Sunday, July 12, 2015

What's with the Church's record on slavery? part 2




Letter to Ray Sizzehm continued...
We Americans are proud of our repudiation of slavery, and that we fought a Civil War to end it.  I am not so sure that we were told the truth in high school history classes. Slavery in the United States didn’t end with the Civil War.
It is interesting that Abraham Lincoln did not talk about the complete abolition of slavery until he had safely won a second term as president. He seems to have been opposed to slavery since his youth, but he knew that if he prosecuted the war, in a way that was a “war to free the Negroes” (the phrase then current) the average Northern soldier would have laid down his weapons.  He didn’t like slavery, but liked blacks even less, just as he disliked Catholics, Jews, and the Irish. Illinois among other states passed laws to keep free blacks out of the state during the Civil War.  The fact is that in many places a kind of slavery was reintroduced after the Civil War that kept African Americans in servitude. This system didn’t begin finally to break down until my childhood in the 1950’s.  A rose by any other name….

I am afraid that the Catholic Church has never fully repudiated slavery, at least until modern times.  That, I believe has to do with the fact that slavery is alive and well and you, dear reader, are its beneficiary.   Slavery is defined by the United Nations as: “debt bondage, serfdom, forced marriage and the delivery of a child for the exploitation of that child are all slavery-like practices and require criminalization and abolishment.”  The 1930 Forced Labor Convention defines slavery as “all work or service which is exacted from any person under the menace of any penalty and for which the said person has not offered himself voluntarily".
 I think the definition given by Lincoln two years before the Civil War in the Lincoln Douglas debates is the clearest and simplest definition:

They (slavery and freedom) are the two principles that have stood face to face from the beginning of time, and will ever continue to struggle. The one is the common right of humanity and the other the divine right of kings. It is the same principle in whatever shape it develops itself. It is the same spirit that says, “You work and toil and earn bread, and I'll eat it.” No matter in what shape it comes, whether from the mouth of a king who seeks to bestride the people of his own nation and live by the fruit of their labor, or from one race of men as an apology for enslaving another race, it is the same tyrannical principle.
 Allow me to quote the New York Times, Dec. 2, 2014, that’s a year and half ago. 
Modern-day slaves include construction workers in the Persian Gulf, girls from Nepal trafficked into prostitution, shrimp fishermen on Thai ships, children in India working in brick kilns and garment workers in Bangladesh. Slavery is also present in prostitution rings, and even in private homes that employ domestic workers in the United States and Europe….. Despite laws that clearly make the practice illegal, slavery is increasing. Women and girls account for 70 percent of those trafficked.  Just five countries account for 61 percent of the world’s slaves. India has, by far, more enslaved people than any country — more than 14 million. Three million are enslaved in China; two million in Pakistan; 1.2 million in Uzbekistan and one million in Russia. In Mauritania, which made slavery illegal decades ago but remains prey to an entrenched tradition of slavery, 4 percent of the population is enslaved.
 To that list, I would add Sudan where Christian boys from the south are sold, last I heard for about $50, though I imagine with the war slowing down and inflation, the price has gone up. Also on the list Iraq and Syria where Muslims sell Christian girls as young as three and four to fill the harems of the Muslim world and our friend Saudi Arabia where people, especially young Filipino girls come to find work and then to their surprise are not allowed to leave despite horrible abuse. Let us not cluck our tongues and shake our heads. 
As I write this I am sitting at a desk that comes from Indonesia (some assembly required) wearing cheap polyester blend clothing made probably by underpaid forced labor or by prisoners in China as does the coffee cup which keeps me awake with its blessed tawny nectar. I am wearing sandals made by little Indonesian girls who are locked in a factory and paid 22 cents an hour. The sandals are very nice. They cost almost $30.00. The shoe stores and the manufacturers divvied up $30 and gave a few cents to the forced child labor that made them. I have not reputed slavery nor have you. “You work and toil and earn bread, and I'll eat it.” As Lincoln might have said today, “You make shoes and I’ll wear them, you make laptops and I’ll sell them you make chairs and I’ll sit on them.”  We have not repudiated slavery in this country. We have just moved it to places where it can’t be easily seen.  
Every time you buy a new pair of sneakers or fill up your gas tank you are enjoying the fruits of slavery. Stop your pious liberal belly aching.  Wherever the Christianity has flourished and Catholicism in particular, slavery has diminished. The Catholic Church was perhaps the first major organization in the world to condemn slavery Pope Benedict XIV condemned slavery in the papal bull Immensa Pastorum in 1741.  The other great world religions seem to have no problem. Islam to this day permits slavery and it is primarily among Muslims that slavery is being given new life through the efforts of the new Muslim Caliphate in the Middle East. Hinduism seems to have no problem with slavery and the great new world religion of secularism which has just given us gay marriage, seems particularly fond of a more subtle kind of slavery.
Catholicism has, however condemned something that we overlook, something that when combined with slavery produces one of the most evil institutions ever devised.  The Catholic Church has condemned racism by its very existence. "There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus". (Galatians 3:28)  Notice St. Paul does not say you are the same, but that you are one in Christ. 
Christianity admits the existence of difference, but insists that it is not the central reality of human existence. Race for the Christian does not really exist except as an external factor, and no institution on earth has more consistently taught this than the Universal, that is catholic, Church.  People who claim to be Catholics may have been horrible racists, but as soon as European Catholicism encountered the completer other, they insisted that those others were also children of God with rights and dignities. In 1402, when the Spaniards “discovered “the Canary Islands they promptly started to enslave the “Guanches,” the indigenous inhabitants of that place. The pope condemned the practice. Regarding the Guanches, Eugene IV in 1435 wrote in his bull, Sicut Dudum
“...They have deprived the natives of their property or turned it to their own use, and have subjected some of the inhabitants of said islands to perpetual slavery, sold them to other persons and committed other various illicit and evil deeds against them... We order and command all and each of the faithful of each sex that, within the space of fifteen days of the publication of these letters in the place where they live, that they restore to their earlier liberty all and each person of either sex who were once residents of said Canary Islands...who have been made subject to slavery. These people are to be totally and perpetually free and are to be let go without the exaction or reception of any money.”
 When Europeans moved on to the Americas and “discovered” the great empires of the New World, Pope Paul III condemned the enslavement of the indigenous peoples in 1537. In the bull Sublimus Dei, Pope Paul III prohibited “unjust” kinds of enslavement relating to the indigenous peoples of the Americas and all others. He called enslavers allies of the devil and condemned attempts to justify slavery.  What did he mean by “unjust kinds of slavery”?  He meant precisely the kind of slavery that we practiced in the United States, chattel slavery based on race. “Chattel” means property. Chattel slavery makes a person a thing.  What the Church has always tried to do is to guarantee that even those who are enslaved have basic rights. They may not be treated as things. We have always insisted that every human being is a person, not a thing. To enslave the other because he is not “us” has always been condemned by Catholicism, though individuals who claim to be Christian have often ignored the Gospel and the teaching of the Church, as they still do today.
As we human beings try to extricate ourselves from the economic predicament of slavery, which  is now and will be for the foreseeable future a major part of the world’s economy, Christianity has said for the very beginning that the other is human and that all people are descended from a common origin and are thus a  family.  Nazis and all other forms of racism deny this. The Church has always championed the universality of the human person. The saints of the Church have always represented the many nations and languages of the earth. Sanctity has never been based on so-called race. The bishops of the Church are the most truly international organization in the world today, despite the pretensions of the United Nations.  The world is trying its best to bring back slavery. Thank heaven for the Church which will always resist the spread of slavery. 
A word of caution to those who want to destroy the Church:  who will struggle to keep you free if you succeed in destroying her?
Rev. Know-it-all

