Dear Diana
My Dear Diana
A preface, I wrote this note to a young Armenian woman who has tutored me a few times to help me learn their language. We talked a bit about the current political situation in Armenia. She knows of my union and political background and I felt compelled to discuss a couple of things with her and thought I would share it with you as well.
I have been thinking so much about our brief conversation a
few days ago. I have not been able to
forget two parts of the unfinished conversation and have decided that I must
some thoughts down in writing to organize them for, hopefully, a more extensive
conversation in the near future.
First and foremost, I must commend you and your associates in
your striving to be heard in peaceful demonstrations addressing the issues
facing your beloved country of Armenia.
My current employment situation will not allow me the freedom to express
my personal beliefs about the merits of your protestations insisting that I
take no public position. I am utilizing
this moment to only address the methodology of your movement and not the substantive
issues. I hope you will understand.
The movement, for the most part, has been an admirable manifestation
of the use of civil disobedience as described by Thoreau and implemented by Gandhi,
Dr. King and many others. Gandhi
described his movement with the word satyagraha meaning forceful love. It is not cowardice but incredible examples
of bravery to face people who are driven by hatred, ignorance, prejudice, and
self-preservation without responding in a like manner with anger and
hatred. Dr. King reminded us to love our
enemies to turn their hearts. Your
movement has been called a velvet revolution because of its soft, smooth, and non-violent
attributes. I told you the other day of how I was so impressed by the methods
utilized by the team barricading the road in to the airport. Those folks welcomed the stranded passengers
walking from the airport, pulling their suitcases. At the barricades, they had taxis waiting for
them. But, even more of a testament to
empowered love, they offered the passengers cake and bottled water to apologize
for the inconveniences they had suffered and let the passengers know their
grievances were not with them but the government that controlled the
airport. Most of those inconvenienced
passengers stopped and shared cake. It
was a beautiful scene on the news.
Another incident in the protests is what has spurred me to
transcribe my thoughts to you. A few
days before the airport incident, I saw some protesters holding a mock funeral
for the leader whom they hoped would resign his position as prime minister. The procession went through the streets
carrying flowers, a framed picture of the prime minister and a pretend casket
carried by a team of pall bearers. They
moved through the streets around Freedom Square ending in the Square itself. A
eulogy I did not understand was delivered.
Then, what disturbed me most, the “pall bearers” dropped the pretend
casket and began stomping it and its contents to pieces. The media, which I am led to believe is
controlled by the Republican Party of Armenia leadership to whom most of your
grievances are addressed, showed the destructive behavior and, although I did
not understand every word, I could tell from the tone and tenor of the
reporting that they were reporting the incident in a very negative way. Now, here was small group in a gathering of close
to five hundred thousand peaceful protesters and the media was using them as an
example of the scene in Freedom Square. In
our brief conversation, you mentioned a guide to civil disobedience and that a
funeral procession was a recommended practice by the aforementioned guide.
Please allow me to share with you a few thoughts about why
such an action can be detrimental to your or any other similar protest.
First, as I am from the southern part of the United States
and a history teacher, I would like to share an incident that is analogous to
your protest. As a coach and a fan of
high school level athletic competition, I have always appreciated spectators in
the stands cheering for the school’s team they are there to watch and support. I have never liked hearing spectator’s
remonstrations that criticized the other school’s team or, even worse, an
individual player. To point out someone
else’s mistake or failure does not elevate the person or person’s cheering in
this negative fashion but, instead, lowers them to a mob mentality focused, not
on their team’s success but the other team’s failure. A great American once
said that a person of honor never celebrates another’s failure but helps that
person back up. This is not to say there
will not be winners and losers, rather, to frame your successful exultation
around your success and not the other’s failure. Rudyard Kipling wrote, “If you can meet with
triumph and disaster and treat both those impostors just the same”.
I was taught very early to hate the sin but love the
sinner. In my opinion, the funeral
procession action put the focus on the person and not the misdeeds of the
person upon whom the grievances are aimed.
