Racism
Three movies that deal specifically with
racism are: 1. City of God, 2. Hotel Rwanda,
3. Crash. None of these three films are for the week
stomached, nor are they for those searching for pleasurable
entertainment. Instead, they are respectively about the black poverty
stricken drug dealers living in the projects outside Rio de Janeiro, the
African Genocide in the country of Rwanda, and about stereotyping all
groups of people, majority and minority, respectively.
In "City of God," one learns about the way
in which children of the ghetto are brought up into gangs and into
dealing and using drugs. This movie is extremely violent and includes
multiple scenes where children are shot and where drug dealers are
fighting. This film also exposes the ways in which the Brazilian police
are in cahoots with the drug runners, selling them guns, and providing
them with business. This film has less to do with racism than the other
two, but it does show the oppression and poverty of a minority people
group, and how difficult it is for them to get out of the status in
which they are born. (note: this film is in Portuguese)
The movie "Hotel Rwanda," while PG-13, is
still hard to watch. It tells the story of certain group of people
living in Rwanda during the months after the assassination of the
president Juvenal Habyarimana. Between the months of April and June of
1994, it is estimated that 800,000 people were killed. The killings
were related to race. Both sides were black, but they were still
considered different ethnically by the tribes themselves. The two
groups there are the Hutus and the Tutsis. BBC News reported that "The
two ethnic groups are actually very similar - they speak the same
language, inhabit the same areas and follow the same traditions."
Despite the similarities, the two groups became rather hostile towards
one another after the Belgium's began to colonize the country in 1916.
In the end, the killings were ethnically centered around one group
believing it was superior to the other. To read more on this event,
visit
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/1288230.stm.
The final film, "Crash," actually takes
place in modern America; California to be exact. This film is a
situational movie showing how the paths of different people with
different backgrounds, ethnicities, and cultures, cross and bring out
the prejudices of each person in this film. Like "Hotel Rwanda," you
may not like many of the characters, but in this one, there is really no
hero. The introduction to the film contains a conversation between two
amateur car thieves who are the real life representations of the
stereotype that blacks do not tip at restaurants. They then steel a car
from a white woman and her husband. This freaks out the woman (of
course) and she demands that the doors on the house be changed that very
night. The locksmith is Hispanic, and the wife is prejudiced against
him as a result of his race (this flows from the fact that she was
robbed by a black person). Later the locksmith attempts to fix a
Persian man's door and it does not work, so the Persian makes racial
comments to the locksmith. Later this same night, one white officer
molests a black woman in front of her husband on a deserted street
downtown after pulling the car over without reason. The husband is
later insulted by his wife for being afraid to be black and proud of his
heritage. The next day, the officer is offended when a black woman will
not provide special assistance to his father who is badly in need of
hospice care. These types of events go on and on throughout the entire
movie. Whites against blacks, Persians against whites, blacks against
Puerto Ricans, Puerto Ricans against Asians, Asians against whites,
the possibilities seem endless. So are we living in a world today
that is virtual free of racism? Absolutely not. What about a country
that has overcome its rugged past? Again, the answer is an emphatic
no. This being the case, what are we to do about it?
Scripture:
Genesis 1:26-28 - 26
Then God said, "Let us make man in our
image, in our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea and
the birds of the air, over the livestock, over all the earth, and over
all the creatures that move along the ground."
23
The man said,
27
So God created man in his own image,
in the image of God he created him;
male and female he created them.
in the image of God he created him;
male and female he created them.
28
God blessed them and said to them, "Be fruitful and increase in
number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish of the
sea and the birds of the air and over every living creature that
moves on the ground."
And
Genesis 2:21-23
- 21
So the LORD God caused the man to fall into a deep sleep; and
while he was sleeping, he took one of the man's ribs and closed
up the place with flesh.
22
Then the LORD God made a woman from the rib he had taken out of
the man, and he brought her to the man.
23
The man said,
"This is now bone of my bones
and flesh of my flesh;
she shall be called 'woman,'
for she was taken out of man."
And
Genesis 3:20 - Adam
named his wife Eve, because she would become the mother of all the
living.
Application:
The Bible clearly teaches that God
made humans in his image and that both men and women equally
represent God as human beings. It also teaches that Eve was the
mother of all living. This means that if someone is a human, then
ultimately, they descended from her. If all races have the same
origin, that should settle the question for good. People are not to
be racists. They are not to discriminate in business,
education, marital relationships, trust, respect, or any other
number of things. In fact, we should love and cherish the cultures
and backgrounds of those who are different than us. We should learn
from them and from there art. It is ok for a white person to enjoy
a black musicians work; it is equally acceptable for a black person
to enjoy a Latino persons work. Music has actually done more to
break the racial barriers down than most any other form of art. Sly
(from Sly and the Family Stone) was one of the first musicians to
really understand this. Paul McCartney jumped on the band wagon
soon as did a number of other artists in the sixties. However, like
all good things, the liberator can become the oppressor. Recently
John Mellencamp did an album called "Cutting Heads," which is about
the issue of racism. In the title track, a black artist raps about
how black artists should not be using the term "Nigger" to refer to
one another.
Today, musicians and fans alike need to
recognize that while we are not to stifle are cultures and
backgrounds, that we must also be careful not to lift our ethnicity
up to the point that it causes us to put down those who are
different. The Southern Baptist started out as a denomination that
wanted to send out missionaries who were slave owners. We have
since repented of this awful sin, but we still see effects of it
today. There are very few blacks in the Southern Baptist
convention.
In the Old Testament people were
condemned for marrying outside of ethnicity, but this was a
religious practice not a racial practice. The Bible only condemned
people who served Yahweh for marrying people who served other God's.
This is no different than the New Testament idea that believers are
not to marry unbelievers.
Let us continue to work together
through our art and culture, and in our faith to break down racial
barriers. Let us love one another as bearers of God's image
regardless of what are color is or our status in life. Let us see
people as beautiful in how God designed each one individually. Let
us encourage our artists to continue to build bridges and not burn
them down. Let us all show the care and concern for one another
that we should have, that can only be a result of being a new
creation in Christ.
Let me know if you have any questions or
comments.