“You do not know what hope is, until you have lost it. You only know what it is not to hope.” T.S. Eliot, Family Reunion
I know what it is not to hope.
The Guatemala City garbage dump, where hundreds work each day to support their families. |
From the
airport in Guatemala City we drove to Seteca,
the theological seminary where we would be staying until we separated out again
into different groups for a week long work project. We’d barely had time so to set our bags down and sit down
before our professor began yet another belligerent, and yet no longer shocking,
tirade about U.S. involvement in Guatemala.
In a rare act of encouragement, one of our leaders played a
song in which the singer confidently declared that in God’s hands her “pain and
hurt looked less like scars and more like character.” We’d been through a lot that semester, but we were
developing character, my study abroad program implied. Character
shmaracter, I thought. What if
you no longer believe that God has hands for you to be in? Or feet? Or a heart?
Anything? Had I gone
Nietzche on myself? Could I really
believe that God was dead?
Yep, dead as a doornail. Or a least in a coma.
Our
professor, Don Mike, continued to rant and rave, we heard from different people
involved in myriad types of government positions, toured the city, went to the
dump, talked about justice and Jesus and liberation theology.
Is it so
awful to say that after awhile all third world countries start to look the
same? The littered highways, the
graffiti-covered concrete buildings, the bars and spikes and security guards
with guns. I wish I could say that
I instantly connected with Guatemalans, that it mattered to me that they had
been in a civil war for decades.
But I didn’t care about the indigenous, specifically Mayan, influence on
the culture or that hundreds of thousands of women had mysteriously lost their
husbands and sons, fathers and brothers to midnight kidnappings and mass
murders during the war. I feared
there was nothing in me that cared anymore.
I had lost my hope.
Throughout the last six years, I
have experienced a Love that saves, a Joy that saves, a Hope that saves. My
friends and family and church and coworkers have shown me that my anger doesn’t
help the suffering, my hopelessness does not prove my compassion. They have
shown me, and God continues to teach me, that Hope brings change, that Joy
alleviates suffering, that Love drives out fear.
This time around in Guatemala,
although I’ve already heard countless stories of war and violence and
injustice, although I’ve already visited the wasteland of the Guatemala City
garbage dump, although there are plenty of reasons to shut down and tune out, I
will cling to hope. I will look for the bright spots.
I will remember the words of AnnVoskamp in One Thousand Gifts,
“Why would the world need more anger, more outrage? How does it save the world to reject unabashed joy when it is joy that saves us? Rejecting joy to stand in solidarity with the suffering doesn't rescue the suffering. The converse does. The brave who focus on all things good and all things beautiful and all things true, even in the small, who give thanks for it and discover joy even in the here and now, they are the change agents who bring fullest Light to all the world."
This time around I will not be paralyzed. I will not reject
joy. I will listen and I will move and I will act. I will engage.
I will not disregard the
suffering. I will not turn a complacent eye to their pain. But amidst the pain
and horror, I will look for hope. I pray I will be brave enough to “focus on
all things good and all things beautiful and all things true.”
So far I’ve seen some incredibly
hopeful, transformative work being done in Guatemala. There are so many ways
for me to get involved in bringing Hope and Life and Joy to the people around
me. But I don’t know quite where to spend my time yet. Despite my commitment to
move, I feel a call to be patient, to wait on God’s timing and leading. I pray
for wisdom in how to spend my time here. I ask for an open heart to accompany
my open schedule.
As I wait and look for ways to
engage, I will share the bright spots that I have seen. Throughout the week,
and I imagine beyond this week as well, I will share the stories of hope and
redemption and transformation that I have glimpsed. I will write of the miracle
of kids being able to be kids in the midst of gang violence and extreme poverty,
of women speaking out against injustice and sharing their stories of pain for
the first time, of brave individuals seeking alternatives to violence, of
people daring to hope and try and move in a place where the problems seem copiously
complex and insurmountable.
I know what it is not to hope;
this time around I will fix my eyes on the Hope that saves.
Hope is manifesting itself through you every day. Of that, I have no doubt.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful post, Aly.
Thanks, Adrian. Sharing these thoughts keeps me accountable and focused on looking for the good.
DeleteI can't wait to read more!
ReplyDeleteThanks! I can't wait to write more!
DeleteAs long as there are hispanic kids with bubbles, I think you'll always find hope. :)
ReplyDeleteYou are so right, Audrie. And might I add chocobananos to the list of hope producers.
DeleteA to the MEN!
Delete