Quote
"

We pray for children
Who sneak popsicles before supper,
Who erase holes in math workbooks,
Who can never find their shoes.

And we pray for those
Who stare at photographers from behind barbed wire,
Who can’t bound down the street in a new pair of sneakers,
Who never “counted potatoes,”
Who are born in places we wouldn’t be caught dead,
Who never go to the circus,
Who live in an X-rated world.

We pray for children
Who bring us sticky kisses and fistfuls of dandelions,
Who hug us in a hurry and forget their lunch money.
And we pray for those
Who never get dessert,
Who have no safe blanket to drag behind them,
Who watch their parents watch them die,
Who can’t find any bread to steal,
Who don’t have any rooms to clean up,
Whose pictures aren’t on anybody’s dresser,
Whose monsters are real.

We pray for children
Who spend all their allowance before Tuesday,
Who throw tantrums in the grocery store and pick at their food,
Who like ghost stories,
Who shove dirty clothes under the bed and never rinse out the tub,
Who get visits from the tooth fairy,
Who don’t like to be kissed in front of the carpool,
Who squirm in church or temple and scream in the phone,
Whose tears we sometimes laugh at and whose smiles can make us cry.

And we pray for those
Whose nightmares come in the daytime,
Who will eat anything,
Who have never seen a dentist,
Who aren’t spoiled by anybody,
Who go to bed hungry and cry themselves to sleep,
Who live and move, but have no being.

We pray for children who want to be carried and for those who must,
For those we never give up on and for those who don’t get a second chance.
For those we smother … and for those who will grab the hand of anybody kind enough to offer it.

"

— Marian Wright Edelman, “A Prayer for Children”

Video

Words fail at describing the obliterated space of your absence. You were a poet of the highest caliber and a friend to the least of these. Your music has sustained and your wisdom uplifted me. I remember our first introduction, and how I knew immediately that we’d be good friends.

Text

How to react

…there was this shared feeling of catharsis certainly, but also the uneasy knowing that celebration is not quite proper, that reflection is in order, that we owe our selves better than the drunkenness of cheap vengeance. Justice, if this is justice, requires a certain decorum, a certain dignity, that places weight on the value of a life, even when it requires that life be taken. There is no place here for levity. Not least because this event, while it represents a symbolic close to one episode, is almost certainly the beginning of another. God I hope we have not made the most powerful martyr.

Text

Recovering a revolutionary

I’m unsatisfied with how we engage with Dr. King; this is particularly true on days such as this, his birthday. Quotations of his ‘I have a dream’ speech feature prominently among a narrow and unobjectionable grouping of his oft-referenced ruminations on righteousness. That iconic address powerfully articulated the hopes of a people and served as a catalyst to the evolving character of a nation. That said, enough already! Can we move beyond the sanitized and sound-bitten Dr. King? He was a radical, in the best sense of the word; a man at once unafraid to confront the enemies of justice and willing to bear the disapproval, ire even, of his closest allies when conscience demanded it. His most powerful ideas go unquoted and are unquotable within a scrubbed-clean, made-for-TV national discourse referencing but a shadow of the man. I remember him as the breadth of his writings paint him, as no less than a revolutionary. He was the man who said: “For years I labored with the idea of reforming the existing institutions of the society, a little change here, a little change there. Now I feel quite differently. I think you’ve got to have a reconstruction of the entire society, a revolution of values.”

Tags: mlk peace justice
Text

Privilege Paradox

It is an odd position to be in - an incredibly privileged person trying to afford others some of those same privileges.

One the one hand, I believe that up to a certain point, innovation, creativity and paradigm shifting can bring significantly more people into the circle of privilege without diminishing its benefits to those already in it.

On the other, I believe that we can’t bring about a more just and equitable future without giving up some of the privileges that we current highly value. There is only so much human ingenuity can do to expand the pie, the rest involves expanding our hearts and conceptions of self interest.

This is a question that many generations of social reformers have faced: How much of our own privilege are we willing to give up so that others may realize higher standard of living? Are we really prepared to live, and let our children live on a playing field we have leveled such that it is not in our favor?

In a strange way, we are pining for the age of our own irrelevance.