Tuesday, October 28, 2014

To the man who followed my wife home from the grocery store

To the man who followed my wife home from the grocery store the other day,

These days, it’s easy to give in to fear and suspicion. To believe we’re less safe than we ever have been. To imagine no one can be trusted.

Over the past three days I’ve been reminding my wife we don’t have to do that. That fear doesn’t keep us secure. That we’re actually more safe, in the incredibly blessed circumstances in which we’ve found ourselves, than the vast majority of people in our society since its founding. That most people are good people, with good intentions.

And that you’re probably — almost definitely — a good guy who made a stupid decision to follow her home from the grocery store.

She is beautiful, after all. Striking. If I didn’t know her, and if I was a single guy (as I assume you are) I’d want to get to know her, too.

But here’s what I wouldn’t have done: I wouldn’t have waited for her to check out and then followed her into the parking lot. I wouldn’t have gotten into my car and pulled up behind hers on the road. I wouldn’t have followed her, turn for turn, as she serpentined this way and that through the city. I wouldn’t have thought that such driving was normal — and so I would have assumed that the person I was pursuing was nervous about what I was doing.

She thought she lost you when she no longer could see you in her rear-view mirror. And she believes, as I do, that we shouldn’t always assume the worst about people. She figured it was all in her head.

Not for nothing, since you are an African American man and she is a white woman, she was conscientious about the possibility that the fear and suspicion she so loathes when she sees it in other people could somehow be materializing in her own subconscious. She didn’t want to feel that way about you, though she didn’t even know you.

She told herself that everything was fine and she drove home.

Then you pulled up to the curb. You were cordial, she says, though nonetheless creepy. You told her she was beautiful. You asked for her number. You persisted when she told you she was married (a recognizable and time-tested statement of declination — regardless of whether it’s true and regardless of the questionable sanctity of that tradition in our society.) You asked if she was on Facebook and if she wanted a friend.

Again, she said no. Finally you apologized and drove away.

That’s where it ended for you. Not, though, for her.

The past few days she’s been second-guessing herself. She’s been wondering if she made a mistake in coming home. She’s been thinking she should have kept driving — maybe right to the police station — and that she should have given into fear. She posted your description and a description of your car on Facebook, though neither is particularly detailed — you’re a tall, well-dressed 20-something black man in a late-model gold sedan — so she’s apprehensive about adding to the already terrible environment of profiling faced by men who look like you do.

And she’s scared. She knows it’s incredibly unlikely that she needs to feel that way, but that’s how she feels nonetheless. It may or may not be a logical response, but it is an absolutely reasonable one.

To my knowledge (and I think it is good knowledge, but no man is ever entitled to assume) my wife is not one of the 28 million American women who have been raped in their lifetimes. But you don’t know that. You couldn’t know that. So, for all you know, in addition to the fear your actions could have incited in any person, you might very well have been re-awakening a past trauma in her life.

Damn you.

It’s not really my place to stand up for my wife. She can do that for herself and she did it quite well the other day. But men who don’t consider how their actions are likely to be perceived by women are likely not to listen to women either. And because it seems highly possible that you are irrational in this way, please allow me to tell you: You need to stop doing this sort of thing.

It’s not cute. It’s not charming. It’s not an acceptable way to strike up a conversation with a person you’re attracted to. If you want to talk to a woman you don’t know, approach her in public when she is surrounded by other people. Take “no” for an answer. And take anything that seems like it’s remotely like “no” for an answer, too.

Yes, I’ll bet you’re a good guy who made a stupid decision. But I’ll bet you’ve done this before. And I’ll bet you’ll do it again if you’re not shamed for it by other men.

So shame on you. Start acting like a man.

Sincerely,

matthew

Friday, August 15, 2014

If not Congress, then Christ: Seeking the right response to the illegal immigrants who live among us

Maybe someday they'll do something.

They'll build a wall. They'll offer amnesty. They'll offer economic help to the nations whose citizens are crossing our borders because they cannot find work within their own. They'll fund a mass deportation. They'll actually punish the businesses and individuals who exploit illegal labor. 

They'll do something. Hell, they'll do anything. 

Someday.

But not today. Not tomorrow. Not a week from now. Probably not a year from now.

And not yesterday. Not the day before. Not a year ago. Not five years ago.

It has been nearly three decades since the United States Congress last agreed on a substantial immigration reform bill. And over the past 10 years, in particular, even the best of efforts to align our nation's immigration laws with the needs and desires of its population have been stymied by partisan bickering and political infighting.

In the meantime, the number of people living illegally in this country has grown.

Five million. Seven million. Nine million. Eleven-point-seven million — a number greater than the populations of New York City and Chicago combined.

It is completely appropriate to debate what our laws should do about this situation. It's also a largely theoretical exercise. Congress, because it is Congress, has failed to do its job when it comes to making laws that are actually effective in governing our borders and regulating who may work in this country. And that is unlikely to change any time soon.

The next question, then, is what should we do?

For whatever reason, these days I hear about this issue most often from my Christian friends. And they all seem so very angry. One recently lamented that "illegal aliens" in our nation, "get free housing, free health care, free contraception, free education, free transportation and the right to vote," and wondered why, if that was all true, he couldn't get some "free ammunition."

Notwithstanding the myriad inaccuracies of his statement — and setting aside the menacing insinuation as mere hyperbole — I was still struck by how incredibly unChristian his words seemed.

It has been a long time since I attended church, though. Perhaps, I thought, I've forgotten a thing or two along the way. So it was that I took the stairs to our family's library and dusted off the Bible my parents gave me when I left for basic training, nearly 20 years ago.

Here is what it (and a little bit of surfing on a handy Bible search tool) told me:

If they are homeless, shall we not give them shelter? Leviticus 25:35 says: "If your brother becomes poor and cannot maintain himself with you, you shall support him as though he were a stranger and a sojourner, and he shall live with you." 

If they are sick or injured, shall we not help nurse them back to health? Luke 10:25-37, the parable of the Good Samaritan, seems pretty clear on this: "He went to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring on oil and wine," Christ told his followers. "Go and do likewise."

Shall we turn their children away from our schools? What kind of a world would that beget? Proverbs 22:6 says that Christians should "start children off on the way they should go, and even when they are old they will not turn from it." And, of course, Matthew 19:14 is among several gospel renditions of a story in which Jesus rebukes his followers for pushing young would-be disciples away, saying "let the little children come to me." 

I don't know what the political solution will be to this crisis, but I do know that is it not coming. Not any time soon, at least. 

In the meantime, it seems rather clear to me what the Christian approach should be to those living among us in this, a nation in which about three-quarters of our citizens identify themselves as Christian.

We should treat them as friends, as neighbors, as brothers and sisters. We should treat them as fellow children of God.