Watching the news of massive flooding in Texas and South Asia, I cannot help but be touched by the humanness of the experience. After all, as the mass migration and refugee crisis show us every day, displacement is something millions of women, men and children experience each day as a result of poverty, violence, war, and environmental disasters.
I am touched deeply by the look on the face of a Bangladeshi mother as she carries her child through water waste deep … pure determination mixed with despair. I am heartened by a comment by two young men in Texas who were helping strangers evacuate, “We’re not heroes, we’re ordinary people doing what we can do.”
I also cannot help but reflect on my own time of displacement last fall. One October morning I woke up to a fire outside our motherhouse. Everyone was safe, but the main building is still not occupiable. I spent about four months living out of boxes away from home. I was safe, I had everything I needed, I was cared for … and yet I was discombobulated constantly. I kept losing things and was off kilter even as life settled into a new normal.
We have been back home since January, but I am still finding things and sorting them. Just today I found a favorite mug I thought had been lost and found some important papers that had been oddly mixed in with some trivial stuff in the packing and unpacking.
I hold in prayer all those who have lost their homes, their livelihoods, their mementos. I pray for all those relying on the kindness of strangers, and those strangers who see a neighbor in need and respond even though they have never met them before.
I hope and pray that all will be safe, and just maybe hearts will be broken open enough to widen our circle of relationship.
Maybe those sharing a shelter with an undocumented family will be able to see them as friend and neighbor rather than other to be feared or vilified. Perhaps stereotypes and bias towards racial or ethnic groups will be tested through a shared human experience.
I pray that in our gratitude for safety and securury and prosperity we recognize the vulnerability we all share.
I pray that our common experience of compassion and care for those facing unimaginable suffering brings us closer, makes us stronger, and teaches us what really matters in life.
Connection not division.
Little acts of kindness and love that can break through even the worst suffering and despair.
Hope not fear.
AMEN
January 11, 2013 I came home to find a fire in our home. It started in the kitchen with a charging lithium ion battery. After the fire personnel did their work and helped us find a reliable contractor my husband and I backed our cars out of the driveway and headed to our daughter and son-in-laws house. All we had were the clothes on our backs and our vehicles! We still find items missing. We still have boxes partially unpacked. Life still feels a little shaky. Our home took 10 months to redo! It was ripped down to studs and rebuilt. We moved into a ‘new’ home. I can only imagine how difficult it would be with an entire area upside down like the wake of Harvey, Irma, etc. My heart, my prayers and some of our money goes out to them.
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