Perhaps a funeral process for the ideas or policies of the person would
be less personal but I would even caution against that as well. Make the focal point of your protest being the
positive ideas with which you wish to replace the grievous actions perpetrated
upon your people. Perhaps, an action
involving a stork and flowers announcing the birth of a new world of democratic
freedom would have a positive impact on the crowds.
Besides the personal energy that you are expending through
negative thought fuel was supplied to the opposition of your cause. I saw the media coverage of the events and
they focused on the destructive acts of a few people instead of focusing on the
hundreds of thousands acting responsibly and peacefully. If one heart was turned against you by this
coverage it is one too many. A peaceful
protest needs to gather the hearts and soul of all the people to be
successful. Never give fuel to the enemy’s fire.
Forceful love and staying positive is arduous work. You might ask if I have ever wanted to scream
in such a situation. I will return to sports for a moment. A young Black man who is like a son to me was
on the free throw line in a high school basketball game. I heard a chant begin from the students on
the other side of the gym. “Nigger can’t shoot”. I saw tears in Kelsey’s
eyes. I wanted to go over there and shut
those kids up but I kept my peace and prayed that he would sink his free
throws. We lost the basketball game that
night but I took him to dinner and told him how proud I was of him to not shout
back at those boys and how much I loved him for his courage. That was our win that night.
So in closing on part one of these thoughts, I ask you to
remember how far away you can see a single candle shining brightly on the
darkest night. Be the candle.
The second part of our conversation involved the offer of
male help in the struggle for women’s equal rights. Equal rights for one is equal rights for all.
Please realize the load is made easier with more hands involved.
In the hot summer of 1967, Dr. King was approached by some
of the leaders of SNCC (Students Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) about disallowing
the participation of whites in the marches that were planned because of the
terrible actions of predominantly white police forces perpetrated upon the Blacks
protesting for civil rights. Dr. King
reminded them that white people had walked beside them for years. He reminded them that young white men hade
been murdered in Mississippi because they were registering Blacks to vote. Most stirring of all were his comments
regarding poor white people. Dr. King
pointed out that there were poor white people being discriminated against and
underpaid like the Blacks. Their white governmental
officials were saying to them was at least you are not Black. Dr. King said that the Civil Rights movement
needed to enlist those poor whites to march along side them to elevate everyone
economically. Their living conditions
were not only racial but economic and imagine the power of an army of poor
people descending on Washington D.C. The others agreed and the Poor Peoples March
saw more than a million poor people of every color meet at the Washington Monument that
summer.
So, Diana, I believe very strongly that the struggle for
women’s equal rights can be aided by men standing by their side and insisting
that their brothers acknowledge that the egregious behaviors towards women such
as the pay disparity called the glass ceiling must come to an end. Men hearing
from other men that what they have done towards women with or without conscious
behavior must end will hold power.
I do agree with you that a man should not call himself a
feminist. This title should belong to the women because the most supportive of
men cannot fully understand what it means to be a woman because he is not
one. Just as a white man working to gain
civil rights for people of color will never fully understand the issues by
persons of color. At the end of the day,
a white man is privileged to walk where he wants without fear of retribution. But, I ask you please, to accept the dedication
to and willingness to sacrifice for women’s equality.
Steve Biko, the great Anti-Apartheid leader, wrote that the
Black Consciousness Movement in South Africa first and eventually the world
must be lead by Black people because whites could not fully comprehend the
centuries of degradation and its impacts on the Black soul. If white men try to take the lead, it would
look like the Blacks were being given their rights rather than earning them. More pride is taken in what is earned than
what is given. White people stood
proudly and died ending the practice of apartheid but the leadership was South
African Blacks.
The same thoughts apply to the women’s movement. Women understand the effects of the
oppressive behavior of men towards them for years, centuries even. The role modeling of empowered women standing
tall and proudly will encourage the women who are reluctant or afraid to stand
for themselves. I only ask that you please accept men’s hands to work, their
legs to march, their voices to speak out and accept the love
from their hearts for your cause.
In closing Diana, please accept my inestimable respect for
your courage, strength, and intelligence.
Continue to grow in your beliefs. Remember what Steve Biko wrote, “ The
greatest weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed”.
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