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God's Politics

Creating a New American Ethos

by Randy Woodley 01-12-2009

We stand at what could be the greatest divide in American history. America has come from Native American genocide, African slavery, the Jim Crow era, Civil Rights enactment and now we have elected the first mixed-blood white/black president.

America is fast becoming transformed to a multi-ethnic blend of citizenry, and yet the majority of positions of power (in most spheres of life) are currently held by Caucasians. As a person of mixed Native American and white ancestry, I am concerned about the possibility of a multi-ethnic America eventually turning into something resembling a less ambitious form of South African Apartheid, with a minority white government setting a harsh agenda for the “ethnic” majority.

As new possibilities emerge from the president-elect’s nomination, white Americans can already be heard resisting these changes while ethnic minority folks are complaining about the lack of “color” in recent appointments. It is a dilemma that requires education and a change of worldview in order to enable the America we are becoming to learn to appreciate itself. I offer a few simple points that could be helpful for everyone, but perhaps especially helpful for white Americans to begin to re-educate themselves in this process:

If You are Not Native American, You are an Immigrant and an Ethnic Person

Unless you are a Native American, you are an immigrant to a country whose history began long before 1492. Native Americans have a rich pre-contact history that can be shared with all Americans because it is the history of this land. We make jokes about the first “Boat People” (whites) and America’s first “Welfare Line” (Thanksgiving). But, as good hosts, we want to include everyone in our long history and how our stories are now inextricably linked together.

Diversity is a Gift

Ethnic and cultural homogeneity is impractical, boring, and not worthy of the American ethos. Yes, most people feel comfortable when they are around people who seem like themselves, affirm their identity, and make them feel safe. But to stay in the safe zone is not the American way. Curiosity of other people and other cultures is natural. We are made to reach beyond ourselves and to learn about others. And we are always surprised to find out, not only how different “the other” is, but also how similar.

The Past is Still Present

“Just get over it” is an oft-repeated phrase used on minority folks when justice issues are raised. But we can only get over it when it is over. Just because one does not see the everyday residual effects of American systemic racism does not mean racism has ended. Minority people face both direct and indirect racism on a regular basis. Realize there are other moccasins that you should try on. When we are at our best, justice is an American trait of which we can all be proud.

The Founding Fathers’ Myth is Unfounded

Let’s face it. The founding fathers stole a continent and appropriated slavery. Many of them claimed to have a religious faith, but theirs would not be the church of our choice today. The myth of clearing the wilderness with their own bare hands neglects the fact that the Woodland tribes and others already had tens of thousands of acres of gardens. Then, much of America’s prosperity came on the backs of imported slaves. The “fathers” were men of their own times with ethnocentric views, greed, and some good ideas of what freedom should be. Their imperfect idea of freedom may have moved society closer to realizing the dream today, but the idea has been greatly sustained by other “founding fathers and mothers” of many ethnicities. We need to give them all a place in American history.

Wealth is Meant to be Shared

The general principles of capitalism and socialism have this in common: Everyone should get something. If a social program is broken, work in a bipartisan, inter-denominational, cross-philosophical, et. al. way to fix it. Regardless of whether you favor a strong safety net or a more gradual trickle-down economics, our real wealth is in our concern for the most marginalized of society. America should not leave anyone out at any time.

Hugging a Tree Could Save Your Family

Our native view is that all of life is sacred. If we are to survive, the dominant society must learn how to love and honor the land, not just for what it can produce but because it is a gift. America is much more than land, but it is also land. If you love America, learn to honor each tree, stream, field, and all the resources of the earth because it is the richest inheritance we can give our children and grandchildren’s generations.

Every War is an Automatic Defeat

War should always be the last resort. Many Americans believe the false premise that we must always fight to be free. In truth, we always lose when we go to war. We lose the lives of our young men and women. We lose economically. Often we lose our standing of honor in the world. And we lose because we not only kill others, but we make killers of our own children. Native Americans have the highest enlistment per capita of all minorities in military service, yet our best ethos is to bring about peace and harmony if possible. It’s time for the American war myth to be replaced with the idea of wise but powerful peacemakers. Regardless of the outcome, Might Makes Right is the value of bullies and it should not be the value of Americans.

Mistakes can be Made Right

We are all in this together. It is time for white America to face the truth of its own history and to be welcomed into the greater history now occurring for all of America. I pray that can we take a chance by seeing through the eyes of the other in order to make a better America.

Randy WoodleyRev. Dr. Randy Woodley is a Keetoowah Cherokee Indian descendent and the author of  Living in Color: Embracing God’s Passion for Ethnic Diversity. He teaches history, theology and culture at George Fox Evangelical Seminary in Portland, Oregon.

