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Tag Archives: The Lost Cause

BABY, DON’T LET ‘EM STEAL YOUR JOY!

Cartoon used by permission: 276723_DeSantis Slavery benefits by Dave Granlund, PoliticalCartoons.com

As an African-American grandmother who thought the Civil Rights Movement, the Voting Rights Act, and the election of our first Black President had catapulted us at least a century-plus away from the sin and ignorance of slavery, I am in complete despair over DeSantis’ latest efforts to whitewash the filthiness of American history. He is basically saying: “White people, White people, don’t worry, be happy! Slavery didn’t steal Black people from their homeland, force them to labor for free, rape their women, maim and torture them, break up their families and sell them like bales of cotton across the country. White people, don’t you worry your pretty little heads about this fake news. No, no, no, no, no…those slaves learned much needed skills to make them good, solid American citizens. Slavery was actually beneficial to Black people. Plus, ignore what you heard about us White folks causing mass slaughter to thousands of them in towns like Tulsa, Ocoee, and Rosewood. Nothing to see here: Black people themselves perpetrated a lot of the violence that came upon them. It was their fault their houses were burned down, their lands were stolen, and that they were lynched. That’s why we’re revising the curriculum in our school text books here in Florida, so that our fair-haired White babies won’t have their feelings hurt or be traumatized by the truth…oops, I mean by fake news.”

Cartoon used by permission: 276777_The Benefits of Slavery by Bruce Plante, PoliticalCartoons.com

Since the news broke about DeSantis and his horrid actions, my daily prayer is one of utter despair: “Why, Oh Lord? How long, Oh Lord must Black folks put up with the erasure of our historical pain and the Whitewashing of America’s racist history?”

Recently, I confessed my anger and despair to a group of Black women who are my age and older, and who have traveled similar paths: born poor, educated through college acceptance thanks to Affirmative Action laws, procured great jobs, and settled down in a nice retirement area and life.  Black women are the most resilient people I have ever met.  No matter what level of Hell we are dragged into, we manage to rise—to keep going.

Cartoon used by permission: 148993_Maya Angelou by Bob Englehart, PoliticalCartoons.com

As we all shook our heads and did the Black woman “tisk” (“Um, um, um…”), one of them gave me the Black woman benediction of their mothers and grandmothers that has sustained us for generations: “Baby, don’t let ‘em steal your joy!”

I meditated on the sources of joy in the days that followed my counsel from Black women. I decided that “joy” blossoms out of other actions, and I’d look for joy whenever and wherever I encountered love, peace, kindness, mercy, laughter, music, books, theater, art, and beauty.  It only took a few days to come across a cache of beauty on tour in Virginia Beach, Virginia: “Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience.”  It was a truly exhilarating spiritual experience that enveloped me in beauty and astonished me by lifting my spirit above the ignorance and hatred of the day.

Event Poster/Va. Beach July 2023

“Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience” is a world-wide tour that explores hundreds of masterpieces in one place as Van Gogh’s art turns the surfaces around you (including the floor) into your personal digital museum of beauty.  The experience is enveloped in music as well as Vincent van Gogh’s quotes about life, love, and beauty which fade in and out of the exhibit.

Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh

Photo: Courtesy of JRT
Photo: Courtesy of JRT

To Theo van Gogh, Arles, 5 June 1888

Photo: Courtesy of JRT

To Theo van Gogh, Arles, 11 April 1888

Photo: Courtesy of JRT

Vincent van Gogh believed sunflowers symbolized gratitude.

Vincent suffered from mental illness, depression, and despair most of his life culminating in his cutting off most of his left ear, which he gave to a prostitute? /cleaning woman? (inconclusive historical reports as to occupation of ear recipient) after an altercation with the French artist, Paul Gauguin.

Vincent was a commercial failure: painted 900 paintings but sold only one in his lifetime.

…and yet—his capture of the beauty of nature in the midst of madness ministered to me in July 2023—a Black woman whose faith in country and mankind is failing her.

Starry Night, Vincent van Gogh, Google Art Project

To Theo van Gogh, Arles, 18 August 1888

Starry, Starry Night (my personal favorite)—Van Gogh painted this scene while looking out the window of a mental institution.

“Starry, starry night

Paint your palette blue and gray

Look out on a summer’s day

With eyes that know the darkness in my soul”

—“Vincent” by Don McLean

Dr. Paul Gachet, Auvers-Sur-Oise, 1890, Public Domain

Dr. Paul Gachet cared for Van Gogh during the last few months of his life and was at his bedside when Vincent died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound suffered 30 hours earlier.  Vincent van Gogh died unknown, impoverished, and in horrible despair that his art would ever make an impression on our deeply flawed world.

The Dr. Gachet painting sold for 82.5 Million in 1990.  It still remains the record price for a Van Gogh work at auction.

After the exhibit, I returned to the very real world with all the White racist bullshit I still have to live with on a daily basis.  And yet…my soul does feel a little lighter, a little happier, a little more joyful than what it was before stepping into Vincent’s world.  I don’t know exactly why, except being able to immerse myself in the beauty of art produced by someone who suffered so deeply and painfully over 130 years ago gave me the joy I needed to “rise up” in spite of the darkness that washes over me on a daily basis.  Thank you, Vincent.

DEAR READER: If you get a chance to experience Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience (beyondvangogh.com) in your area, please do so.  You won’t regret it!

Cartoon used by permission: 276738_Sanitize American History by John Darkow, Columbia Missourian

Eleanor Tomczyk is an author and a satirist who is an award-winning voice-over performer.  In 2011, she created the blog, “How the Hell Did I End Up Here” which features mostly satirical posts that have thousands of readers around the world—although she was recently banned in Pakistan (for real!).  Tomczyk’s three books were featured in a recent book festival: “Monsters’ Throwdown,” “Fleeing Oz,” and “The Fetus Chronicles—Podcasts to my Miseducated Self.”  Currently in her 70s and living life like it is freakin’ golden, she is a consummate storyteller and much sought-after motivational speaker.  If you don’t believe me, just ask her!

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Posted by on July 27, 2023 in Uncategorized

 

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