RSS
More Feeds












God's Politics

A Prayer for Derrion Albert

by Valerie Elverton Dixon 09-30-2009

Every dawning day we wake to the news of human violence against humanity.  We see images of soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan who’ve traveled a long way from home to fight terrorists.  We hear the news of a roadside bomb or a suicide bomb.  We hear of the violent oppression of distant peoples in distant places.

Then there is the violence closer to our own doors.  A census worker is found dead with the word “Fed” written across his chest.  An entire family is found dead.  And all this comes within the context of a recent history where young men bring automatic weapons to school and kill their teachers and classmates.  We even see murder in church.

We develop calluses around our consciousness.  Protective shields go up around our hearts lest the violence, the pain of strangers, becomes a missile attack upon our own fragile emotions suffering from our own losses, disappointments, and fears.  It all threatens to become more than we can bear.

Derrion Albert was an honor roll student at Christian Fenger Academy High School in Chicago.  He was a church-goer who refused to join a gang.  As he was on his way to catch a bus, minding his own business, he became caught up in a battle between two groups of teenagers he did not know.  He was beaten to death on the street.  The structural violence that his attackers had absorbed exploded in subjective violence against his body.  Derrion Albert is dead and at least four other young men have been charged in his killing.  If they are convicted their lives will be ruined.

A community memorial to Derrion Albert was burned, another act of violence that denies a community its expression of grief.  Our calluses thicken.  Our shields go up yet again, higher and faster this time.  What is the biochemistry of the calluses that harden around our consciousness?  What is the physics of the shields around our hearts? What happens to our compassion, to the capacity to suffer with the Other from the core of our being?  Do we lose a portion of our own humanity when our capacity to care weakens?

There is passion in compassion and that passion ought to be more than a co-suffering.  It ought to be a love so deep, so radical, so fearless that we dare to act, to do something to step up to the challenge of the violence in this world rather than to step back or to step away.  The passion of compassion is the passion of Jesus and the challenge of our faith to make our own bodies a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable unto our God. (Romans 12:1).

Toward this end, I propose that we begin by making Wednesday a weekly day of prayer and fasting for the end of global and local violence.  Many churches already have mid-week prayer services on Wednesday.  Let us add the dimension of fasting to our prayers.  This requires no ideological contest. It requires no act of Congress or presidential proclamation.  This requires only a personal commitment.  It requires faith as a grain of mustard seed.  It requires trust in the worth of prayer and the power of the Church Universal praying on one accord to tame the roaring lion of violence that is stalking our world and eating us all alive.

Dr. Valerie Elverton Dixon is an independent scholar who publishes lectures and essays at JustPeaceTheory.com. She received her Ph.D. in religion and society from Temple University and taught Christian ethics at United Theological Seminary and Andover Newton Theological School.

Share or bookmark this post:
  • email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
advertisement


Comment Code of Conduct

I will express myself with civility, courtesy, and respect for every member of the Sojourners online community, especially toward those with whom I disagree—even if I feel disrespected by them. (Romans 12:17-21)

I will express my disagreements with other community members' ideas without insulting, mocking, or slandering them personally. (Matthew 5:22)

I will not exaggerate others' beliefs nor make unfounded prejudicial assumptions based on labels, categories, or stereotypes. I will always extend the benefit of the doubt. (Ephesians 4:29)

I will hold others accountable by clicking "report" on comments that violate these principles, based not on what ideas are expressed but on how they're expressed. (2 Thessalonians 3:13-15)

I understand that comments reported as abusive are reviewed by Sojourners staff and are subject to removal. Repeat offenders will be blocked from making further comments. (Proverbs 18:7)

