Journal of Sacred Work

Caregivers have superpowers! Radical Loving Care illuminates the divine truth that caregiving is not just a job. It is Sacred Work.

About

"Sitting Bull: You must take them out of our lands.

Col. Nelson Miles: What precisely are your lands?

Sitting Bull:These are the places where my people lived before you whites first came."
  -From the film Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee – based on the book by Dee Brown

Wounded_Knee    One of the great myths you and I grew up with is this strange headline: "Columbus Discovered America." This blatantly Euro-centric view reflects the wrong-headed notion that centuries of Native American life and its rich culture in America were meaningless. According to this view, America didn't matter until Europeans "discovered" it. This arrogance was reflected by the shameful treatment so many Europeans inflicted on the native people they encountered
   Four hundred eighty-one years after Columbus' "discovery" a group of Lakota Indians took a last stand (in 1973) against government oppression at a small South Dakota town called Wounded Knee. This story was retold again on May 11 in a PBS documentary: "We Shall Remain." What happened at Wounded Knee was perhaps the last armed attack on Native Americans by the American government. Perhaps the leadership of the band of Lakota that fought in those bloody days was wrong to choose violence. But, their frustration and righteous indignation emerges clearly in the PBS documentary.
   According to the leader of the American Indian Movement (AIM), Russell Means, "Wounded Knee happened because Indian people wanted to survive as
Indians and there wasn't any way to survive, so we made a stand and
made a statement, but now Indian people are beginning to rebound,
rebound according to their [concept of] 'Beauty.' And that's really
what's necessary.to understand: Indian people have to become free again."
   "Free again!" Free to live their concept of Beauty.
   Across history, and inside our healthcare system, there exists a chronic human temptation that entices the powerful to oppress the vulnerable. All of us need to absorb into our hearts the energy of the second part of the three-part Serenity Prayer and find,  "…the courage to change the things we can." We, as caregivers, need to change healthcare – to stand up for patients against the oppression of our healthcare system.
   Patients of hospitals and clients of charities wait not only for healing but for justice. As caregivers, only one question needs to live at the forefront of our consciousness. The question is not, "Does this patient have insurance?" The question is not, "Does this patient come from a culture like mine?" The only relevant question is: "What does this person need?
   Europeans oppressed Native Americans because of their bias that the European way was the the only right way. Native Americans, according to this arrogant view, were "uncivilized" and needed to be "taught" (as in "forced") to live like Europeans. This meant that European ways and European religion must be shoved down the throats of "these heathen savages" as they were often called by arriving boats of Englishmen, people like my own ancestors, who came to this land in 1635.
   Similarly, the American healthcare system often shoves patients into the role of second class citizens. For example, if I am doctor in a white coat and have a stethoscope draped around my neck and you are sick and wear nothing but one of those humiliating patient gowns, then, clearly, I am powerful and you are weak. It's a short step from this point to the position that I am better than you and you must do things my way.
   Where is justice in all of this? Justice and healing lie in listening to the most important truth about God. God is Love. And whatever the question, Love is the answer.This is why loving caregivers work in partnership with patients, not as one kind of being trying to dominate another. 

   What do you think?

-Erie Chapman

Posted in

5 responses to “Day 132 – Waiting For Justice – Respecting Every Culture”

  1. Edwin Loftin Avatar

    The Justice is in the choices we make every minute of every day in providing healing care. Do we choose to have a relationship with Sam or Sue or do we treat the pneumonia in 405? Do we choose “not take it anymore” or to do it this way becasue “its the way we have always done it”. Do we choose to be disciples of Love and loving care…I say this is not a choice but our calling.

