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God's Politics

Columbus in Reverse: ‘Travel as a Political Act’

by LaVonne Neff 10-12-2009

091012-travel-as-a-political-actRick Steves was a teenager when he first traveled overseas. Visiting a park in Norway with his parents, he had an epiphany:

Right there, my 14-year-old egocentric worldview took a huge hit. I thought, “Wow, those parents love their kids as much as my parents love me. This planet is home to billions of equally lovable children of God.” I’ve carried that understanding with me in my travels ever since.

Now famous for his travelogues on public television, his guided tours of Europe, and his guidebook collections including the constantly updated Europe Through the Back Door, Steves is somewhat less well known for his devout Lutheran faith and his devotion to liberalizing America’s drug laws. All of these interests coalesce in his new book, Travel as a Political Act.

Steves’s message is simple: Go to other countries. Listen to the people who live there. Learn other ways of seeing and doing that you might not have considered before. Some of these ways are better than the ones we’re used to. Some could help us make our country a better place.

America is a great and innovative nation that the world understandably looks to for leadership [he writes]. But other nations have some pretty good ideas, too. By learning from our travels and bringing these ideas home, we can make our nation even stronger. As a nation of immigrants whose very origin is based on the power of diversity (”out of many, one”), this should come naturally to us … and be celebrated.

The book consists of eight essays drawing on his travels not only in Western Europe but also in the Balkans, Turkey, North Africa, Central America, and Iran (click here to watch his hour-long presentation on “the most fascinating and surprising land I’ve ever visited”). One thread unites the chapters: Steves’s plea to us Americans to open our minds, ears, and hearts to people of other cultures and to learn to see things from their perspective. “Growing up in the U.S.,” he writes, “I was told over and over how smart, generous, and free we were. Travel has taught me that the vast majority of humanity is raised with a different view of America.”

I’m not a world traveler like Rick Steves, but beginning right after my sixteenth birthday, I’ve gone to school in France and worked in the U.K. and visited most of the Western European countries as well as Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Taiwan, and Thailand. I’ve never, ever been treated rudely because I’m an American, but I’ve been startled to catch glimpses of what some non-Americans think of the American way of life.

I’ve watched anti-American banners parading down the street at a Swiss May Day parade, seen British TV political adverts warning that the opposition party might instigate a health-care policy as dreadful as America’s, listened to an entire sermon in an English country church lambasting American evangelical religion, and heard German conservative evangelical politicians express disbelief and fury at the actions of George W. Bush. To me, Rick Steves’s observations about how people of other nations view us ring true.

Rather than dominating other nations, Steves believes, we should listen to them and learn from them. A self-avowed capitalist (he runs a business, after all), he nevertheless sees value in some of Europe’s social programs and is horrified by what U.S. businesses have done to Central America. An unapologetic Christian, he is comfortable with secular Islamic — not Islamist — governments. Appalled by Iranian totalitarianism, he still finds common ground with people he meets and even explains why the omnipresent “Death to America” posters may not be quite as menacing as they seem. And he thinks Europe’s ways of curbing drug use are much, much smarter than America’s.

As the title indicates, Travel as a Political Act has a strong political slant, but it is also full of human interest stories and quirky factoids about other cultures (did you know that on October 24, less than three weeks from today, the average American will have worked as many hours as the average Western European works in an entire year?). Color photos on nearly every page add to the book’s appeal. Steves hopes to appeal to people of all political persuasions, though I suspect he is preaching largely to the left-leaning, well-traveled choir.

One reviewer at amazon.com wrote Steves off as just another liberal from the Northwest who is clueless about how the rest of America thinks (she doesn’t say if she has traveled outside the U.S.). It seems to me that Steves knows a lot about how Americans think — and he is terrified, because too many of our views are not based on reality or understanding. Only to the extent that we know how others think — those “billions of equally lovable children of God” — will we Americans be able to add to the world’s peace, prosperity, and freedom.

portrait-lavonne-neffLaVonne Neff is an amateur theologian and cook; lover of language and travel; wife, mother, grandmother, godmother, dogmother; perpetual student, constant reader, and Christian contrarian. She blogs at Lively Dust.

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  • NMRod
    It's hard to be a Native American on Columbus Day: everyone else can look to ancestry from their mother country. The English, to England, the Irish, to Ireland, the Germans, to Germany; and a hundred other original nationalities and nations. Even Jewish folk can now look to Israel.

    All of those often on Columbus Day celebrate the conquest of North America; and for those, it can often have a religious and patriotic cast: the Pilgrims and Puritans, setting "God's City" upon a "hill" - the pre-eminent and dominating high ground from which all the world is now ruled, according to Manifest Destiny.

    It's another thing to be an American Indian; to be a conquered people, shrunken to reservations originally set up to be concentration camps for those slated for extinction.

    It's demoralizing to be an American Indian man; America's troops roam the globe and there's no serious chance that they will actually ever need to defend the "homeland" from any of their far-flung foes conquering it or taking it over the way that American Indians had it done to them.

    But American Indian men cannot defend their lost nation. No wonder that so many submerge this into becoming the ethnic minority with the greatest participation in America's armed forces: if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. In this way the sense of failure at being unable to defend one's people is sublimated.

    Yet everyone is God's child. The prescription for having suffered victimization is not to victimize in turn, even in one's heart or wishes.
    The victim is superior to the oppressor, until he takes up bitterness. Evil is not conquered with thoughts of evil.

    What would God have us do, by the example of Jesus?

    Americans who've profited from this oppression need forgiveness. They will never be whole until they realize what truly happened and how contrary to God's will it has been. For this to occur, they need to be confronted with the loving forgiveness of those oppressed, with it clearly stated what they are being forgiven for.

    Many Americans are now suffering personally - financially, spiritually and in personal sacrifice in endless battles - for the wrongs that have been done. The inevitability of the consequences for what has been done that's wrong, multiply as the same errors continue, writ larger and larger. Not realizing fully what has been done, many Americans have taken the wrong lessons as to how to proceed in the future, and we compound error upon error.

    America needs to listen to its American Indian voices. It needs to hear and heed their voices of forgiveness.

    For it is a rare and unusual native people Americans have in their midst - a forgiving and loving people, who can model the behavior Jesus wants us all to show to each other.
  • letjusticerolldown
    I hear and have long heard.
    I do not wish to romanticize that voice and make it into something it is not. But neither do I wish to ignore the true and valuable gift that is there.
  • WaveTossed
    Go to Japan. I've been there 3 times. You will find a country with an extensive and very efficient train and bus system that is completely accessible for handicapped people.

    You will find that the majority of Christians who live and worship Jesus in Japan actually believe that Jesus stood for all of the marginalized; the Japanese Christians I met were also part of a marginalized and discriminated against minority (the Burakumin, descendents of feudal-era outcastes). They understood that Jesus did not judge or condemn anyone for loving or for any of their expressions of love any more than did Jesus judge or condemn anyone for their caste or for the work that their ancestors did.

    You will find people who welcome visitors into their country and wish to show them the sites and epics of their long history.

    Believe me, the Japanese are not perfect. The Americans aren't perfect either. But spending some time in another country is definitely a way to expand one's knowledge of the world.

    I love my country, the United States, for its diversity and its freedoms to express and be exposed to other viewpoints. But there are those who want to shut us off from the rest of the World. Believe it or not, the World does not revolve around the United States, as some would have us think.
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