Cinco de Mayo

Cinco de Mayo! While not Mexico’s Day of Independance, it is a day to celebrate Mexican heritage.

Food, of course, comes into play here. Do you like spicy food? We most definitely do. Here’s a picture of the grilled, stuffed, chili rellenos we made.

Take a little time today and explore Mexican culture. Try a Mexican restaurant. Read about Mexican history. Volunteer to teach English as a second language in a Spanish speaking community. Learn Spanish at the same time. Watch a film to learn more about conditions immigrants face, such as Amexicano (play instantly on Netflix). Read my post on Juarez. Visit Ciudad Juarez, Mexico just across the border from El Paso, Texas and stretch out of your comfort zone.

Become aware of the severe poverty in which most of the world lives. Become aware of our role in creating or maintaining that poverty.

Take time to learn about another culture. Remember, to know only one culture is to know no culture at all. We need another culture to compare and contrast our own. That’s how we begin to have enough information to critique our own culture.

This is the reason schools actively promote study abroad programs. Getting students immersed (not just a visit or vacation) in another culture gives them a basis from which to view their own culture. By being present to another way of viewing the world we are transformed. In fact, this is the reason the ability to speak another language is a requirement for most masters and doctoral programs in theology.

Go deeper. Entering into another culture is a way to learn more about others and also more about who we are, why we think the way we do and what impact our own culture has on us. For Catholics this is “mission.”

Go deeper still. Learn about immigration reform. Consider how U.S. farm subsidy policies bankrupt farmers in Mexico and elsewhere, causing them to come north looking for work.

For authentic Chili Rellenos here’s what we did. Roast poblano peppers.

Peel the roasted peppers.

Stuff roasted and peeled peppers with strips of queso cheese.

Dip into egg whites whipped stiff with a bit of flour and fry until golden.

Into 1 cup simmering water whisk 1/2 cup of chili powder until red sauce thickens.

Into cooked rice stir chopped cilantro.

Into cooked black beans add green onion, celery or greens of your choice.

Serve chili rellenos smothered in red sauce along with rice and bean mixture. Add a cold beer with lime if you like.

Enjoy.

Mmmmm

Adios!

You may also like Question the Culture, From Dublin to Juarez and Irish Heritage.

On Osama bin Laden’s Death

DH wrote a thoughtful post on our contribution to the frustration and desperation in the two-thirds world that contributes to the emergence of people like Osama bin Laden:

“We are all guilty of complicity in supporting the policies and actions of a government and culture that exploits other nations. We all drive cars and do precious little to push any significant change in our convenience of travel, say change to public transportation.

We all continue to buy “cheap things” (iPods, radios, kitchen appliances, other things) made in other countries (China, Mexico, India) where the workers get paid significantly less than we get paid, and where their wages are unfair and insufficient to live decently.

This means that the price we pay for the products is subsidized by workers off-shore. This means that we exploit their work, exploit their lifestyle, exploit the future of their kids, exploit their health.

We look longingly at (and many times move into) larger living quarters, more plush houses/condos. This also means heating and cooling these environments with ever more scarce energy resources. We use building materials which are ever more scarce to build these living quarters.

We drive SUVs which use more fuel than smaller cars. We pay “through the nose” for the fuel, but this price is not even the true price of the fuel when you consider the all environmental costs, social costs and so on of driving such vehicles.

We send our garbage, our unwanted plasma TVs, LCDs, computer boards and other debris, to some African nation to rot and decompose over there. These folks in that African country end up paying our cheap disposal costs with their health, their environment being polluted beyond repair.

We simply shift our environmental cleanup cost to them. I would call this exploitation. What would you call it?

I do not mean to demonize you, the reader, in any personal way. I am certain that many of the people reading this feel a discomfort and perhaps just gloss over this article. It is HARD to give up a way of life that has comforts, even when we realize how it exploits others.

So we delay dealing with the issue, push it under the carpet. Until some other time.

But all the while, the costs rise, the price rises, and eventually the “platform of the oppressed” (as my friend so aptly call it), solidifies, becomes hardened, perhaps more radical in seeking its own salvation.

What I’d like to see is a tiny movement from each of you readers: Resolve now, today, that you will eliminate one item of empty luxury from your life, an item which exploits others in this country or other countries. Just eliminate or give up ONE item a week, one item a month. No more.

You will make this a wonderful world to live in – for you, for your children, and for me.

Thank you!”

You may also like Cry of the Poor and What Can You and I Do?

New Books

Photo: ArtsJournal.com

It’s always interesting to know what someone is reading. You can learn a lot about someone by perusing their books, looking at what they fill their minds with, browsing what’s on their bookshelves.

If their TV takes up more room than their books – that tells me something too. TV is junk food for the mind. Read. Read. Read. The most important ideas take time and space to explain. Magazine or internet articles won’t do it. It takes books.

As a voracious reader I am always looking for new books that offer insight and new perspectives, especially in the areas of alleviating hunger or solving the complex problem of poverty.

As an author and theologian I read in order to process, understand and ultimately to write. Books that go deeper help me to do this.

As a professor I keep an eye out for inspirational books for my students, books that will change how they view the world.

Here are some new books that I’m reading now, recommended by my friend L., a librarian –

Enough: Why the Word’s Poorest Starve in an Age of Plenty by Roger Thurow and Scott Kilman, PublicAffairs: 2010.

A Thousand Sisters: My Journey Into the Worst Place on Earth to Be a Woman by Lisa J. Shannon, Seal Press: 2011.

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind by Willam Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer, New Harper: 2010.

Exodus From Hunger: We Are Called To Change the Politics of Hunger by David Beckmann, Westminster John Knox: 2010.

29 Gifts: How a Month of Giving Can Change Your Life by Cami Walker, Brightside Communications: 2009.

I haven’t finished these yet – but they promise to be good.

You may also like Six Word Novel, Exercise Your Mind, Cry of the Poor and What Can You and I Do?

May Day

It’s May Day, but we have snow flurries here in Minnesota.

Meanwhile, my jasmine and anthurium plants are full of white and red blooms in my living room. The jasmine has a subtle but sweet scent. Below is a picture of an elegant hibiscus. For now, we must dream about the lavish blooms and scented flowers yet to come . . .

Photo A. Meshar

Krista Tippett on Being

Photo R. Meshar

If thoughtful conversations on faith and God interest you, check out Krista Tippett’s show –

Krista Tippett on Being: meaning, religion, ethics and ideas.

Her serious journalism, in-depth interviews and thoughtful shows are available as Podcasts on the website link above. You can watch them at your convenience.

You may also like Question the Culture or The Story of the Wolf.