Wednesday, November 30, 2011

WHAT DO THEY WANT?

"What do they want?" my vicar asked, looking over at me on the deacon's bench, knowing my involvement with Occupy.  My response – during the Prayers of the People – was "We pray for a society that is fair and just and loving."  In the faith setting of a church service such an answer, I felt, was not only appropriate, but profoundly simple and manifestly clear – we seek a society that more closely resembles the Kingdom of God, the Beloved Community we all profess to strive for, just as we seek forgiveness for the unfair, unjust, and mean-spirited society we have created.
But that may have been an inappropriate and/or inadequate answer to a wrong question.
First, its pronoun is wrong.  The proper question is "What do we want?"  Are we not the 99%?  Do we not want to convince even the 1% to join a new, more humane consensus?  Do we not have eyes and ears and hearts to see and hear and feel what Stephane Hessel calls the "unbearable things all around us" – the myriad injustices and indignities heaped upon us by out-of-control capitalism and a democracy corrupted by money.  Must we rely on the courageous campers who have opened our eyes to those unbearable things to also fill our minds, grown flaccid, with ready-made answers?  Have we not minds of our own?  Can we not engage?  Can we not exert ourselves, and, through such exertion, tone up our capacity to think for ourselves and, together, shape our answers…the answers we need, we seek, and, yes, want.  As Hessel writes in Time for Outrage, "The worst attitude is indifference."
And we have been indifferent for a long time – for more than forty years – as our political and economic system, our liberal, enlightened civilization, our sense of self have been warped beyond recognition.  Against this background, that "What do they want?" is a wrong question in that it is premature.  It attempts to leapfrog the necessary prefatory question: "How did we get here?"  The answer to that question is perforce long and complex.  It must, however, be tackled, if we are to find our way forward.  For starters, consider this long excerpt from The Coming Insurrection, an already-four-year-old analysis by France's "Invisible Committee" (Why must they always be French?).  It is a little book being read by our American youth.
                        The West is a civilization that has survived all the prophecies of
                        its collapse with a singular stratagem.  Just as the bourgeoisie had
                        to deny itself as a class in order to permit the boureoisification of
                        society as a whole, from the worker to the baron; just as capital
                        had to sacrifice itself as a wage relation in order to impose itself
                        as a social relation – becoming cultural capital and health capital
                        in addition to finance capital; just as Christianity had to sacrifice
                        itself as a religion in order to survive as an affective structure – as
                        a vague injunction to humility, compassion, and weakness; so the
                        West has sacrificed itself as a particular civilization in order to
                        impose itself as a universal culture.  The operation can be
                        summarized like this: an entity in its death throes sacrifices itself
                        as a content in order to survive as a form.
                        The fragmented individual survives as a form thanks to the
                        "spiritual" technologies of counseling.  Patriarchy survives by
                        attributing to women all the worst attributes of men: willfulness,
                        self-control, insensitivity.  A disintegrated society survives by
                        propagating an epidemic of sociability and entertainment.  So it
                        goes with all the great, outmoded fictions of the West maintaining
                        themselves through artifices that contradict these fictions point by
                        point.
                        There is no "clash of civilizations."  There is a clinically dead
                        Civilization kept alive by all sorts of life-support machines that
                        spread a peculiar plague into the planet's atmosphere.  At this
                        point it can no longer believe in a single one of its own "values,"
                        and any affirmation of them is considered an impudent act, a
                        provocation….
We have thus arrived at a dark place – not Orwell's 1984 with its ubiquitous overt oppression by force, but rather Huxley's Brave New World where we sleep walk through life, numbed by drugs and distracted by the bread-and-circus of infotainment.  As the Invisible Committee says "The catastrophe is not coming, it is here.  We are already situated within the collapse of a civilization.  It is within that reality that we must choose sides."
The campers of Zucotti Park, Frank Ogawa Plaza, Justin Herman Plaza, Berkeley and Davis have chosen sides.  They have chosen the "impudent act," the provocation, the shouted "Wake up!"  And now it's time for the rest of us to choose – to wake up or continue sleep walking.
Finally, my vicar's question and my attempt at a prayerful response are also both wrong in that they talk past each other.  The question seeks not the campers' statement of the problem, its genesis, or the proffered vision.  It seeks rather – in typically pragmatic American fashion – a program, a statement of concrete steps forward.  As such, it is a question that is a source of hope…that, at last, we are waking up…that, having been provoked, we have begun the search for answers.  It is a search that can bear fruit if we engage in it together – not just the campers, not just the 99%, but all of us; if we base it on a solid understanding on where we've been and how we got here; and, if we keep our eyes on the prize – a fairer, more humane society, a democracy in which all voices are equal, capitalism with a human face…that Beloved Community, if you will.
We must also realize that we are but at the very beginning of a long process that can still go wrong… if we lose heart or interest.  We are at a pivotal moment in a movement that is barely two months old.  First they ignored us, then they laughed at us ("Get a job…after you take a bath."), now they're fighting us – the drumbeat on Fox, the police violence on campuses, the orchestrated raids on the camps.  As I write this, Occupy San Francisco stands in precarious isolation.  But this is not about camps, it is about ideas.  It is not about tents, it is about people.  The tents are being torn down, but the people are still standing.  We are not scattering.  We are coming together around the ideas, seeking to put the flesh of action on the bones that are their animating spirit.
I have taken part in several such seminars in San Francisco…in the middle of Market Street, in general assemblies on Justin Herman Plaza, in a Catholic church, in a Friends meeting house.  Others have elsewhere.  A week ago, Michael Moore attended one such meeting with more than forty Occupy Wall Street activists.  They produced a consensus vision statement and Moore proposed a list of "10 Things We Want," ranging from single-payer health care and the rescinding of the Bush tax cuts for the rich to constitutional amendments removing money from the electoral process and stripping corporations of their "personhood" (http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/mike-friends-blog/where-does-occupy-wall-street-go-here).  The OWS General Assembly will consider these proposals and others may find in them a worthy nucleus for further discussion.
Seek out such discussions.  Take part.  Engage.  As the Invisible Committee said four years ago, "To go on waiting is madness."  And, as Michael Moore said last week, "Don't sit this one out."  Next time someone asks you "What do they want?" be prepared to respond with what we want.  Who knows, there may yet be an American Spring.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