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  • erbe
    Many of the European immigrants to this continent sure didn't practice "loving their neighbor as they loved themselves". But then, I don't either.
  • samuel667
    That's a good point.
  • jeffp
    "Unless you are a Native American, you are an immigrant to a country"
    Foolishness
    I am pleased to say that I am a Native American, meaning I was born here.
  • I am pleased to say that I am a Native American, meaning I was born here.

    But your cultural heritage wasn't -- his point was that you were descended from immigrants who weren't born here.
  • joshkidd
    I believe his full intention was to push back against a world view in which the descendants of white Europeans are viewed as the norm. In saying that we are all (except for Native Americans) immigrants, he is saying that none of us has a greater claim to being American. Still, I'm not sure that saying, "You are all immigrants" is the best way to go about this for this very confusion. I would guess that many white Americans, including myself, don't have much of a European identity. And yes, I understand that this very view is part of the cultural dominance among white Americans that Randy is trying to oppose. I just think that "but I am not an immigrant" is a reasonable response that should have a reasonable answer.
  • Sounds good, but it flies in the face of reality. The language we write in is European, and virtually all white Americans can point to at least one specific country from which their ancestors came. To show you just how far this goes, I'm African-American but my legal first name is Dutch, my middle name is Spanish and my last name is Irish.
  • joshkidd
    To be clear, I actually have no disagreement with Randy's point. My point was regarding tactics for consciousness raising.
  • Lord_Voldemort
    Yes, and if you follow Mr. Woodley's ancestry back far enough, eventually you'll find folks who crossed from Asia to Alaska.

    Now if you'll excuse me, I'm off to hunt a woolly mammoth.

    LV
  • meurig
    You mean they're all invaders from <gasp> Russia.... Where was Sarah Palin to stop them?
  • BuckeyeDon
    LOL!
  • JamesM
    She was too busy looking into the sky for those incursions into our air space.
  • meurig
    ...and even then she's still never got Santa...
  • Joe_Allen_Doty
    Being born in the United States of America and having all of your ancestors from other continents than North and South America, only makes you a Native of the USA. It does not make you a Native American.

    Over 10 years ago, I lived in a Tulsa Housing Authority Senior Citizen and Disabled Persons apartment complex. An elderly woman got an Oklahoma ID at the Drivers License place. Because the words "Native America" were on the ID card, she said, "The State of Oklahoma made me a Native American."
  • jeffp
    I can trace many generations who were also born in America, which does not matter. I was born here, I am a native. I'm also part Indian, yes I said Indian.
  • jeffp
    I lost a point for stating the obvious.
  • Eric77
    The distinction he makes between “Native Americans” and “Immigrants” isn’t particularly helpful, unless it’s just to remind readers that there were people living in the “ New World ” before Europeans came here. To wit, I have American Indian ancestors as well as European and Asian ancestors. So am I an immigrant or a Native American? Am I Caucasian or Asian or American Indian? Separating people into neat categories will get harder and harder as time goes on. In reality, those who we think of as “Native Americans” also came from somewhere else (most likely Asia ) so everyone is actually an immigrant (or has immigrant ancestors) to this land, some have just been here longer than others.

    I agree with Randy about diversity and homogeneity. However, there is something to be said for trying to find something that all Americans can have in common (he seems to allude that we do have something in common at the end of his comments on diversity). America is relatively unique compared to other self-constructed countries in that it isn’t based on nationality or ethnicity. Trying to craft a common experience or worldview is important so that we don’t end up in greater cultural ghettos than we already are.

    I appreciate Randy acknowledging that our next President is mixed race. This fact seems to evade most commentators.
  • *sigh*
  • Joe_Allen_Doty
    I am of mixed ancestry like Randy Woodley; like him, I, too, have European and Cherokee Ancestry. Since I have been in church services and other activities with him here in Tulsa, I am glad that others in the world can know about his ministry.

    While there is a "Keetoowah Band of Cherokees," which is considered to be a separate tribal group from the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma (of which I am a member), there is a spiritual group which has been known as the "Keetoowah Society."

    One interesting thing to know is that the Cherokees who chose to follow Jesus before the Trail of Tears forced march removal took place in the 1830s, most of those did keep their faith in the Lord in spite of the way they were treated by the Federal Government. They even had baptisms by immersion in water rituals on the trail, too, when someone accepted Jesus.
  • Joe_Allen_Doty
    I am a US Army and a Vietnam Veteran. I did not know until during the last 15 years that one of the main reasons we were in South Vietnam was that Americans had money invested in off-shore drilling in the South China Sea off the coast of South Vietnam.

    There is nothing just about the War in Iraq; but, some people claiming to be Christian and in leadership in the USA have gone to the Old Testament to proof-text verses in an attempt to tell Believers in Jesus that it is a "just war."

    There is nothing in the 4 Gospels nor the Book of Acts where Believers are told to start a war with their enemies. In fact, Jesus said that we are supposed to love our enemies.
  • Eric77
    Is this really on topic?
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