perspectives
		
		Let Freedom Ring
		
		By Craig von Buseck 
  CBN.com Contributing Writer 
            
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  In his famous "I Have a  Dream" speech, Martin Luther King appealed to the American nation to  recognize the sins of slavery and racial hatred and to do something tangible to  heal the wounds. 
              
                Five score years ago, a great American, in whose  symbolic shadow we stand today, signed the Emancipation Proclamation. This  momentous decree came as a great beacon light of hope to millions of Negro  slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice… 
                But one hundred years later, the Negro still is not  free. One hundred years later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by  the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination. … And so we've  come here today to dramatize a shameful condition. 
               
              Recently I had the privilege  of watching another dramatization of the shameful condition of racism in America in the  deeply moving motion picture, The Great Debaters directed by  Denzel Washington and produced by Oprah Winfrey, it is inspired by the true  story of the debate team from Wiley College, an African-American school in Marshall, Texas.  The film is set in the segregated Jim Crow south of the 1930s. 
              Without giving away the  ending, the team from this small black college is so focused and dedicated to  declaring the truth that they eventually earn an invitation to debate at Harvard University. This landmark event marked a  turning point for black students and black colleges in America.  
              The film highlights the  reality of the racial hatred that lingered for more than one hundred years  after the American Civil War -- and sadly, that still exists today, though  often demonstrated in more subtle, but still destructive ways.  
              In my view, the problem is  that too many non-black Americans are not willing to acknowledge and take  responsibility for the cruel injustices done to black Americans in the century  following the Civil War. We have, in large measure, finally come to the place  where we will recognize and admit to the inhumanities of slavery. But we still have  a difficult time comprehending the horrors of Jim Crow America. 
              That is why you should take  your older children to see The Great Debaters. That is why a movie  like The Great Debaters is an important contribution to the  dialogue concerning race in America.  That is why a movie like The Great Debaters should be shown in our  classrooms. And that is why I have added The Great Debaters along  side Amazing Grace as my two favorite movies of 2007. 
              Amazing Grace  brought in the year with the heroic story of William Wilberforce's crusade to  end the Atlantic Slave Trade in the early Nineteenth Century. The Great  Debaters ended the year with the tale of young African-American students  working diligently to overcome the wretched remnants and consequences of racial  hatred in the early Twentieth Century. Both movies speak relevantly to the  ongoing struggle for racial reconciliation in the early Twenty-first Century. 
              A History of Abuse 
              The problem we face in 2008  is that there are still many who are uneducated -- by circumstance or by choice  -- about the plight of black America  prior to the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 60s. Let me give you some  examples to help you understand the depths of racism in this country during  that tragic time. 
              In 1997,  President Clinton, on behalf of the nation, apologized for the federal "Tuskegee experiment,"  in which government doctors withheld syphilis treatment from a group of  African-American men for four decades -- without informing the men of their  actions. Six hundred twenty three men were involved in the experiment in which  the doctors gave some of the men medicine to treat the disease, while others  were given a placebo.   
              The  experiment was intended to study the effects of syphilis over an extended period  of time.  In 40 years, 128 of these men  died from the disease. Many went blind. Some became insane. The project was  halted when Associated Press reporter Jean Heller blew the whistle on July 25, 1972.   
              Only 4  of these men were still alive to receive the nation's apology.   
              The  reason it took so long for the general public to be alerted was that the  medical community did not see a problem with the experiment.  In fact, the research was published in more  than one medical journal.  The prevailing  view in the health establishment was that there may be no other time in history  where this kind of study could take place. The government doctors wanted the  study to continue to gather as much data as possible. 
              Some  African-American leaders believe that the doctors not only refused treatment in  the Tuskegee case,  but they purposely injected some of the men with the disease. There is no  evidence to support this claim, yet the pervading attitude highlights the gulf  of distrust between many blacks and their fellow Americans. 
              With  regard to those involved in the heinous Tuskegee  experiments, no apology or monetary settlement can wash away forty years of  deception and devious medical behavior.   Unfortunately, the scars of this atrocity will be a part of the fabric  of American society for a very long time to come. 
              In  The Negro Holocaust, Robert A. Gibson of the Yale-New Haven Teachers  Institute describes the reign of terror by lynch mobs that pervaded in much of  the southern United States  from the 1880s through 1950. 
              
