Luke 13:1-9
Responding Differently
James Sledge February
28, 2016
The
other night the eleven o’clock news had a report of another shooting
in southeast DC. TV news tends to emphasize such events, but the following
morning, it was hard to find anything about it in The Washington Post, just a small paragraph buried deep inside the
local section. Such shootings are routine enough that they’re easy to ignore. People
might notice if the shooting were in northwest DC or Falls Church or Arlington.
They
certainly noticed the terrorist attacks in Paris last November. A lot of people
still have the colors of the French flag superimposed on their Facebook
pictures, and I added the flag to mine briefly. But I never put a Kenyan flag
over my picture, even though they had an attack that killed more than the one
in Paris. No Nigerian flag either, and they had two deadlier attacks. In fact,
there were six terror attacks in 2015 deadlier than Paris, but I could only
remember one of them. I had never even heard of some. Just like I couldn’t tell
you the details of any of those shootings in southeast DC.
There
are lots of reasons for this. One surely has to do with race. The victims in
Southeast DC and in Nigeria were largely black. In Southeast DC, they were
often poor, and their deaths didn’t represent any real danger to me or my
suburban existence.
We
aren’t much surprised by shootings in certain parts of DC, or terror attacks in
certain parts of the world. We’ve grown numb by repetition, and it’s not much
of a step from numbness to the idea, perhaps a subconscious one, that these
deaths matter less, which would mean that their lives mattered less.
There
also seems to be a natural human tendency to blame the victim. It makes our
lives feel a little more orderly if tragedies happen to other people because of
their actions. They got involved with the wrong people. They didn’t work hard
enough to live in a safer neighborhood. They got mixed up in drugs and alcohol.
We sometimes do the same thing when it
comes to illness or natural disaster. The person smoked or drank too much,
didn’t exercise or have a healthy diet. They lived in a flimsy trailer or near
a stream that floods. It’s partly their own fault, right?