color.
After Fisk he became the first black man to obtain a Doctoral
degree from Harvard University.
Each success drove him -- not for himself but for all the
black identity surging
in his heart. He wrote “the knowledge that would teach the white
world was Greek to his own flesh and blood.
The love of harmony and beauty that set the souls of my
people a-dancing and a-singing, that raised but confusion and doubt
in the soul of the black artist, for the beauty revealed to him was
the soul-beauty of a race which a larger audience despised.”
DuBois saw that we are called to shape and claim our identity.
He wrote: “to attain his place in the world he must be
himself and not another.” Under
simpler conditions than DuBois faced, this idea is challenge enough
– the claiming of the authentic self.
He further understood that black people searched through a
veil -- of history, of oppression, and suffering.
And further that they saw themselves through the lenses of
white eyes – of white culture and power.
He wrote: “the
Negro is born with a veil, and gifted with second-sight in this
American world, which yields him no true self-consciousness, but
only lets him see himself through the revelation of the other world.
It is a peculiar sensation, this sense of always looking at
one's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one's soul by
the tape of a world that looks on in contempt and pity.
One ever feels his twoness, an American, a Negro; two souls,
two unreconciled strivings; The history of the American Negro
is the history of this strife,-this longing to merge his double self
into a better and truer self. In this merging, he wishes neither of
the older selves to be lost. He simply wishes to make it possible
for a man to be both a Negro and an American, without being cursed
and spit upon by his fellow.”
When so recently experienced terrorism as a nation it was as though a new
monster had come into our midst and yet terrorism had shadowed the
lives of generations of slaves and African-Americans.
It was in1909 in the wake of yet another lynching – this
one in Springfield, Illinois, that WEB Du Bois and many others –
Jews, liberal Christians, Unitarians, atheist humanists, formed the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People – the
NAACP. This was truly
an anti-terrorist group – it used the call of virtue, and the
lever of the law to establish and enable justice. DuBois eventually frustrated with the slow increase of real
justice turned increasingly to communism and eventually became a
citizen of Ghana, where he died in 1963.
His passing was announced at the historic Freedom March on
Washington.
Terrorism isn’t new here – lynching, rape, burning churches,
synagogues, crosses, banning marriages between slaves or same sex
couples, stalking, hate crimes.
We know it. It’s
the stuff headlines are made of – to make us fearful and ready to
cower or to strike.
Thandeka writes that to become aware of being white is to
experience terror – not over the loss of power but at the thought
of exile. White folk
carry memories of their own exiles --Nigger-lover – my Dad told me
two of his little students calling him that.
There is yet a line we tread and beyond that line we can be
outside the circle of family, collegiality, race and yes, even small
power.
To live is a serious thing. Each
person here knows that or you would not have bothered to come this
morning. When Thandeka
made up the game in which we remember the race of ourselves and
every other person we are speaking with consciously for a week we
begin to know ourselves. What
is reparation? Apology?
The world healing Tikkun – how I ache for that! Not in some
useless guilt mongering way but more deeply – as severed kin –
as brothers and sisters on a stormy sea of waves made by our own
troubled histories. To
know ourselves and one another more deeply and truly is to calm that
sea. ¯Nobody
knows my trials lord, nobody knows.
Maya Angelou wrote:
Now if you listen closely
I’ll tell you what I know
Storm clouds are gathering
The wind is gonna blow
The race of man is suffering
And I can hear the moan,
‘Cause nobody,
but nobody
Can make it out here alone.
To know ourselves and is to know one another, is to find peace and to make
peace and to still the waters.
To take this living seriously is to reclaim long buried joy.
To do this together is the call of our principles.
Unitarian Universalism calls us to establish unity while
honoring diversity. There was the NPR story of the man who tried to contact the
descendents of his family’s former slaves.
In acts both small and great – to step across the color
line that still exists, stepping across the lunch room to the new
person, to produce a 2nd grade play that sings that we
are a rainbow, to spread literacy and health care to every person
born, to run for local office and retain your principles – these
are acts of more than reparation – they are world building.
Without pistols on our desks we can defend and liberate –
those around us who are unfree and that within us which remains in
chains and apart. To
know ourselves and one another – is to end terror – to calm the
waters and to make the future possible.
Closing for DuBois
Our senses, restored, never to be the same,
Whisper to us.
They existed. They existed
We can be.
Be and be
better. For they
existed. |