                In the last decades of the nineteenth century, the lynching of black people in the southern and border states became an  institutionalized method used by whites to terrorize blacks and maintain white  supremacy. In the South, during the period 1880 to 1940, there was deep-seated  and all-pervading hatred and fear of the Negro which led white mobs to turn to  “lynch law” as a means of social control. Lynchings—open public murders of  individuals suspected of crime conceived and carried out more or less  spontaneously by a mob—seem to have been an American invention…       
                Most  of the lynchings were by hanging or shooting, or both. However, many were of a  more hideous nature—burning at the stake, maiming, dismemberment, castration,  and other brutal methods of physical torture. Lynching therefore was a cruel  combination of racism and sadism, which was utilized primarily to sustain the  caste system in the South. Many white people believed that Negroes could only  be controlled by fear. To them, lynching was seen as the most effective means  of control.  
               
              According  to the Tuskegee Institute, 3,445  African-Americans were murdered by lynching in the United States of America between  1882 and 1964.  
              Years  ago, when I served as an associate pastor, I had the privilege of  co-officiating a funeral of an African-American man whose family attended our  church. After the conclusion of the graveside service, the family remained and  watched until the casket was lowered into the ground. The African-American  pastor who had preached the eulogy turned to me and explained that black  families often remain at the grave because in years-gone-by undertakers were in  the habit of removing the body of a black person and burying it, keeping the expensive  coffin to sell to someone else. 
              Hope for the Future 
              Another  of my favorite movies is Amistad, directed by Steven Spielberg,  which is the story of a group of Africans who revolted against their captors  during their Atlantic crossing, only to be arrested for murder and  insurrection. This historic case was propelled to the Supreme Court where  former president, John Quincy Adams, served as legal council to the Africans.  
              In the  movie, Adams stands before the Supreme Court  and declares: 
              
                …gentlemen, I must say I differ with the keen minds of  the south, and with our president who apparently shares their views, offering  that the natural state of mankind is instead -- and I know this is a  controversial idea -- is freedom... 
                And the proof is the lengths to which a man, woman, or  child will go to regain it once taken. He will break loose his chains. He will  decimate his enemies. He will try, and try, and try, against all odds --  against all prejudices, to get home. 
               
              Movies  like Amistad, The Great Debaters, and Amazing  Grace show us that there is hope for reconciliation amongst the races.  People can do something tangible to heal the wounds inflicted through past  injustices. Just as the Wiley College debaters risked their lives to show that  blacks were created intellectually equal with whites, years earlier William  Wilberforce poured out his life to see the end of the Atlantic slave trade. 
              We can  -- individually and collectively -- make a difference.  
              The  Apostle Paul declares in First Corinthians, Chapter 13, that "love never  fails." To see these lingering wounds healed, people of all races must  reach out to one another with acts of genuine love -- not only in words, but in  tangible deeds. Our apologies must convey the message that not only are we are  sorry, but that we recognize that we were wrong for years of hatred and abuse.   
              It took  years of prejudice and violence to create the racial divide. It will take years  of love and acts of goodwill, coupled with prayer, to change hearts and build  trust. 
              Let us  begin today to see these wounds healed. 
              As we  enter this New Year, let us all make a determination to rise up to the ideals  of the Declaration of Independence: 
              
                that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their  Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and  the pursuit of Happiness.' 
               
              This year , let freedom ring. 
              Comments? Send Craig an e-mail.  
              More Perspectives on Spiritual Life 
              More from Spiritual Life 
              Read ChurchWatch, Craig's Blog  on CBN.com 
              More from Craig von Buseck on CBN.com 
               
               Craig 
                von Buseck is  Ministries Director  for CBN.com. Send 
          him an e-mail with your comments.		
		   
  
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