Parallels seen in Pakistan to U.S. civil rights struggles
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Andris Salter |
Jan. 13, 2006
A UMNS Report
By Kelly Martini*
For Andris Salter, a
trip to Pakistan ? where Christians suffer persecution and have seen
their churches burned ? served as a reminder of the struggles of the
U.S. civil rights movement.
Salter, an executive
with the Women?s Division, United Methodist Board of Global Ministries,
traveled to Pakistan in November with a group of four women from
different denominations and countries. They represented a women?s
solidarity delegation sponsored by the World Council of Churches.
With the United States
celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Jan. 16, Salter reflected on
how her Pakistan experience evoked intense feelings about civil rights,
persecution, and her belief that the work started by the civil rights
leader must continue, both nationally and globally.
?Being an
African-American woman in Pakistan, I could relate so much to what the
oppressed people there are struggling with,? Salter explained. One of
the stopovers for her delegation was a Pakistani town where protesters
had burned five churches, as well as homes of Christians, to the ground.
Hearing the stories of
Pakistani Christians and seeing the burned houses and churches
paralleled her experiences of living through the civil rights era in the
United States.
?I could not help but
relate it to the black church burnings,? she said. ?I kept stopping
myself because I was having difficulty separating black church burnings
in the United States with the church burnings in Pakistan.?
Salter recalled the
hatred that drove people to burn churches in the 1960s. Hatred ran so
deeply that people obliterated black houses of worship to ensure nothing
could be saved.
?They would make sure
to throw rocks through every single window pane, not just one.
They would smash every flower pot and decimate every room in a building.
They wanted to destroy people?s souls,? she said. ?Burning a church is
destroying something people have wrapped their lives around.?
Seeing the burned
churches and houses in Pakistan ? knowing that, in one instance, 400
Bibles were burned ? also reminded Salter that the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr. started a movement that has to press forward and look both
internally and globally.
?Look at what is
happening around Hurricane Katrina,? she added. ?The media does not pay
attention anymore. People are still suffering. Imagine all the things
black people have lost, and yet, they do not get the justice they
deserve. Insurance companies are refusing to pay claims or are paying
only small portions of the claims.?
In Pakistan, Salter
witnessed instances where the country has been taking care of its
neighbors better than the United States has for its own citizens
following the hurricanes. In one camp for Afghan refugees,
Pakistan has created schools, health care centers and markets for
handmade goods where refugees can sell their wares for fair prices.
?We sit in judgment of
these folks (Pakistanis), but go to Louisiana, Mississippi or Florida ?
we have made them refugees by not treating them fairly in our response.?
Salter recalled one
story of a black man whose house was destroyed because of the hurricane.
Although his house was valued at $165,000, he received only $8,000 in
insurance. The insurance company defended its decision, saying the house
was destroyed by winds, not flooding, which was all the insurance
covered.
?We need to celebrate
Martin Luther King Jr.?s birthday, but we need to speak up for the
injustices that we still have not cared for in our nation,? Salter
declared. ?Martin Luther King struggled so we could get to the place
where we didn?t have to struggle and so we wouldn?t see people?s skin.
Yet, skin color is still the barometer by which we judge people in this
country.?
In other countries, the
struggle for justice may not be due to skin color, but it?s very real.
?I was most impressed with the women in Pakistan who choose to be
Christian, even though they face persecution,? Salter said. ?When they
make this choice, it often comes with a harder life.?
Many women are pushed
into the sex market for economic reasons. They live as second-class
citizens because they are women. They struggle with their own dreams for
their daughters. Injustice and discrimination have close ties.
?These women have lived this life for so long that they often cannot see a new dream for themselves,? Salter pointed out.
?For me, these are the injustices that Martin Luther King tried to stop. We?ve made some strides, but we have a long way to go.?
*Martini is communications director for the Women?s Division.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Resources
Country Profiles: Pakistan
Women?s Division
World Council of Churches
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