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Sabotage Christian Supremacy

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Grace Nichols

April 13, 2021 by Grace Nichols

There continues to be a lot to process after the shooting in Atlanta last month. Tragedy and grief continue to stack and yet we trudge forward. Many of us are numb and exhausted and the thought of one more zoom meeting alone is enough to make us want to disappear forever. 

It feels easy to become inundated with fear that nothing will change. Tragedy in tow, our capitalistic culture insists on moving at a pace that is incredibly harmful. Our central nervous systems are wrecked by the continuous uncertainty of the pandemic, plus one traumatic event after another. Even the little things, like doing the dishes, feel overwhelming and unmanageable. It has become very obvious to me that we will not survive if we continue on in this way. I have been taking a lot of naps, eating a lot of indulgent food, and watching a lot of RuPaul’s Drag Race (a very problematic, guilty pleasure, I know).

I want to lift up the legacy of Black and Asian solidarity and a term used by one of my heroes Grace Lee Boggs that guides me and gives me hope: solutionary. Reconciling an entire white christian supremacist world rightfully feels daunting and unattainable. I witness so many organizers burn themselves out or stay spinning in spirals of unresolved rage. And while rage is righteous, rage alone won’t save us. We also need rest, resolve, laughter, and replenishment if we’re going to be in this fight together for the long haul.

To me, a solutionary approach is to find what is solvable, what is doable, what is attainable in the moment in order to remain in the movement. It’s also employing our innovation and creativity and trusting that change is possible, and that we have everything we need within us and around us to dismantle oppression and build a new world. 

I have learned that I feel the most empowered when I take responsibility for my own actions, my own rest, and my own energy. I am further empowered when I believe that my participation in my community is important. And that I am where I am today because I am part of a collective. We have to believe these things; these must be our inherent truths. And we must become unshakeable in these beliefs. 

At Soulforce, we have never shied away from confronting hate and harm head on. And in my personal life, I know that I am most available to provide support and fight back when I am grounded and well-rested. This isn’t always the case; I’m definitely guilty of not drinking enough water, doom scrolling, and coping in many other non-generative ways. But if I travel down that route too far, I instinctually begin to feel as though I have lost my way. I am called to do much more in the world than witness life happening around me through twitter or the tv screen. I am called to be very active in the overthrow of that which keeps us from being free. 

I feel very in alignment with Soulforce’s charge to face oppression head on, and I believe naming the sources of harm clearly and unapologetically is a central strategy to our healing.

There is no question that white Christian supremacist rhetoric and purity culture emboldened the shooter in Atlanta to do what he did. The united states’ legacies of imperialism, xenophobia, and stigmatization of sex workers made the gunman feel like murder was a perfectly logical and morally justifiable action because Asian women, whether actual or perceived participants in sex work, were a ‘temptation’ that needed to be ‘eliminated.’

This is heart wrenching. How do we reconcile a world where a white guy having a ‘bad day’ feels justified to murder eight people because he felt sexually tempted and repressed? (A lot of deep breaths, punching pillows, and screaming into the void to start.) Because how do you undo such deep seeded messages of hatred and entitlement? It honestly feels like too much. 

But after I’ve had a nap, some good food, and I’ve calmed down my central nervous system, I can expand my purview and remember that the incident in Atlanta is nothing new and neither is our survival, or resistance, resilience, and solidarity. White Christian Supremacy that empowers white guys to kill when they have a bad day is fucking tired. White Christian Supremacy that inspires policy makers to write discrimination into the law is a long-employed strategy of the right. White Christian Supremacy that seeks to control the bodies of women, LGBTQ+, Black, Brown, and disabled people is baked into the foundation of the united states of america.

We have to name the sources of harm clearly and unapologetically. Whenever there is a mass shooting, many politicians respond with this is ‘unamerican.’ And that really makes me laugh. How can we say that a country that was founded on the enslavement of Africans and the genocide of Indigenous people is any different than what it built itself on? 

