More
than nine hundred people crowded into the Church of the Epiphany, an
Episcopal church in Washington, DC. They had gathered to hear Rev.
William Barber, the dynamic and prophetic co-leader (with Rev. Liz
Theoharis) of the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral
Revival. They came, not only to hear Rev. Barber but also to sing
and bond and listen to poor people tell their own stories.
This
late January gathering is one of many that the Poor People's Campaign
is having all over the country, leading up to a Mass Poor People's
Assembly and Moral March on Washington on June 20, 2020. With 43
state coordinating committees actively working in communities, Barber
and Theoharis are planning to peacefully "take it to the
streets" in downtown Washington, and to make the statement that
"everybody's got the right to live."
To
assert that everyone has a right to live seems obvious. But many of
those who live in poverty have to fight to live. The poor have to
scramble to eat, to afford medication, to find an affordable place to
live. They have to watch their neighborhoods being decimated by
gentrification, as rising housing costs push long-time residents out.
As many as 45,000 people a year die because they don't have health
insurance. And more than 10 percent of the US population is "food
insecure," which means that they either skip meals, eat less at
meals, or cannot afford nutritious food. One in six children is food
insecure.
Several
of the poor people told their stories, while Congresswomen Barbara
Lee (D-CA), Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX), and Brenda Lawrence (MI),
among others, listened to the harrowing personal narratives from
homeless people, a deaf student whose financial aid was cut when her
father got a small raise, a woman who was arrested and incarcerated
in front of her children when she sold food on the street, and many
more. The audience was urged not to clap but to shout supportively,
"Somebody is hurting our people, and we won't be silent
anymore."
Poverty
is trauma. Poverty can be the source of enormous stress, and perhaps
even some mental illness (though you don't have to be impoverished to
be crazy!). Poverty or near-poverty impacts 140 million people,
nearly half of us. Rev. Barber says we must have "righteous
indignation" about poverty.
Instead,
we seem to accept poverty as something we can do nothing about. We
walk by homeless people on the street, drive past homeless
encampments under freeways. Some of us roll up our noses and are
appalled by the odors that some homeless emit without wondering why
there are odors and whether there are places where they can get
showers or a bath. Some of us find the homeless "unsightly"
and lobby to have them moved from visible commercial corridors and
upscale neighborhoods to places where we don't have to look at or
think about their plight. But homelessness is the most visible
manifestation of poverty. And when we endeavor to render the
homeless invisible, we are also attempting to eliminate the scourge
of poverty. Dr. Martin Luther King once called poverty "an
abomination" and compared it to cannibalism. Just a few weeks
ago, we celebrated Dr. King's birthday, but there were too few
mentions of poverty.
Indeed,
while some of the presidential candidates have paid attention to
economic structure, fewer have candidly discussed ways they would
reduce or eliminate it. Speeches and debates go by with nary a
mention of poverty. The candidates who choose to ignore poverty seem
to forget that poor people vote. Or perhaps they are counting on
poor people to be absent from the polls, especially when some forms
of voter suppression require voters to incur additional costs to
vote. Between 2016 and 2018, hundreds of polling places were closed,
and if some have their way, there will be even fewer in 2020. Our
electoral system is biased against Black people, Brown people, poor
people.
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