You've got to be taught to hate and
fear,
You've got to be taught, from year
to year.
It's got to be drummed in your dear
little ear
You've got to be carefully taught.
You've got to be taught to be afraid
Of people whose eyes are oddly made,
And people whose skin is a diff'rent
shade,
You've got to be carefully taught.
You've got to be taught before it's
too late,
Before you are six or seven or
eight,
To hate all the people your
relatives hate,
You've got to be carefully taught!
- Oscar Hammerstein II, lyricist, SOUTH PACIFIC
- Oscar Hammerstein II, lyricist, SOUTH PACIFIC
The heartbreak in
Charleston, South Carolina this week is on many of our minds. When we
heard the news of the horrific attack on a group at the AME church
who were engaged in a bible study that ended in the deaths of nine
faithful, and by all accounts, caring individuals, there were no
words. As details from the killings continue to be revealed, many of
us are overwhelmed with emotions – some sadness, some anger, some
confusion, and some, of course, with a deep desire for retribution
and justice.
My mind, of course,
linked to the lyrics of a Broadway musical. In 1949, the legendary
musical team of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II brought
their award-winning adaptation of James A. Michner's TALES OF THE
SOUTH PACIFIC to the stage with SOUTH PACIFIC, a sweeping
love story set in World War II. While many more immediately might
immediately recall the songs Some Enchanted Evening, or I'm
Gonna Wash That Man Right Outta My Hair, or There is Nuthin'
Like A Dame, I was drawn to a song that is, even now, sometimes
cut from performance: You've Got To Be Carefully Taught. In
the second act of the musical, Lt. Cable is confronted by Emile
Debecque who asks why his love interest, Nellie Forbush, has such
aversion to his biracial children to his first wife, a Polynesian
woman. Cable is overcome with his own self-loathing, and confesses
that, “...it's not something you're born with...” but something
that is intrinsically part of many's upbringings. As he sings, he
confronts his own racial prejudice and hatred, and the audience, too,
must also be confronted.
The song's
inclusion in the musical almost brought about the downfall of the
show. Many producers were concerned that the message was to
controversial for audiences, and that potential supporters,
particularly in southern theatres, would not book touring companies
or produce the show because of its clear condemnation of racism. Many
in the US had linked anti-racist rhetoric to communist principles. In
Georgia, for example, a bill was introduced outlawing entertainment
containing “an underlying philosophy inspired by Moscow.” But the
authors were stubborn, and refused to allow the song to be removed,
as it was in integral part of the show.
While we will
continue to wrestle with questions regarding the mental state of the
attacker, his behaviors and statements before the murders, the
acquisition of the weapon used to commit this horrific act, and the
correct response to create safer public spaces, one thing simply
cannot be argued or explained away: this person was carefully taught
– by his family, by his teachers, by his friends, by media, by
society, by history – to hate. And his hate is more than mere
distrust or aversion; it is a hate that allowed him to take the lives
of others even after he was treated by those victims with caring and
welcome.
Our response must
be assume our responsibility, as followers of Jesus Christ, to
counter that hateful teaching with the teaching of welcome,
hospitality, concern, equality, justice, and love. It was radical in
the first century; it is, in some parts of the world, just as radical
today. We have to talk about it with our young people. We have to
talk about it ourselves. We have to show it in how we live our lives
and open are arms to all who are different from us.
Years of teaching
of hatred are not easy to overcome, if they can be overcome at all.
However, complacency in the face of racial intolerance does not
follow the example of Jesus, who not only called out hatred, but
confronted it with radical, unconditional love and self-sacrifice.
The struggle for equality and justice is not one that was fought and
one in the last century; it may well be the eternal struggle for all
of human history. It is our responsibility and charge to engage this
struggle and do what we can to leave the world more loving, more
accepting than it was before our first entrance on the stage.
In the peace of
Christ,
Fr. Shawn