An Amicable Nativity Story: A Visit from a Man Named Gabe


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Gabriel (Photo by Bob Plain)

As they gazed at Hope, their daughter, Maura and Jose’s feeling of calm and assurance was dispelled as a shadow passed over them. The unexpected shadow brought their attention back to the present. Simultaneously their faces turned and looked up. Standing in front of them, both in the light and crowned by it, was the imposing figure of a man.

Before them stood an African-American man, easily six feet tall, wearing a long leather trench coat. On his head was a black knit hat, covering most of his forehead. At first glance there seemed to be a hardness to his face. Maybe it was the small scar on his right cheek, barely noticeable, but a little bit pink in the cold. He wore black leather gloves. His right hand was raised breast high with palm open, thumb bent. His coat was slightly open, so they could see that he wore a black turtle neck sweater. Around the neck of the sweater was a large, gold chain with a gold cross attached. His black cuffed dress slacks and black shoes were noticeable as they extended below the hem of his coat.

Jose’s instantaneous thought was defense. He was sure that no one big and black, standing in front of him in the middle of the night, could be up to any good. Jose had seen enough turf battles in his day to be leery of strangers. Jose’s was an automatic distrust built up over the years, fed more by rumor and stories, than by personal experience. Ever since his arrival in the States he had been warned by other Mexicans to avoid the unpredictable and often violent African-Americans. With fear running through his body, Jose began to stand, preparing to put himself between the stranger and Maura.

Maura had had few encounters with African-Americans, having grown up in a fairly wealthy area of Connecticut. For the most part those people could not afford to live in her town. Even if they could afford to live there financially, most African-Americans felt out of place, and unwanted, in such communities. So Maura’s initial reaction, upon seeing him, was to instinctively draw Hope closer to herself, attempting to protect her.

Before they could speak they heard the man, with his hand still raised, say, “Fear not.”

Jose heard the two words and almost allowed himself a sneer. Fear not? he questioned to himself. I find myself in a run-down part of Springfield, Illinois, and a stranger, a black man, tells me not to be afraid. Being afraid is what has kept me alive. Simply being approached by you, a stranger, is reason enough to be fearful.

Maura was confused by his words. But, as she studied him a bit more, she saw a kindness in his eyes that she had not expected. His words had sounded almost like a command, yet there resonated more in the baritone voice than just command. There was a kindness and a gentleness to be heard. There was also an air of confidence about him. Perhaps it was how he stood before them – so certain, so calm.

____________________

Editor’s note: Check back here tomorrow for the next installment in Rev. Bill Sterritt’s modern adaptation of the nativity story. RI Future is serializing Sterritt’s 26-page short story throughout the holiday season.  Here’s my post on the Amicable Congregational Church’s nativity story and scene.

Senate Judiciary Still Likely Anti-Marriage Equality


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While it’s certainly great news that Teresa Paiva Weed said she will allow the Senate Judiciary Committee to vote on marriage equality if and when it passes the House next month, the committee isn’t exactly the legislative equivalent of the Castro District. In fact, it’s pretty anti-equality.

Of the seven returning members, only two are solid votes for marriage equality: Democrat Donna Nesselbush and Republican Dawson Hodgson.

Democrat Erin Lynch was on the fence when I asked her toward the end of the last legislative session, but some say she has moved closer to being a firm yes. On the other hand, a contentious primary may have moved Democrat Paul Jabour farther away. Last session he told me “prefers” civil unions to marriage.

The remaining members of the committee – Democrats Maryellen Goodwin, Harold Metts and William Walaska – have all been solidly against marriage equality. And perhaps no one is more set against it than committee Chairman Michael McCaffrey.

“I think you know what my position is on this,” he told me when I asked him last session.

However, with two vacancies on Senate Judiciary, the balance of power on the committee is likely to shift back towards equality. Rhoda Perry, the progressive Democrat who retired, is likely to be replaced with her heir apparent Gayle Goldin. And Paiva Weed couldn’t find anyone more anti-equality than was Glen Shibley, who lost to Lou Raptakis.

Leadership can always vote on a committee, if it wishes, so Paiva Weed could always step in and swing the balance back against equality, but I don’t guess she will.

The Senate President might have a blind spot when it comes to marriage equality but it’s hard to not see that the politics of it have reached a tipping point.

Sign Local Gun Control Petition Here


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How many more must die? We need true gun control now, and our congressional delegation agrees.

Today’s a great day to re-watch “Bowling for Columbine” and you can do so here. It’s a great day to honor the heroism of our educators – any of whom could one day be put in the same situation that the teachers at Sandy Hook were – and you can do that here.

It’s also a great day to take action. And you can do that here:

Please sign this Petition and Pledge.

Sometime in January we will hold an event at the State House at which we submit this petition and pledge, and demand our elected officials to act.

