The Austin American-Statesman published the following as an op-ed on Sunday, August 18, 2019.
In the four years since declaring for the presidency, Donald Trump’s tongue and fingers (on Twitter) have spewed divisive and sometimes hateful words to a worldwide audience. It has helped him amass a fervent base of supporters, even though his approval ratings are the lowest for any president of recent memory.
The hyper-partisan political divide in this country pre-dates the Trump presidency, yet the 45th president intentionally stokes the fires of division while striving for a second term. He treads upon the same path as did previous American politicians who leveraged this nation’s original sin of racism to gain and maintain a grip on power: Andrew Jackson, Ben Tillman, George Wallace, Jesse Helms, Strom Thurmond.
Mass shootings in America also pre-date the current presidency. But Trump’s words to describe immigrants and immigration – invasion, criminals, infestation – helped create the environment where a disgruntled twenty-one-year-old from the Dallas area drove to El Paso and opened fire at a local Walmart, killing twenty-two persons – mostly Latinx. In an online rant posted just prior to the massacre, the white male shooter parroted the president’s language, writing: “This attack is in response to a Hispanic invasion of Texas.”
El Paso – on today’s site of its sister city, Juarez – was founded in 1659, more than a century and a half before Stephen F. Austin came to establish an English-speaking and slave-holding settlement in what was then the northeastern part of Mexico. Spanish, alongside indigenous languages, was spoken in this territory – now called Texas – long before English ever was. I wonder if the El Paso shooter knows these historical facts. I imagine the president doesn’t and would label them, if he encountered them, “fake news” as they run contrary to his invasion narrative.
The renown Jewish theologian Abraham Joshua Heschel spoke these three words – “words create worlds” – to his students and to his own daughter, raised in the post-Nazi world. The wise rabbi based his teaching on the first chapter of Genesis wherein God’s words create the world of light, seas, land, and sky.
Heschel was born in Poland in 1907. The Nazis would eventually kill his mother and three of his sisters. The Gestapo deported him from Frankfurt, Germany in 1938, where he instructed adults in the Jewish faith. His escape from the Nazis to America was facilitated by his giftedness in writing and teaching.
He eventually settled in New York City, where he instructed seminarians – future rabbis – to be public actors burdened with the responsibility to speak out against social injustice. The Holocaust, he knew, was originally created with words – words of hate, blame, and propaganda seeking political power and advantage. Only after these words inflamed public sentiment, did the Nazis construct their crematoria and concentration camps. Words create worlds, for better and for worse.

In 1963, Heschel shared the keynote speaker stage at an ecumenical religious conference on religion and race in Chicago with Martin Luther King Jr. They mutually recognized a prophetic connection and became confidants. Two years later, Heschel walked arm-in-arm with King as they led thousands on a civil rights’ march from Selma to Montgomery. This historic march marshaled the political will President Johnson needed to sign the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Heschel later said, “When I marched with Martin Luther King in Selma, I felt my legs were praying.”
King was an African American and Protestant minister, and Heschel was a European immigrant and Jewish rabbi. Different, yes, but they shared a common calling to bring justice to the oppressed by opposing those who create, cause, and maintain injustice. Their words – conversations, prayers, sermons, speeches, and writings – have an edifying effect yet today, helping to uplift liberty and promote justice for all, building on the egalitarian structures created by the words of great Americans who came before: Frederick Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, Louis Brandeis, Susan B. Anthony.
It was hoped that the current president, when assuming office, would become more “presidential” by scaling back his volatile and divisive rhetoric. He’s not done it, and as both supporters and resisters can see, he’ll not change his ways – or his words – anytime soon.
Words create worlds. After four years of invective words from Trump, it’s time for those of us who oppose him to work as hard as we legally can – whether for impeachment or reelection defeat in 2020 – to change the narrative for the better, and with it, the world we now live in.
T. Carlos Anderson is a Protestant minister and the author of There is a Balm in Huntsville: A True Story of Tragedy and Restoration from the Heart of the Texas Prison System.
Visit http://www.tcarlosanderson.com for more information.
Read this in the paper last evening. Says my feelings well and will send it on. Balm is a splendid narrative and a genuine page-turner. What will Anderson do next with these two books covering quite different arenas? Do continue writing as you explore vistas that maybe weren’t on the horizon a few years ago.
Gratitude, again, for your effective study with us at Triumphant Love. I remember our lunching a couple of years ago and you sharing some of your embryonic conversations with Andrew and and David. Christian Century should carry the book.
A graced day.
Norb
Get Outlook for iOS
________________________________
Appreciated, Norb. Good to see you two for two weeks in a row. Do send CC book editor an email inquiring as to when they’ll give Balm a review! ;]
Excellent post. The challenge for the Democratic party will be to support and nominate a candidate who will back off proposals for the tens of trillions of dollars for entitlement programs we cannot afford and move toward the center of his/her party’s liberal agenda. Trump will continue to spew his inflammatory rhetoric and will win again if the Dems don’t wake up.
You are quite possibly right, Jud . . . but I expect that a move to the center will happen once the primary selection season passes. Which leads me to an interesting question: Might you consider voting for such a centrist over this current guy?
T. Carlos. I didn’t vote for Trump the first time and I will not vote for him next time. If there truly was or could be a centrist Democrat, yes, I would consider voting for him/her. Right now, all of the candidates are bunched up on the left side and with only a couple of exceptions, I don’t see a successful candidate in the field.
Thank you for sharing YOUR important words. Although I couldn’t attend the discussion of your wonderful book, it was a wonderful & thought-provoking read. Much love and grace, Linda Roesle
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android