The Summer Everyone Thought I Was Liberal
Until I got
married, my life had been blissfully dull. I was born in Lanett, AL,
the rough equivalent of Mayberry, to a mom who was a dance teacher,
then stay at home mom, then kindergarten teacher at the First Baptist
Church. My dad owned the local hardware store.
I had an
inkling that there were people “out there” who lived and thought
very differently from me and my family. I knew there were people who
went to high schools with more than 500 people and vacationed in
Europe, but they lived in far off places like Montgomery or
Minneapolis.
So, about
my 2nd
year of college, I decided I needed to do something to bridge the gap
between myself and the rest of the world. I looked at my church
denomination's college programs and found a couple that sounded
interesting. One possibility was working in Appalachia for the
summer. The other was to be a Peace Intern. Peace Interns got to
travel the country visiting church camps and talking with high
schoolers. People who worked in Appalachia did hard, hot, dirty
work.
So, I
applied to be a Peace Intern.
I
painstakingly researched and wrote an essay about what “peace”
means to me. It was long with lots of references. Maybe not
surprisingly, I didn't get it. So, I spent the summer after my
sophomore year of college doing something just as meaningful and
thought provoking: I taught high school majorettes.
The summer
before my senior year I decided to give a peace internship one more
try. This time I almost missed the deadline and ended up writing a
one page paper about how Jesus Christ should be our peace. Know
Jesus, know peace. No Jesus, no peace.
I sent it
off not expecting much and not really concerned either way. I had
met people who applied for this program and didn't get it, impressive
and smart people like my sister and a great-great niece of Hemingway.
I was
shocked when I received a letter not too long afterward telling me
that I was selected to be a Peace Intern for the summer of 1992.
I knew I
was an unlikely selection, but I didn't realize that I was the least
likely choice ever, I mean EVER, until I arrived at training in
Indianapolis.
When I
arrived, and met the other interns, I realized they all had a
“platform”, like Miss America contestants, and they were all kind
of mad. There was a woman who had spent the previous summer in
Africa and now refused to eat the seeds in tomatoes, another woman
who called God a goddess. There was an army brat who was staunchly
anti-military and a guy who thought I should leave the training
immediately because I voted for Bush. One intern had a pony tail and
planned to ride his motorcycle from camp to camp, another was proudly
gay, but hadn't worked up the nerve to tell his parents. There was a
sweet guy who was Puerto Rican and another who's strangest
characteristic, as far as I could tell, was that he went to the
University of Connecticut.
Peace Intern Training 1992 |
And, then
there was me – white, female, uninformed, conservative, southern,
not mad about much and just voted for Bush. I became very quiet,
considered going home and tried repeatedly to stop my head from
spinning by suggesting we play silly games in the hallway of the
offices of our General Assembly where the training was taking place.
You may be
able to guess that this was a weird week for me. I loved learning
about “peace with justice” issues and the people I was meeting
were fascinating. But, I realized, probably for the first time, that
I was different. I wanted to tell every kid I met at church camp
that it didn't matter who they voted for, what their families looked
like, or what their plans were for life after high school, if they
didn't embrace Jesus Christ as their Savior there would be no peace
in their hearts and lives. Without peace in your heart, there won't
be peace in your home, your neighborhood, state, country or world.
He is the only way.
After we've
addressed the peace that you live in, we can talk about hunger and
war and stereotypes. But, it just won't work before that.
After that
week at training, I made some strange changes. I would never again
consider peace to be solely the absence of war. I stopped drying my
hands in public restrooms with the electric dryers or paper towels,
instead I would run my hands through my hair. And, I would never
look at bananas the same.
We read
about the “just war” theory and why flying is bad. We talked
about prejudice and hate. But somewhere in all the stories and
statistics and letters, there was this one poem that stuck with me.
It was in the “hunger” segment of our materials. The poem was
written by someone visiting a desperately poor nation. In some of
this travelers’ observations, he saw a small girl steal a banana.
She took this one banana back to her even smaller brother and sister,
giving each of them half. Then, the little thief sat down and licked
the inside of the banana peel. The poem ended with the phrase “I
swear I saw the face of God.” I wish I could find that poem to
share with you now. Just the thought of it, the reality of it, moves
me.
After that
week of training, I knew I had a decision to make. I could become
more informed and involved. I could get swept along and give in. I
could get angry and condescending. I could embrace every issue that
came along, even ones I didn't agree with. Or, I could figure out
how to care about the world around me and still be true to who I am.
I could learn to disagree with people who voted differently than I
did, yet embrace them because we both want this world to be a better
place.
The rest of
that summer was good. It wasn't as trying as my week of training. I
wasn't asked to go to any gay bars or think about whether flag
burning should be ok. But, I was confronted with a retired
military man who openly disliked me as soon as he heard the word
“peace”. I was flattered by a camp director who said she had
been really worried about having a Peace Intern and I made her feel
better about the program all together. I met a man who became a dear
friend, who respected me and my views and threatened to call Bobby,
who would soon propose, to ask him a series of questions including
“what are your intentions” and “will you really promise to take
care of her?”
Camp in Montana |
I visited
camps around the country that I would never have seen and met people
I would never have thought about meeting. I was forced to think
through issues I had never given much brain power to and I learned
how to present my views in a way that took others' perspectives and
disagreements and backgrounds into account.
Mostly, I
was confronted with my Savior. Jesus got me into that summer program
and showed me that I was His. He called me out and asked me do and
say stuff that was sometimes uncomfortable. He took me to places I
had never really wanted to go and would never have planned on. And,
it was all really, really good.
As I said
before, I was the least likely Peace Intern ever. If there were a
reunion, I'm sure someone would think I should leave. I mean, I'm a
mom now. I cook dinner most nights and hardly ever protest anything.
I drive a minivan, for goodness' sake, and freely use the paper
towels in public restrooms. I have even given my Birkenstocks away.
But, I
still care. I pray for our country and leaders while wondering
exactly where we're going to end up. I want people to know that
refugees are some of my favorite people ever and that slavery still
exists. I help those around me and teach my kids to help out too.
So, whether
you're crazy or sane, whether you get your news off your Yahoo
homepage or listen to NPR, whether you refuse to shower until Tibet
is free or shave your legs every single day, we're all really more
alike than we are different. And if you don't believe that, you
should at least believe that we all care deeply about something.
“For
a while that worked fine
All the Zooks stayed away
and our country was safe.
Then one terrible day
a very rude Zook by the name of VanItch
snuck up and slingshotted
my Snick-Berry Switch!”
All the Zooks stayed away
and our country was safe.
Then one terrible day
a very rude Zook by the name of VanItch
snuck up and slingshotted
my Snick-Berry Switch!”
-Dr.
Suess, The Butter Battle Book