Friday, July 3, 2015

What's with the Church's record on slavery?

Dear Rev. Know-it-all, 

A while back I read an article by John Blake of CNN claiming that, “Sunday morning is the most segregated hour of Christian America, ” and quotes Kevin Dougherty, a sociology professor at Baylor University in Texas and co-author of the article, as saying, “Churches haven't kept pace with other institutions… Socially, we’ve become much more integrated in schools, the military and businesses. But in the places where we worship, segregation still seems to be the norm.” Why does the Catholic Church and even the Bible have such a poor record regarding racism, and even condoned slavery?         
                    
Yours sincerely,

Raymond “Ray” Sizehm

 Dear Ray, 

That statement about Sunday morning has always confused me. I’ve never been a member of a racist congregation in a Catholic Church. I have always served in large urban areas where there is a mixed population and the one place that people of different skin shades and ethnic backgrounds sit together as true equals and true friends is an urban Catholic church. My current congregation is made up of Asians, European Americans, Africans, Caribbean, African Americans, Latinos, Native Americans, Arabs, Assyrians and a few Jewish people. Where else are you going to get a crowd like that together for an hour followed by coffee and pastry? I think that whoever said that never actually entered a Catholic church in an urban setting.

That just isn’t true in this modern enlightened age. I grew up in the whitest of white suburbs. The place was run by Presbyterians who doubted that Catholics were really white. They were correct. We weren’t white. We were Catholic. The head usher, a prestigious position in any church, was an African American lawyer. I have to admit that I didn’t really hang around with the African Americans in our church. They were of a better social class than I was. 

Slavery? Well you’re right. The Catholic Church has strongly discouraged but never absolutely condemned slavery as far as I know, and neither does the Bible. In fact the code of Canon Law under Pope Gregory IX around 1230 AD expressly condones certain types of slavery. Canon Law at that time allowed what was called “four just titles” for holding slaves: slaves captured in war, persons condemned to slavery for a crime; persons selling themselves or their children into slavery and children of a mother who is a slave. 