 Petition and Pledge

Dear Governor Chafee, Speaker Fox and President Paiva-Weed:

We, the undersigned, do call upon the elected officials our state and local governments to enact meaningful gun control legislation. At a minimum, we expect he legislation to include the following:

  • No sale of or private ownership of automatic or semi-automatic firearms;
  • No sale of or private ownership of ammunition for such guns, nor any form of ammunition that is armor-piercing;
  • No sales of firearms without a 30-day waiting period and a background criminal check, including at gun shows or other “private sales”;
  • All sales of firearms, weather in a retail or private setting, shall require documentation that is submitted to the appropriate branch of the Rhode Island State Police;
  • Permits for firearm ownership will only be granted with demonstration of legitimate need for the item, including hunting or sport;
  • In addition to current laws, those with permits for firearm ownership shall be required to reapply every two years for their permit.

Please note: the proposal above is much less restrictive than in most democracies; for one example, the United Kingdom does not allow private ownership of almost any form of firearm, and its gun homicide rate is 1/100th that of the US (0.03 per 100,000 vs.  nearly 3 per 100,000).

We additionally pledge the following:

  • We will refuse to vote for or in any way support the candidacies of any person running for office who does not publicly support and work for the enactment of legislation that accomplishes the above; and
  • Will actively seek and support candidates to oppose any elected official who does not publicly support and work for the enactment of legislation that accomplishes the above ; and
  • Will disaffiliate with any party whose leadership does not publicly support and work for the enactment of legislation that accomplishes the above; and
  • We hereby promise to oppose the candidacies of any person seeking office who accepts the endorsement or financial support of the NRA; its affiliates; similar gun-industry or gun-rights organizations; or who in any way publicly expresses support for the positions and goals of said organizations.

In particular, we look to Governor Lincoln Chafee, Speaker of the House Gordon Fox and Senate President M. Teresa Pavia-Weed to ensure legislation meeting the above criteria is enacted in the 2013 legislative session. If such legislation is not enacted, the moral standing of these three leaders will be forever tarnished and their names held in disdain.

In memory of those who died in Newtown, and all those who have suffered and died from the easy access to guns in our nation, we say enough is enough. We demand that the phrase “well regulated’ be the keystone for our understanding of the Second Amendment of the US Constitution.

 

Web Editor Dee DeQuattro Is Leaving WPRO for ABC6


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WPRO digital reporter Dee DeQuattro is leaving the station she is suing for a new job on December 21. On January 2, she starts as the assignment editor for ABC 6 and ABC6.com. She’ll also do a morning TV spot and keep her own political blog in her new position.

“I’m excited to pursue a new endeavor and transition to tv after working in radio for the past five years,” DeQuattro told me this morning.

She would not comment on her lawsuit alleging that DePetro sexually harassed her. When I asked if she was sad to be leaving WPRO, she said:

“Not sad. I’m excited and enthusiastic to move on in my career and I expect to maintain professional relationships and personal friendships with some of the people I met working here.”

She confirmed that she is leaving the Salty Shack after I got an email forwarded written by station manager Craig Schwalb to WPRO employees wishing her good luck in her next opportunity.

The email from Schwalb, according to the employee who shared it with me, said, “Want to say thanks and good luck to WPRO-AMs web producer/reporter Dee DeQuattro who will be moving to ABC 6 for a new job there. We wish her nothing but the best in her new role and thank her very much for helping make 630wpro.com what it is today.

“We will be working with Dee next week to transition into our interim plan until a replacement can be named in the coming weeks.”

Full disclosure: I was DeQuattro’s manager at WPRO and am referenced in her lawsuit for statements DePetro made to me about DeQuattro and her allegations after they became public.

Newtown Tragedy, and the Wages of American Cruelty


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I really don’t know what to say about the events in CT today, so close to where I grew up, at precisely the time my own children were in school. Tragic events like this are, in the end, inexplicable — but much like the 9/11 attacks, to simply describe what happened as a consequence of ‘evil’ is, frankly, a moral cop-out.

We live in a society that lays claim (sometimes a unique claim) to loving our children. But we don’t. Not really. We love our own, yes. But not other people’s children.

Our children will learn and practice love when we provide them with institutions, laws and communities that reflect and reinforce it. We are cruel to the children of the poor, the undocumented, and the incarcerated, more so than any other developed nation. We tolerate — even revel in — breathtaking levels of violence and inequality, giving our young people a sense that using other human beings as a means to our own ends is OK. Its Ok in our foreign policy. Its OK at work. And its OK in our relationships.

Silenced by a patriarchal culture that reproduces and rewards male aggression, and that devalues and denigrates humility, doubt, interdependence and vulnerability, we underfund the treatment of mental illness while living in a society that produces it in great quantities. We continue to allow the free flow and use of firearms, far beyond any reasonable definition of self-defense and constitutional protection, ensuring that our children — especially our poorest children — will grow up experiencing daily stress and insecurity, perpetuating almost everything I’ve described above.

I don’t know what lessons we’re supposed to draw from the events in CT today. But I do know that the cruel and bitter edge of American society, there at its very slave-owning birth as a kind of original sin, seems to have become even sharper in the last two decades. Cruelty is all of a piece, woven together, constricting all of us, even the most privileged and safe. But love is all of a piece, too. And it simply isn’t enough, in the end, for us to hoard it, household by household, like one more zero-sum game we’re trying to win. Once we commit to loving ALL of our children, the society we construct out of that love will finally make this country — finally — a source of great hope in the world.

For more of Mark Santow’s writings, click here.