My family lives in the South, and like many southern
communities, the majority of the residents in my town are church affiliated.
Christianity here is bigger than college football, which is almost a religion
of its own. And when I say Christianity, I really mean evangelicals, those
lovely fundamentalists who feel the need to convert or condemn anyone who does
not share their beliefs. They do an excellent job of indoctrinating their
children with the righteousness and entitlement they feel that comes from their
personal relationship with their lord and savior.
I’m not judging them. Everyone is free to believe and
practice what feels right, as long as it doesn’t infringe on the next person’s
set of beliefs. That’s where it gets a little hazy for some folks.
My younger daughter is in 8th grade. She has been
no stranger to the horrible comments lots of Jewish kids hear. Nothing makes
the momma bear in me come out faster than having another kid tell mine that she
is going to burn in hell because she is Jewish, but no matter how big the stink
I make, another kid will step up to take a turn. Since 8th grade is her last year of
middle school, most of the kids who know her already know she is a Jew and have
shared their prophesy with her, leaving them free to aim it at someone else who
isn’t white or Christian.
One of her good friends happens to be Muslim, and she began
wearing a hijab this year. It was a very personal decision for her friend, who
up til now had not covered her head even when her twin sister chose to a few
years ago. These girls, who were born in the US and are therefore as American
as the rednecks who harass them, have had to deal with terrorist jokes for
their entire middle school experience. They have always risen above the
comments and display a level of maturity and confidence that shows more about
their religious beliefs then the so-called Christian students. One kid asked S’s
friend why she started covering her head. She didn’t answer hi since it was
none of his business, so he followed it up with asking if she was a Muslim.
When she told him yes, he wanted to know if that meant she was from Islam. She
looked at him with what I hope was as much judgment as he showed her and said,
I was born right here in this city.
If it were me, I would have said yes. Yes, I am from Islam,
you oblivious piece of crap. I happen to know for a fact that the seventh grade
social studies classes were required to learn all the countries and maps of the
world. I wonder where this future McDonald’s employee thinks Islam is located.
Meanwhile, over at the high school, my older daughter, E,
was having her own religious experience. She has a much different approach to
her Jewish identity than her sister. She doesn’t really give a shit what anyone
thinks, and she is much less likely to be polite about it. Because she is less
sensitive, she gets a lot more ribbing than her sister does, which she thinks
is funny. Some of it comes from her friends but she gives it back as good as
she gets it, so it’s all okay for the whole lot of them.
This week it wasn’t her one of her friends that was teasing
her. Some dumb freshman, according to my sophomore child, was following her and
another of her friends down the hall. They were having a conversation about the
Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur holidays next month, and the freshman behind her
asked her if she ate Ramadan because she was Jewish. Let that sink in for a
minute.
E gave him a look that should have made him throw himself
off a rooftop, but instead, he continued to follow her down the hall shrieking “Ramadan”
at her. Finally, she turned around and yelled, “Jesus Christ, would you cut it
out?” The boy immediately stopped and was truly outraged. “You know,” he said, “that’s
taking it too far. I was just messing with you, but you really shouldn’t say
that. It’s offensive.”She stared at him and then screamed,” Just shut the fuck up!” The hall erupted in great boisterous laughter because someone yelled the F word. He stopped following her, and that was the end of that.
Both my daughters still tell me stuff, and they each shared these stories with me. While they aren’t really the same at all, at the core they share the same level of ignorance. These aren’t little kids. These are kids who have had at least a small amount of book learning on world geography and different religions and what happens when we don’t accept and respect one another. Do they pay absolutely no attention to what is presented to them in class? Do they watch no news at all, either on television or the internet? Is there no discussion of different cultures in their homes?
The answer to all of those is most likely no. Intolerance is
easy when you surround yourself with your own kind. You go to school and church
with white Christians. You wear your bracelet or your Forever 21 shirt with crosses
all over it. You might have one black friend or know one smart Asian kid, but
you don’t have them over to your house. If all you see is white and Christian,
you expect the whole world to be just like you.
Well guess what, even in nineteen of the United States you are becoming
a minority, never mind the rest of the world, so it might be time to rethink
your position.
When I hear about people feeling their religious freedoms
are being suppressed, it just infuriates me. There is no war on Christmas, but
there is district testing on the high holy days. Nobody asks you if you are
from Bethlehem because you are Christian, but my kids get asked all the time if
they can say something in Jewish and if they come from Israel. There is no
official religion in our country, yet our biggest holidays celebrate the birth
and death of a guy who wasn’t even Christian!Do me a favor and stop telling my daughters they are going to burn in hell, because guess what, we don’t believe in hell, so there.
3 comments:
Well said on an old and tiresome subject...total ignorance.Hugs to your girls.
Just excellent. I'll be sharing this...
As a liberal Christian, I can empathize. In our small southern town, the big Baptist Church operates more like a Country Club. If you aren't a member, you aren't a member of the "in" crowd. My personal favorite is the use of #blessed on social media. What they really should be using is #spoiled. You are blessed because you don't worry about your next meal and you have a roof over your head and you are adequately clothed. However, you are not blessed because your parents bought you an expensive new car at 15 or your new Jacks Rogers sandals.
And, I am sure they are watching the news. But I would bet my last dollar it is Fox News.
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