Reflection on Dignity
Unitarian Society of Santa Barbara
August 12, 2012
Deportees, by Woody Guthrie
performed by Arlo Guthrie and Emmylou Harris
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TN3HTdndZec
performed by Arlo Guthrie and Emmylou Harris
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TN3HTdndZec
reflection audio link:
The
song, Deportees,
is the story of a 1948 plane crash in Los Gatos Canyon that killed 32
people, four Americans and 28 migrant farm workers who were being
deported back to Mexico from California. The farm workers were part
of the braceros program of the 1940s through the 1960s, a program
designed to bring in temporary, low paid contract workers from Mexico
to harvest the fruit fields and orchards of California. Today these
workers would be referred to (somewhat ironically I think) as “guest
workers”.
During
the time of the braceros, it was common
to bring workers over the border from Mexico with intentionally
flawed contracts (in English) so as to make them legally invalid.
Following a season of backbreaking field work in California's
orchards and fields, the braceros
would
ocassionally be rounded up as illegals because of the invalid
contracts and deported without being paid at all.
I do not know if this was the case for the victims of the crash over
Los Gatos Canyon.
Everyone
on board that 1948 plane crash died. News coverage of the event
gave the names of the four American flight crew members, but referred
to the migrant workers only as “deportees.” The Mexican victims
were buried in a mass grave at Holy Cross Cemetery in Fresno. Only
twelve of the victims were ever identified.
Woody
Guthrie was outraged that these people were not identified, that they
were robbed of the simplest measure of dignity, their names. He
responded by writing Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos)
originally as a poem.
And while he did not know the
actual names of the victims, it was crucial to him that they have
names in this poem. Goodbye to my Juan. Goodbye Rosalita. Adios mis
amigos, Jesus y Maria. 10 years later a schoolteacher named
Martin Hoffman set Woody's poem to music, and it became the song we
know today, arguably one of Woody's most powerful and relevant songs.
I
find this story heartbreaking, both for the individuals who died
without their names in this particular incident, and for the fact
that we still treat the people who harvest our crops with little
dignity and respect.
I
could continue this reflection by talking about the abuses and
injustices with which we continue to treat our farm workers. And I
could feel rightous about speaking out about these injustices. But
the truth is, we all rob people of their dignity all the time. We
don't always promote the inherent worth and dignity of every
person, as our first principle instructs us. Sometimes we forget that
this principle applies to every person, not just people we
like or agree with. We all rob people of their dignity.
I
rob people of their dignity.
Whenever
we group a bunch of people under a heading, be it illegal immigrants,
gays and lesbians, Republicans, or Unitarians we must be very
careful. While these labels provide a short hand for talking about a
group of people in similar situations or with similar beliefs, they
remove the individual identities of the people who make up those
groups, making it too easy to stereotype. The names and faces of the
people belonging to any group (with the exception of the most
prominent members) are erased.
I
do this all the time when I refer to the Religous Right or
Republicans. I am quick to laugh at jokes made at their expense and
to lump them into narrowly defined groups with little compassion, a
people I view as brimming with hatred and self-rightousness. Granted,
most members of the Religious Right, and probably even more
Republicans, do not suffer the humiliation and cruel
injustices faced by migrant farm workers. But that's not the point.
What does it say about me when I am quick to crack a joke that might
deeply offend someone I know? Someone I love? Because when I talk
about the Religious Right, I am talking about people I love.
The
Religous Right is my sister-in-law, Mary, who paints beautiful,
delicate water colors of Texas wildflowers.
The
Religious Right is my dad's wife, Nelda, who grew up playing the
piano in her Baptist Church on Sunday mornings.
The
Religious Right is my cousin, Rod, his wife Susan, and their four
beautiful children who I share Christmas dinner with every year, and
enjoy catching up with.
The
Religious Right is my late grandmother, Effie, who loved to go
camping, who knew how to laugh at herself, and baked the most
delicious dinner rolls on the planet.
The
Religious Right is my own father who loves me unconditionally, a man
I can openly disagree with on politics and religion, but whom I will
always love and who will always love me in return. My relationship
with my dad is the embodiment of the words we UUs hold so dear: “We
don't have to think alike to love alike.”
***
Last
week's shooting at a Sikh Temple in Oak Creek Wisconsin made me think
of Woody Guthrie. How would he react to this tragedy and the slow
response of the media to report on it? What sort of poem or song
would he write to remember the people who died? Would he write a
song like Deportees that reminds us that Sikhs are not
nameless faces, but our brothers and sisters? Would he remind us that
we cannot fight hate with hate? As the son of one of the victims
said, “My father used to say you could not put out a fire by
putting gasoline on it.” Would Woody tell us that if we do not ask
hard questions about this event, about race and religion, that we are
in danger of losing what is best about America? At it's best this is
a country where we can practice our various faiths, celebrate our
many cultural heritages, and disagree openly with our politicians.
These are things worth protecting.
I
don't know what kind of song Woody would write, but we can be sure he
would give the victims of this tragedy the dignity of their names.
Goodbye Suveg Singh Khattra, Satwant Singh Kaleka, and Paramjit Kaur.
Goodbye Ranjit Singh, Sita Singh, and Prakash Singh. May you always
have your dignity.
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