How could the Church possibly have allowed this? They did so because Roman law allowed it.  Modern American law also encourages slavery. And I bet you are slave too! Have you ever heard of Tax Freedom Day?  Tax Freedom Day is the day on which you begin to keep the money you make at your job. Until that day all the work you do goes to pay for things that the governing class thinks important.  

The elected nobility is spending $750,000 on a new soccer field for prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. The current administration plans to spend between 16 and 20 million dollars helping graduate students from Indonesia get master’s degrees. (Coincidentally Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim country where the current president lived for part of his youth.) This is not to be confused with 30 million dollars once spent on a program to help Pakistani farmers produce more mangos. Here’s a good one.  

The government spent $175,587 “…to determine if cocaine makes Japanese quail engage in sexually risky behavior.” Do not confuse money spent on Japanese quail with the 2.6 million dollars once spent to teach Chinese prostitutes to drink responsibly. Heaven forefend that we have irresponsible prostitutes on the other side of the world threatened by drug-crazed quail.  Myself, I think the only decent thing to do is to spend money on teaching Japanese quail how to use cocaine responsibly.

I wish I were making all this up. Perhaps this tops the list of lunacy: U.S. District Court Judge Jon Tigar in San Francisco ruled that denying sex reassignment surgery to 51-year-old Michelle-Lael Norsworthy violates his constitutional rights. His birth name is Jeffrey Bryan Norsworthy. He was convicted of second-degree murder in 1986 for fatally shooting a friend during an altercation outside a Southern California bar. He/she/it has lived as a woman since the 1990s. If the legal appeals to Judge Tigar’s edict fail, you will be paying for the operation as you have already paid for the hormone shots, counseling and court costs.   

My point here is that you worked until April 24, 114 days into the year, to pay for these important projects. That’s 82 work days for the average American wage earner... Did anyone ask you if you were curious about drug-crazed quail and their amatory habits. No, they just told you to keep working and they would tell you when they had taken enough money from you.  That’s 82 days; that’s 676 hours. Add to that the average hourly commute and you 93 days or 755 hours, 82 of which his majesty the government bureaucrat lightens the heavy load in your wallet by means of red light cameras and speed traps.  

If in addition you owe a mortgage, student loans and credit card debt part of you is owned by the banks to the tune of around $200,000 for the average American. Servicing that debt at a generous 8 percent comes to around $16,000 a year, about 160 days at an average US salary. This is all quite variable, but the taking into account the fact that with two days off a week, and two weeks of vacation, we work a total of 251 days a year. If it’s true that we work 82 days for the government and 100 for the banks, then we actually get to work for ourselves for 89 days a year. This would explain why you are always broke and have to take a second job at the K-Mart on the weekends just to make ends meet. It would explain why our spouses must work and our children are in day care as soon as possible, tended by underpaid people more enslaved than we are.   

The insatiable appetite of M’Lord the politician has bought you at a very reasonable price. At least you own your own home (or farm)! Not even! You rent your real estate from the elected aristocracy.  Just try to default in your mortgage payment or you real estate tax and you will be moving in with your aged parents once again. The government allows you to live there as long as you pay the rent, I mean the tax, and on the property you call your own. You really think slavery is over?  

Are you opposed to slavery? Read the labels of the clothes you are wearing and the electronics that amuse you. Chances are they are made in China by slaves. Remember Gregory IX? One of the four just slaveries was that of persons condemned to slavery for a crime. Chinese criminals are commonly used as slave laborers and in other third-world countries, there is de facto slavery that provides our expensive tennis shoes, our cheap clothing and our “some assembly required” furniture. If you are really opposed to slavery, dump the cheap consumer goods that fill your life and learn carpentry and weaving. I am afraid that slavery is the usual condition of humanity, no matter how much the Church condemns it.  

A side note: The word serf comes from, the Latin word “servus”, which meant slave. Serfs in medieval Europe worked about 50 or 60 days for the lord of the manor, and they had Saints days and religious feasts off, two weeks of vacation at Christmas and two weeks at Easter.  The serf was provided housing as part of the deal. Admittedly it was lousy housing, but the Lord’s manor house wasn’t much better. Everyone had fleas and everyone died young, gentry and peasant alike. So, all in all, the case can be made that the medieval serf got a better deal than the modern wage slave, though I would not change places. I like indoor plumbing and dislike fleas.

Remember Gregory IX and the four just reasons for slavery? The principle reason for enslavement was debt. You put yourself and your family down as collateral. It was the social contract. Perhaps the future will look at our era as one of horrible injustice and wonder why the Church didn’t condemn credit card companies. The Church and the scriptures have always said that, though people are not economically equal, they are equal in their dignity as children of God. It has always been a virtuous act to set the captive free and to ransom the slave. Where Christianity has flourished slavery has diminished.  

To be continued: the Kind of Slavery that the Church Has Always Condemned