THE SAVIORS OF GOD

Nikos Kazantzakis wrote that, in this harsh, harsh world despoiled by greedy "elites," "Christ wanders about hungry and homeless, that He is in danger, and that now it is His turn to be saved by man."  And, one has the sense, this Thanksgiving week, that it is the church's turn – the turn of its aging, cautious, guardians, some of whom may have forgotten last Sunday's Gospel – to be saved by young people, who may not realize they're Christians, but, nonetheless, have remembered…and, as we're wont to say, inwardly digested Matthew 25.
In their caution and amnesia, those we look to for ecclesial leadership have been slow to speak or act…lest they offend.  It takes money to maintain those buildings.  And, so, they keep their silence, forgetting – or looking away from - so much recent history…when silence killed.  They seem to have forgotten the lament of Leo Baeck, the leader of Germany's Jewish Community from 1933 to 1943 – "Nothing is so sad as silence;" or that of Stephane Hessel, the French Resistance fighter and Holocaust survivor, writing of today's indignities and inequality – "The worst attitude is indifference;" or Martin's j'accuse – "There is a time when silence is betrayal."
That time has come again.  And, in the face of the suffocating silence and indifference, the young people of America and the world have taken to the streets to stand in dignity and voice a cry that can no longer be stifled – "Enough!"  We've heard it in the canyons of Chiapas – "Basta!"  We've heard in Tahrir Square - that place named "Liberty" – "Kefeya!"  And now we hear it on our own streets - from Zucotti Park to Justin Herman Plaza - Enough!  Enough of the self-serving greed; the indignities heaped on God's people; the despoliation of God's creation; the worship of that false god, the golden calf of an amoral, uncaring, unfettered "Market;" the endless wars that devour our youth, our treasure, our souls; the lies and manipulation that mock our intelligence and feed our outrage; a silent church of too many buildings and not enough people.
But the people are there.  They always are.  They're on the street and doing church in new ways that are very old.  They don't ask "Lord, when did we see you hungry?"  They feed the hungry.  And the unseen God smiles.  They break bread together – sometimes a long Italian loaf, a thin pita, or thinner taco – and pass the cup - grape juice, perhaps, for those struggling with addictions.  They hold hands in growing circles of protection to say together the Lord's Prayer and sing - with feeling not felt in any building - "Amazing Grace" and "We Shall Overcome."  And, on a trolley track on Market Street, they light some candles and sit in silence…not knowing what will come, but prepared and free of fear.
"This," as Josh Griffin, a young priest in Portland, said, "is not a protest movement, it is public liturgy of the finest sort.  This movement is powerful because it is showing us a way forward."  In their disparate voices, in terms that should speak to Christians, the young people of Occupy have decried an unfair, often inhumane system.  And, now, with clear vision and engaged minds, they are beginning the task of formulating the concrete goals and objectives the cognoscenti mockingly clamor for.  They will lead the "leaders" and show them the way out of this morally bankrupt cul-de-sac into which they have led us…and left us.  They will, indeed, show us the way forward.  And, if those of us in our comfortable churches will follow…out the doors of our aging buildings…to where God's people are huddled in their pain, their fear, and yearning, we – together - may save the good name of God.