  • When is the next post comming on this topic.
  • k_hemphill7
    Hello, I am a sophomore at Shaw University majoring in elementary education. I was told by my English 113 teacher, Professor Justice (djustice@shawu.edu), to find a blog about Derrion Albert and write about what we really feel the issue is. Violence is becoming a growing issue in today's young society and the case of not “snitching” has had a great effect on the growth. I feel as though I should address the youth because violence has grown tremendously since I was a young girl and is still growing. Now people who are committing the crimes feel safer than those of us who actually have to live in the neighborhoods trying to support our families. Not to many years ago the trend stop snitching came about and I is crazy how we as youth caught on to it as if it was the next pair of Jordans. When I heard about the story of Derrion Albert I was so shocked and hurt. How can a young person beat another person until their body lies there lifeless and feel no remorse, not thinking about what their life will be like from this point on or how they have just affected the family’s life and not turn themselves in? But better yet how any human in their right mind can watch another human, their classmate, someone’s son, nephew, a child of God be beaten to death and if they were nothing and not tell anyone who was responsible? We are stuck in this society where we now believe not saying anything is ok. We are able to go home and sleep well at night after witnessing a murder and the ones who can’t sleep are too afraid to speak up. We as a youth need to get our voice back that was fought so hard for by our ancestors. We need to realize that if we get these people off the street we will not have to live in fear anymore. Life is too short to live in fear with no voice. We need to stand up as a group because we are the future, is this real how we want to live???
  • mlwilliams
    I am a political science major and sophomore at Shaw University. My English 113 professor, Dr. Justice (djustice@shawu.edu) asked my English class to discuss the issue of the death and beating of Derrion Albert and to also offer a possible solution that could help end the violence caused by our inner city youth. This young man was killed by his peers with out good reason. What makes this story so scary is that it is not the first time that this has happen and it has high possibilities of happening again. Our youth need help. It is just that simple. I believe that the people that could really help these young people the best are their community leaders. Parents often try to do all that they can for their children but it is often hard to really give children the correct attention and discipline that they need while trying to hold down a job and keep food on the table. When parents aren’t there for their kids like they are expected to be, the streets often turn out to be their source of influence. This is a continuing problem that is causing much of the problems with our youth and especially the violence. This is why I am suggesting that community leaders step in and try to offer some change. I believe the best way that these leaders can help these young people is by improving upon places like the Boys and Girls club. The Boys and Girls Club of America has often been the place for young people to go do something constructive with their time instead of getting into trouble on the streets. If community leaders made it so that there were more places like this available and invested into putting more mentors in them, there would be a great decrease of violence of our inner city youth.
  • rapman
    Pittsburgh’s G-20 story: Take an expressway from town and disappear into desolate ‘hoods and encounter the civilization of menace. Pittsburgh, a dual city! The glass wonder of PPG Place and/or the G-20 Summit is a faded memory. Here in the ‘hood lives lie abandoned as far as the eye can see.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEukcWW5dM0

    That is: For the most part, African-American Pittsburgh seems to be invisible, not only to the public relations hucksters who tout Pittsburgh’s successes, but we are equally invisible to the protesters.

    Certainly, black Pittsburgh is as proud as anybody in that the black President we worked so hard to elect has selected Pittsburgh as the host of the G-20 Summit. We even enjoy the re-invention of Pittsburgh from a dirty, smoky steel-churning history to the bright, clean, green financial success that the business leaders and politicians boast about so loudly. Nobody is more proud of the Super Bowl winning African-American coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers, Mike Tomlin. But none of that feel-good stuff erases the pain of the stubbornly high unemployment among African American young adults and the staggering dropout rate for young black males from the public school system.
  • arachne646
    Perhaps it's easier to think of the violence as "over there" or "them, not us" when it is happening on a TV news report, or even on YouTube. Knowing about someone and, especially, praying for someone or some community that you know brings some of the uncertainty that violence provokes into your life. Prayer and fasting are a powerful thing. Thank-you, Dr. Dixon.
  • Ashleigh101
    "What is the biochemistry of the calluses that harden around our consciousness?"

    They are darkened in their understanding and separated from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them due to the hardening of their hearts.- Ephesians 4:18
  • Nathan Bedford
    Emmett Till was murdered by white racists in 1955 - 8 years before "the 10 Commandments and God" were removed from the schools. Those who murdered him presumably sat in schools where they were free to pray.

    It would be one thing if we could attribute such vile acts to simply the absence from our schools of the "10 Commandments and God." Unfortunately, it's not quite that simple.
  • kw222
    What would Dr. King or WEB DuBois say about this? That the dream is only partially fulfilled, and that policies on both right and left need to change to end the gangs and the unemployment. This voice-from-beyond act is about how the debate on inner city violence and poverty needs the change.
    http://02e56fa.netsolhost.com/blog1/index.php/2...
  • jjernig2
    Words on a wall do not translate to words written on the heart. The devil is dancing in the street because Christians have taken what should be written in the heart and turned it in to words written on the wall. We are failing society because we do not live what we say we believe.
  • Nathan Bedford
    Dr. Dixon,

    As I read your story, I began thinking that we had finally identified a topic upon which all loving Christians could unite.

    Alas, I think I was mistaken...
  • schools_need_God
    This is the result of removing the 10 Commandments and God from our schools. The devil must be dancing in the streets.........
blog comments powered by Disqus
click here for comments tech support
advertise here
  • MOST VIEWED
  • MOST COMMENTED
  • MOST RECENT
advertise here
advertise here
advertise here
advertise here


HOME | SUBSCRIBE | DONATE | TAKE ACTION | MAGAZINE  
SOJOMAIL | BLOGS | MEDIA | EVENTS | RESOURCES | ABOUT US  
Sojourners | 3333 14th Street NW, Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20010  
Phone 202.328.8842 | Fax 202.328.8757 | sojourners@sojo.net  
Unless otherwise noted, all material © Sojourners 2008