The "hate the
Jews" experiences I have gone through as a child, (and sometimes still hear),
allows me to know, feel and have great compassion for most others in the world that
feel or believe they are not wanted.
The traumatic mean stuff of my past, taught me compassion for others in the world that experience such hatred, marginalization, blame and never being heard or seen. I've learned to see personal negative events as having "happened for me, not to me." How did being treated so badly happen for me? I learned to feel what people of color feel every day. What women often feel when not "seen," nor respected, or just seen as bodies on display. Or what children go through when surrounded by an adult world that talks down to them, demands more, punishes them and teaches them "no matter what you do, it is never good enough."
When asked "what have you done with all those past hurtful experiences? Therapy? Counseling?" What I have done with all the past hurts, is learn to honor the feelings of others, with listening deeply, caring and joining with them. The feelings are an inspiration to step into situations where adults or children are being marginalized with attitude, tone of voice or "make wrong." I have learned how to, more often, find ways to bring people together, release my own judgments that often lie hidden in habit and familiarity. I can still momentarily feel the past hurt in my body, release some tears and then appreciate that I get to still have tears and feel everything.
When I'm lost in myself, (the poor me part), I notice it, and give myself permission to honor "the poor me" too.
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
TRUTH OF THINGS
A six-year-old girl sitting in the lap of her dad, both quietly talking, smiling and holding one another. His voice is equal to hers, hers to his. A quiet calm surrounds them.
They slowly get up from their chairs, open the glass doors, and walk outside to cross the street, holding hands.At a distance, they are one. Inside me, I see the truth of things.
They slowly get up from their chairs, open the glass doors, and walk outside to cross the street, holding hands.At a distance, they are one. Inside me, I see the truth of things.
Wednesday, April 1, 2015
TEN YEARS OLD AND COUNTING
When I was ten years old, growing up in Los Angeles in a regular middle class neighborhood with all white people, some who had problems =with Jewish people too, I met my first black person when she came to our home one day a week to clean for my mom. Her name was Minerva
Minerva. I didn't really notice her color in any significant way. I just noticed she had darker skin, and I thought nothing of it at the time. At 7:30AM on the one day per week she came to our small house, I sat with her at the kitchen table as she drank a cup of coffee, black with no cream, while eating a piece of toast. We sat across from each other just talking and sharing.calmly and honestly.
I had about 30 minutes with Minerva before I walked the two blocks to my elementary school. Minerva was the first human being to "see" me. She always made eye contact, and her voice remained even and kind. She talked with me, not down to me. I did not have words at the time for how she met me equally. I only knew she was different than most adults who spoke to me as a younger person, not considered a full human yet.
At the age of 10, I learned how much Minerva was being paid for the eight hours of work on this one day, and her two hour roundtrip travel by bus across Los Angeles. I immediately asked my parents to double her pay out of fairness and justice. They did. They listened to me.
Years later, when I was 23 years old, I received a phone call from Minerva's family in Los Angeles, inviting me to her funeral. I lived 400 miles away at that time, and I didn't think I mattered that much to the family, for me to attend the funeral. I took the invitation as a "nice" thing, but not that special. I later found out, that I was the only White person close to Minerva, and she had told her family about me.
I was fortunate to go to the only high school in Los Angeles that had a blend of white, black and Latino students that simply came together without making it happen. And it was my own experience with extreme prejudice at the age of five that gave me a sample of what it is like to be marginalized, hated and spit on for having an identity of being Jewish, something I was not aware that I was, when five.
I soon learned how the dominant white world controlled things, and often made war on people of color, and did so believing they were right and justified. I did get to visit Milton Anderson at his home with his family when I was 16. Milton was another Black man in my high school.
Then I went on to teach high school only to find the principal segregating the black students from the white students. I did speak up right away. I did lose my job, but that was OK. Then I got to work among Native Americans for three years, and found the same marginalization, a word that seems too sweet for what was happening. Again I spoke up and reached out, and lost the job, but gained many friends and fellow and sister lovers of people.
Today, I can get angry and frustrated with the continuing injustice and ignorance around color, dominant cultures, and children everywhere. I am left with devoting my life to finding ways to stand with and for all people.
In a dream I had years ago, my father, a man who died decades ago, stepped out of an elevator that had just descended, walked towards me at my present age, as I stood alone in an old wood paneled courtroom. He walked right up to me, looked me in the eye, and said, "Your life is about fairness and Justice." He then turned around, walked to the elevator, stepped in and the doors closed and he ascended.
These stories keep me awake, and remind me to make contact with everyone I meet.
Even if just a simple Hi..
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