    Like

  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    Let the impassioned voices rise up!!
    I stumbled upon an amazing on-line book called; “The Love That Does Justice” by Michael Edwards and Steven Post. I’d like to share this excerpt by James La Rue who heard Martin Luther King Jr. speak in college and he describes how he internalized his message. “A seminary professor, Prentis Pemberton, Ethics Professor at Colgate Rochester Divinity School, helped me shape King’s formative moment when he explained that our life mission as humans must be to find how we can translate love into justice structures. Every critical juncture in my life has been shaped by this thought and each time I return in my mind to that small room off the main cafeteria at Bucknell to refresh my heart and soul with the love twins, the Siamese love twins if you will, of personal acts of love and love as justice structures. They are joined at the heart, mind and soul, and cannot survive for long without one another.”
    We need to find the courage to change our healthcare systems and structures for the common good. To move beyond small acts of kindness for those in need to change the underlying systems and structures that create injustices. I offer up a small step to begin moving to action. Go to the SJHS advocacy website and take a three-minute survey that describes a vision for healthcare and let your voices be heard.
    SaintJosephHealthSystem – A Vision for the Future of U.S. Health Care
    Source: capwiz.com
    A Vision for the Future of U.S. Health Care
    www3.capwiz.com/sjhs/issues/alert/?alertid=12824761

    Like

  3. Diana Gallaher Avatar
    Diana Gallaher

    I think, Erie, you are speaking words of truth. And Liz, thank you for giving us an immediate action to take. And Edwin thank you for reminding us that love and justice start with the person in front of us at any given time. I know you cannot uncouple love from justice, nor can you uncouple justice from love.
    Victor Hugo writes, “Love is action.” My experience with centering prayer has taught me that true contemplation leads to action. In terms of health care, I watched the activism of doctors, nurses, and others in a Senate hearing today about health care reform. They are proponents of single payer health care and those in power did not grant them a place at the table. So they figured out a way to have their voices heard anyway. What they did today makes a positive difference. Apathy to injustice is not acceptable. Here is link to protest if interested. http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/05/12/why-god-invented-c-span-9/

    Like

  4. Claire Wessel Avatar
    Claire Wessel

    While this may not seem like a big deal to people far removed from South Dakota, Pres. Obama has nominated the first female Native American to head up the Indian Health Service since it began in 1955(Dr. Roubideaux, here’s a link to a more in depth article – http://www.politicalbase.com/profile/Chris%20Brown/blog/&blogId=6758 )
    Here in South Dakota, there is a heavy prejudice against Indians and the state is still trying to violate treaties and has engaged in a 20 or so year long lawsuit over water rights. In California, the state would have just rented the land or come to some arrangement. I know when I lived in CA, I didn’t believe that animosity towards Indians was still alive and well as they are almost revered in CA. Living in South Dakota has really given me an appreciation for the troubles the tribes still continue to face and the neglect and outright oppression that is a part of not only history, but daily living.
    It is also interesting to me the mix of reactions that I receive out here. It seems that many people think I am Indian and many people think that I am a white girl with the usual disdain for Indians. The variety of treatment I receive based solely on someone else’s perceptions of who I am has been rather enlightening. I am left to wonder what assumptions I make about people at first glance. Even though I do my best to avoid doing such things, I discovered that doing so is automatic. After living in Latino communities the majority of my life, it turns out that I had to train myself to correct my thinking because out here, the brown people are not Latino. My whole life, I never realized that if I saw someone who looked a certain way that I automatically thought “Hispanic” until I came to a place with virtually no Hispanics and at least 10% Indian population. I wonder how many other automatic thoughts exist in my mind from my life experiences. How do those automatic, unintentional sudden thoughts used to categorize my world actually color it with assumptions instead? How do others’ reactions contribute to my own view of myself?
    I’ve moved around a fair amount and I have absorbed many things from many places. In a sense, all of these places have become a part of me and the experiences with others has changed how I see the world and react to people. I think that is one of the most important parts about interacting with others, particularly people you serve — being open to the possibility that there may be something about them that is so beautiful (or that brings you new knowledge) that you will always carry it with you. I feel if I treat every contact with anyone as a possible opportunity to learn or serve then I am much more likely to hear what they need and thoughtfully respond to their needs.

    Like

  5. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    Claire, I thought your reflection was insightful and profoundly beautiful. Thanks for sharing.
    ~liz

    Like

Leave a reply to Claire Wessel Cancel reply