Minnesota: Human Decency and Hotdish --slogan seen on a T-shirt
Dear Minnesota,
I wanted to write you a note to let you know how heartbroken and angry I am, as are many others here in Massachusetts and New England, about the chaos and violence you are facing right now, all at the hands of ICE and the federal government. The killing of Renee Good, the intimidation and violence toward citizens and non-citizens alike and the targeting of brown skinned people is just so wrong, so unjust, so awful, so Ungodly. As an American and as a person of faith, I’m ashamed of what Uncle Sam claims to be doing in the name of our “homeland,” and I’m embarrassed too for my fellow folks of faith who actually support such human cruelty.
And all of this is happening in one of the most unique and amazing and beautiful parts of our country. Minnesota is a place and a people unlike anywhere else in the world.
I’ve discovered this truth in the more than thirty-two years I’ve visited there and come to love the North Star State. I have two beloved Godchildren there. I watched them grow up and play lots of baseball games on warm summer nights and always, there was the after game trip to Dairy Queen. I cherish two fellow ministers there whom I so love and respect for the work they’ve done and still do in the name of God’s love, how they each embody simple human decency, midwestern kindness at its best. I’ve sharpened my writing skills in Minnesota, with talented fellow creators, and found peace and solace at a Benedictine school in the central part of the state. I’ve visited up north where the headwaters of the Mississippi begin, in a small trickling stream and then grow into the mighty, mighty big muddy, by the time it gets to the Twin Cities.
Minnesota is my second home, my home away from home; hence my hurt and heartbreak right now.
I wonder if more and more people actually knew just how wonderful are in the land of “You betcha!” and Minnesota Nice (it’s a real thing), maybe they’d have more compassion towards the state. Perhaps Uncle Sam might not attack it as if it is some wild animal that needs to be put down and yes, that is the energy of human destruction and pain that is happening on the ground there.
I know.
I’ve spoken firsthand to a friend whose daughter was pepper sprayed at her high school by ICE agents stalking their human prey. I’ve heard stories from another friend about driving Somali high school kids to school because their parents are just too rightfully scared of going out in public. Scores of businesses are closed. Schools are going remote. One colleague spoke of what a ghost town his city has become. When people are this scared, of course they stay in and hunker down and just try to survive.
Which means of course if it can happen there it can happen here too.
Imagine three thousand ICE agents marauding through the streets of Framingham or Lawrence or Springfield, dragging people out of cars, smashing windows, kicking down doors, chasing down folks who are guilty of wanting a better life for themselves and their loved ones. That possibility of an ICE invasion here isn’t just some imagined paranoid fever dream. It’s not an imagined nightmare that could never happen to us.
If our friends in the Land of 10,000 Lakes are not safe, then no one in the United States is safe. Not really. Not anymore. If they can come for them they can come for us and come for the people we love and know as neighbors and friends. Coaches and teachers and gardeners and caregivers. Business owners and fellow church members. Folks who sing in a choir with us and live right next door.
Do we need to figure out how to deal with immigration in the United States in the largest sense, and make our system sane, organized and up to date? Do we need to ensure that undocumented dangerous criminals are found and sent home?
Absolutely. Yes.
But let’s do so through dialogue, the rule of law, due process, non-violence and simple human care and decency. Not at the end of the barrel of a gun, nor with the weighted heft of a blackjack poised to strike.
Minnesota… you do not deserve this treatment. No one does. Not in America. Not anywhere. And so for those of us who try our best to love all of our neighbors, no one left out…and for those of us who still love our nation and want it to stand up for mercy, welcome and kindness….let us resist, resist, resist, and always with non-violence….
In Minnesota, in Maine, in Massachusetts, anywhere the innocent and the peaceful and the powerless are threatened. God help us all.
(The views expressed in this essay do not necessarily reflect the views of the people and church I serve nor the United Church of Christ.)
The Reverend John F. Hudson is Senior Pastor of the Pilgrim Church, United Church of Christ, in Sherborn, Massachusetts (pilgrimsherborn.org). He blogs at sherbornpastor.blogspot.com and is a resident scholar at the Collegeville Institute at Saint John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota. For twenty-five years he was a columnist whose essays appeared in newspapers throughout Massachusetts and Rhode Island. He has served churches in New England since 1989. For comments, please be in touch: pastorjohn@pilgrimsherborn.org.

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