Friday, April 26, 2013

MEMBERS OF CONGRESS, ARE YOU LISTENING?

My dear friend Margaret wrote the following letter to her senators and representative:
Dear....,

My name is Margaret. I am the Episcopal priest serving the Cheyenne River Reservation. It is a difficult job, at best, but I have never felt more fully alive than when serving the good people of South Dakota.

Here is my concern: The "Sequester" cuts have cut to the bone here on the Reservation. Our Social Services workers will be working without a direct office supervisor, and will be expected to absorb the work load of their supervisor when she is laid off beginning May 1. They already each have over 150 clients. I have heard one serves more than 260 clients --adding more is going to make a difficult job impossible.

But more importantly, the clients themselves have been cut off --they have received no monies since the beginning of March. They are coming to my door asking for heating fuel, food, clothes, diapers. Children are at risk. There are no Tribal programs that can assist these folks, they are mostly disabled, elderly with grandchildren in the home, or are desperate for work. Last night, after a funeral, I delivered left over food to people's homes. Funeral food to a family of six of baloney sandwiches, biscuits, two apples, two oranges and some chocolate cake.

I cannot afford to feed all the people who come to my door asking for help. I have emptied my own freezer, my own cupboard in order to help these desperate folks.

I would like to invite you and any one else who is interested to come and stay here for ten days. Just ten days. I would like you to open my door and hear the stories, see the faces, see the desperation and despair. I would like you to feed the people from my freezer --and when it is empty explain to them why it is they have to go hungry and cold.

I would like you to attend the funeral I would probably do sometime in that 10 days and see the faithfulness, the generosity, the generational grief. I would like you to come with me on home visits and see the extreme poverty out of which that faithfulness and generosity and grief springs.

In the last six months, I have done 40 funerals --six infants, two teen suicides, and many, many folks under the age 40.

And food, shelter and heat are not the only problems here --the Indian Health Services were also part of the Sequester cuts. And the cuts are affecting the Head Start programs.

Have you all become so twisted up in your political lives that you have forgotten the people you have been called to serve?

I think so.

Look, it's really easy --have no cap on Social Security payments --everyone pays, all the way up. Including you. Don't make me pay 25% and more on taxes while the ultra-rich pay 15%. Don't give yourself healthcare benefits and raises and then deny them to others.

Don't punish the children and the elderly and the poor and the disabled by cutting the programs that at least keep them alive at poverty levels.  Oh, and by the way, don't sacrifice the environment for monetary gain --that will kill us all.

I'll say it again: Don't exempt yourselves from the burden the poor must bear every day.

I can only say I am shocked and depressed by my own government. Do better than this. The people you are supposed to serve deserve better.

Shocked and depressed,
The Rev. Margaret Watson
For you members of Congress who apparently believe that the inconvenience of delayed flights is the most serious consequence of the Sequester,  may I remind you of your oath upon assuming your offices?
I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter: So help me God.
The very first words of the Constitution are as follows:
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America. (My emphasis)
When Native American citizens of  the richest country in the world live as Margaret describes the situation of her parishioners, something is very wrong.  In the best of times, her people number among the poorest.  In bad times such as these, their plight is desperate.

My prayer for you is that the words from the song of the prophet Ezekiel become the reality for you that will move you to exercise your power to end the Sequester and relieve the suffering people in these United States of America.
A new heart I will give you
and a new spirit put within you.
I will take the stone heart from your chest
and give you a heart of flesh.
I will help you walk in my laws
and cherish my commandments and do them.
You shall be my people,
and I will be your God.

(Ezekiel 36:26-28)

9 comments:

  1. Could you post an address where we may write to Martha?

    Sigh! I hope she receives a response to her letter but I think our Congress persons are living in some la la land with a big bubble over their tiny pointy heads and hearts that has a big I right in the center.

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    1. Bonnie, if you wish to contribute, Margaret has supplied the following address:

      Episcopal Diocese of South Dakota
      500 S. Main Avenue
      Sioux Falls, SD 57104-6814

      Make a note that the contribution is for the Cheyenne River Episcopal Mission, where The Rev Margaret Watson serves as a priest.

      The Congress and the president made quick work of getting the flights moving again, but fixing the cuts to the poor and unemployed will come slowly if ever.

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  2. It is a sad fact that the types of people who are attracted to politics, and are successful at getting elected to high office, are rarely the type who have face-to-face experience of what your friend describes. The political high achievers, with rare exceptions, tend to be well off and don't-give-a-damn except where their own fortunes - political and otherwise - are concerned.

    I always enjoy revisiting the 1938 Jimmy Stewart film Mr. Smith Goes to Washington - because it's still so true. Apart from the incidentals of clothes, cars, and slang - NOTHING HAS CHANGED since then. Sigh.

    And it's still just as hard for the "Mr. Smith" types to make a difference or a dent in the hard-boiled attitudes of the high and mighty. Sometimes they manage, thank God, but not often enough.

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    1. I love the old movie. Where is our Mr Smith today?

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  3. After the little show they gave us today --maybe my next letter shouldn't have the expletives deleted....

    I am even more shocked when I know I shouldn't be --but I am. And I am less depressed, but even more radicalized....

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    1. margaret, how did Democrats come to think the sequester was a good idea? Does any of what we say and do make an impact at all on any of the leaders? I'm losing hope...but we can't give up, for we are called to be a people of hope. We look to be a country that is falling apart, a country that is ungovernable.

      The dirty deed was done on a Friday, the slow news day. Did the Congress and the president hope no one would notice?

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  4. We have to slam them and make them know we noticed. I have little hope it will change --unless we keep knocking and knocking and knocking... I keep trying to think of something that is as obvious as going and sitting down at a lunch counter --but I haven't thought or imagined what that might be as of yet.

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  5. This was a great post. As a social worker, I see every day how out of touch our politicians are to the real world. The letter gave such a genuine look at poverty, right here in the United States.

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