New Portland,
OR police chief Chuck Lovell points out on CBS News the
"lack of care or compassion'' by the officers involved in killing George Floyd.
"When I watched the video of what happened to Mr. Floyd ... I remember the big takeaway I had ... it wasn't the tactics, it wasn't the number of officers who were there ... it was really the lack of care and compassion. The thought that this is an idea that could exist ... it almost felt like you're not important. To me, the fight is not with each other. The fight for all of us is against that idea that people, institutions, agencies ... can harbor that feeling and it has bad outcomes for people."
Lovell is right-on
naming the root of racism and so many other -isms; it all comes down to
harboring a lack of care or compassion in one's heart.
How to change
hearts? How to remedy harboring "lack of care or compassion" in
people's hearts?
Many spiritual
teachings present tools for doing just that; it's sometimes called "The
Golden Rule"--treat others as you would like to be treated. And sometimes
we need a road map, a guidebook, an instruction manual for how to get from here
to there.
History presents
many examples to guide us, both negative and positive. U.S. history seems
rife with negative examples of what happens when we harbor lack of care and
compassion in our hearts (slavery, police brutality, wars of invasion and aggression, settler
colonialism, strip mining, clear cutting old growth forests, massacring
indigenous people, polluting industries, discrimination in all its forms, and on and on).
However, Portland
history also presents examples of people uniting together with hearts brimming
with care and compassion.
One such example is
the Free Medical and Dental Clinics founded and run by the Black Panthers and
staffed by volunteer doctors and dentists from OHSU.
(You can read all
about this inspiring time in Lucas Burke and Judson Jeffries' book The
Portland Black Panthers: Empowering Albina and Remaking a City.)
Although Black
Panther free medical and dental clinics were eventually destroyed by a series
of decisions by Portland city officials and urban planners (whose hearts
apparently harbored lack of care and compassion), now is the perfect time to
start fresh. Here's one way.
OHSU, I'm talking
to you. You can encourage dentists and doctors to once again volunteer to treat
folks for free. In addition to studying the Black Panthers' Free Medical and
Dental Clinics as a model of care and compassion, you can also emulate the
volunteer-run Haight
Ashbury Free Clinic.
Founded in 1967,
the Haight Ashbury Free Clinic's mission is "provide compassionate care
regardless of anyone's ability to pay." It was the Haight Ashbury
Free Clinic's volunteers who coined the now famous phrase, "Health care is
a right, not a privilege."
In conclusion,
there are many ways (beyond a major restructuring of how police behave) we can
nurture each other with hearts harboring care and compassion. One way is for
volunteer doctors and dentists from OHSU to ASAP staff free medical and dental
clinics in locations accessible for lots of Black folks and everyone. Follow
the successful models of the former Portland Black Panthers', and current
Haight-Ashbury, Free
Clinics. Quickly establishing volunteer-staffed free medical and dental
clinics is one of many ways to follow Portland's new police chief Chuck
Lovell's implied advice to harbor care and compassion in our hearts.
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