Tags
children, creation, God, incarceration, land, legacy, lynching, parent, racial reconciliation, reconciliation, segregation, sin, slavery

This past week, my family was able to visit The Legacy Museum in Montgomery, Alabama. The museum artfully and comprehensively presents the “history of the destructive violence that shaped our nation, from the slave trade, to the era of Jim Crow and racial terror lynchings, to our current mass incarceration crisis.” We have made a point as a family to visit various museums focusing on civil rights, but this museum was the first to tie those four actions in history (slavery, segregation, lynchings, and modern incarceration) so intentionally, powerfully, and succinctly.
One of the more moving sections for our family was a wall of jars of dirt, of varying colored soil. As we moved closer, we learned the story of the project through the Equal Justice Initiative. Family members, researchers, and volunteers worked have worked together to trace every known lynching, visit the site, collect dirt in a large jar, and then label the jar with the name of the victim, the date, and the location of the lynching. Something about the varying colors of soil from around our country, and the sheer volume of jars was mesmerizing – as though you could see the variation in the victims’ stories, while being reminded of the ways the earth bears witness to the sins of her inhabitants.
As we left the museum, we soberly began talking about impact the museum had on us and what we might like to do differently to be a part of breaking the cycle of violence in our own day. Inspired by leaders in the closing “Reflection Room,” we realized we all could do something – in our way, in our own place, in our own time. As a parent, part of my work is exposing my children to the awfulness of our humanity that we do not always discuss – especially recognizing the inherent privilege we have to determine when and how our children know this part of our nation’s story. But I especially appreciated the invitation to begin wondering where God was uniquely inviting each of us to play a part in the shaping of the future.
I often say the work of racial reconciliation can never be “done” or completed. Racial reconciliation is lifelong work for us as a country. But sometimes I worry that the reality that we could never “accomplish” racial reconciliation creates a disincentive to even try – to do anything because it feels so very big. As we begin a new year, and as we add many resolutions to our plans for 2024, I invite you to pick just one thing you can do to be a part of work of reconciliation – in your own way, your own place, your own time. God and God’s created order have shown us vividly how far we have to go. Together, we can find our own place in the history of reconciliation.
