Tuesday, August 19, 2014

IS AMERICA FERGUSON?

On August 8 I celebrated my 85th birthday in the well-appointed Florida home of my brother and sister-in-law. I was toasted with good food, and music performed by my children, daughter-in-law grandchildren and nieces and nephews and their spouses.


I spent several days catching up on family news and family myths and stories.  I marveled at how much children had grown and listened to what they wanted to do next.


That light-hearted atmosphere lasted until my grandchildren used their tweeters to tell us the news of the shooting of Michael Brown gunned down on a small street in Ferguson.  We left Florida on August 13 and I returned to my apartment in University City, about seven miles from Ferguson.




My apartment is in a retirement community  where my neighbors include people who live independently and those who require daily care givers to assist them.  I have become friendly with many of these care givers and my building's staff who live in and around Ferguson and I was anxious to talk with them.




Because I respect their intelligence and the understanding and kindness they show the people they
serve I asked them to tell me what they could about Ferguson.  I learned that the problems in Ferguson have been festering for a long time.


From our conversations I gathered a lack of accountability by public servant and office holder was a given, a part of  daily life.  When I asked them if they wanted to give me some examples of what they meant, this is what they told me.




" I nail the windows in my house shut for safety."  "I had a grandchild killed by a stray bullet while he was playing."  "Looting is not who we are."  "I've raised my son who is now a pastor in our Church and is a bus driver." "I wish the noise would just stop and everybody would go home." "My community is more stable because we are home owners not apartment dwellers."


From these general conversations with people, I found that there is a protectiveness about St. Louis, this State and our country. People seem to find it difficult to speak of problems. We attribute threats to our safety to the fault of others, to "outsiders", to "the press" while we do little to decry the dangerous break down of law and order we witness.


We accept arrogance by local, state and national elected officials when they flaunt federal laws or make a mockery of this country and of the decency that has been a part of it and ourselves for so long.


We accept the fact that militaryvehicles are now used with zeal to patrol our streets.We accept the fact that guns once thought to be used in the "wild west" are now "must have"" items in our homes.


  What has happened to us as a people that we elect and accept the appointment of officials that allow the body of a young man to lay in his own blood on a public street for hours as if he were on a battle field of war?


What has happened to us as a people when we are lulled into a false sense of security against "enemies" rather than recognize the greed and power that eats away at our lives?


What has happened to my country when we believe that what has happened in Ferguson Missouri
is the result of "outsiders", or the press or tweeters?


It is time to stop pointing fingers and recognize that what is happening in Ferguson Missouri is happening to each of us.


We are Ferguson!

1 comment :

  1. thanks Bev - you provide a nice insight for me of events that I have otherwise been monitoring on CNN.
    light and love,
    Stanley

    ReplyDelete