The United States believes it has the cornerstone of human
rights within its borders. But our past and present shows a different picture,
a history full of human rights violations, that go back to the beginning of our
history. In our past you can find many Holocausts of hatred and oppression. But
we seem to forget somehow, through patriotic and religious zeal, how this
country truly began, and how we have treated our own citizens throughout our
existence. If you read some books, newspaper articles and editorials today you
will find a rewriting of our past, a total fiction, which somehow history has
magically changed into a fantasy; a mythical tale, full of lies and colorful
trappings. Our educational systems also rewrites history in favor of a Disney
styled world, where everything is perfect. But history cannot be changed to fit
one’s need to feel superior, neither can false patriotism and religious beliefs
change history, and the fact that human ignorance, bigotry, and hatred has been
a part of American culture all along.
When the white Europeans came to the New World, they viewed
the Native Americans as just savages, animals, needing to be saved by European
culture and Christianity. They believed that it was a God-given duty to convert
or murder the natives. Ignoring the fact that these were human beings like
themselves, who already had rich cultures with many religious beliefs that had
existed for thousands of years, they were not savages in any way. This began
years of genocidal acts against the Native Americans, by forced conversions,
massacres, and concentration camps. In fact Adolf Hitler, the head of the Nazi
Party in Germany, fashioned his death camps after what we call Indian
reservations. Today much of Native American culture is forgotten, even to its
people. Many live in poverty and are treated with little or no respect by their
white neighbors. Most white Americans have little knowledge of Native Americans
or their culture, and many still view them with total ignorance.
The owning of African slaves is another part of our history
that is at times forgotten or excused. These human beings that were violently
kidnapped from their own part of the world were sold into a nightmare. The
greed of slave traders, and the laziness and racism of slave owners fueled the
slave trade. When talking about the founding fathers of the United States, we
speak of how heroic and wise they were, but never mention that they were slave
owners and supported slavery, just like the rest of white culture at the time,
especially in the southern states. The Confederate South, also called the Bible
Belt, fought the north for the right to keep owning their slaves. They used
Christian doctrine to verify the right to own another person. Austin Cline
states; “The primary focus of those using Christianity to defend slavery and
segregation was the story of Noah, specifically the part where his son Ham is
cursed to serve his bothers. This story long functioned as a model for
Christians to insist that God meant Africans to be marked as servants of others
because they are descended from Ham. Secondary was the story of the Tower of
Babel as a model for God’s desire to separated people generally rather than
have them united in common cause and purpose.” Web Essay: Christianity in the
Confederate South: Southern Nationalism and Christianity (2007).This idea was a
total twisting of what is really said in the Tanach (the Hebrew Bible.)
After the Confederate South lost the Civil War to the north,
things did not improve for the freed slaves. They were treated as threats to
white culture; many feared that they would get equal rights to whites and
racially mixing. They were hunted down, tortured, and murdered without one
thought of their humanity. Around this time America’s first home grown
terrorist group was founded. In 1866 the Klu Klux Klan was formed by
Confederate veterans of the Civil War in Pulaski, Tennessee, angered because of
the ending of slavery. The far-right Christian Klu Klux Klan started a history
of ethnic and racial hatred and violence throughout the American South, causing
other hate groups to slowly form across the South and the country. Cline
states: “Although the South lost the Civil War, White Supremacy remained an
important component of Christian teaching for the next century. White Christian
churches taught that slavery was a just institution, as were Jim Crow laws and
segregation; that white Christianity remained the last, best hope for western
civilization; and that white Christians had a mandate to exercise dominion over
the world — and especially the darker races who were little more than children”
Web Essay: Christianity in the Confederate South: Southern Nationalism and
Christianity (2007). Southerners supported politicians and other legal systems
that guaranteed total segregation of the races. They did not want to share any
public arena with their black neighbors, strongly enforcing Jim Crow laws. If
you were black you had separate bathrooms, drinking fountains, parks, schools,
and other public areas. You could not eat in restaurants with your white
neighbor, or enter places of business through the same entrance. Jews and other
minorities were also targets of the Klu Klux Klan’s violence. The United States
government did little to change this, viewing it was a state’s right to choose
their laws. Sadly, a lot of those in Washington D.C. agreed with the white
supremacists.
Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith, lynched in Marion, Indiana on
August 7, 1930.
Martin Luther King Jr. and his freedom fighters and other
people like them made great change in the American South and the rest of
America. King and many people like him died for these changes. But there is
more work to be done. Today, the United States has many hate groups around the
country; the KKK, Aryan Nations (the Church of Jesus Christ Christian), the
American Nazi Party, National Association for the Advancement of White People,
(founded by former KKK leader David Duke), and many others. Their objects of
hate are African-Americans, Jews, liberal Christians, gays and lesbians,
immigrants, and many other minorities. These hate groups hide behind the
American Constitution, false interpretation of religious doctrine, and twisted
patriotism. Their members are active in our communities, politics and legal
systems. Can we have true justice for all? When we still let these terrorist
groups exist within are borders. When they have done the very things that
terrorist around the world have. That is a question that can only be answered
by “no”. Martin Luther King Jr. said; “Injustice
anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” Martin Luther King JR., Essay:
Letters from Birmingham Jail.
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