Although particularly insidious and shameful in its current iteration, exemplified by the numerous extremists who have made it into public office and the slew of bills attacking trans youth proposed this year, we have to remember that White Christian Supremacy is behaving this way because it’s fighting for its survival. This also means we’re making progress and the opposition is scared. As overwhelming as everything can feel right now, we have to remember that we have more tools of resistance available to us than ever. 

There’s a line a in a gorgeous video poem entitled “What came first, the fear or the virus?” by Jenevieve Ting & Jensen Reyes that states:

“If our hurt is connected, so too is our healing, so too is our holding, so too grows our capacity to stand together in the face of fear and render it into a formless fiction.” 

We are far more equipped to defeat the systems of oppression that plague our world than the fear-mongering tactics of the opposition would have us believe. 

White supremacy lies to us all. It divides and dehumanizes. White supremacy will tell us that it’s Black and Brown communities that are tearing each other apart and that we are ‘the violent threats of the world’ that need to be eliminated but in reality, it’s all of us (Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, AND white) that have the capacity to build and organize together to defeat the actual threat of white supremacy. 

Solidarity is our strength. I wrote a haiku that goes:

white supremacy 

lies to white people too, says, 

 ‘this is what white is.’

White supremacy will tell us that there isn’t room for your humanity and mine. White supremacy leaves room for no humanity at all. 

I have been devastated by every mass shooting and police killing that has happened. I don’t need to be Black, disabled, Jewish, Latinx, or a family member of a gunned down child to grieve the loss of those lives.

We should be seeing ourselves, our humanity in each other, and not in a way that is toxically positive or imposing, but one that is deeply connected and reverent of each other. White Christian supremacy will tell us that dominance, hierarchy, and suffering are the only way humans can exist. But we know this is a treacherous lie.

There is room for all of us. There is space for your humanity and mine. Healing and transformation is possible. And there is plenty of time to rest and take care of ourselves and each other so we have the collective will to keep going and create a different world.

I will close with two other lines from the poem I mentioned earlier by Jenevieve Ting & Jensen Reyes:

“…we belong everywhere and we are the living embodiment of a thousand deaths and rebirths, shaped into a body that is still fighting to find a home.”

“We are not afraid because we are not the descendants of fear, we are the descendants of love, and of joy and of possibility and of promise.”

If you are in need of support or if you’re looking for ways to be in solidarity with Asian Pacific Islander communities, here are few resources I recommend:

Atlanta based organization, Asian Americans Advancing Justice is offering bystander training

RedCanarySong – Atlanta based organization supporting migrant sex workers

18MillionRising – National Asian American organization connecting communities through media

Asian Mental Health Collective 

Filed Under: Blog Post

August 24, 2020 by Grace Nichols

This article was originally written for Q de Cuir, a digital Cuban magazine for the empowerment of LGBTQI people. Read the article in Spanish here on Medium.

Why is it that in almost every queer gathering, someone will ask another person, “what’s your sign?” And then the inquirer will go “ahh, I can see that,” or “uh-oh, better watch out!” especially if the responder is a Scorpio or Leo?

Why is astrology so important within queer communities and how is queer affinity to celestial guidance connected to Christian Supremacy?

I’m no expert and there’s no catch all to this question. Even within queer communities, interest in astrology ranges from in-depth study to casual acknowledgement or a ‘food for thought’ type of approach. 

While the investment varies, my take is that queers are more likely to ascribe to astrology because no one has been kicked out of the universe for being gay. The expanse of the universe doesn’t care about our gender or sexuality, in fact these aspects of our lives become trivial when placed in the context of the infinite possibilities of existence available to us.

Commercialized astrology will guide us to ‘finding the love of your life’ or ‘making the right career choice.’ More social justice and queer oriented astrology, such as the offerings made by Chani Nicholas will remind us of our connectivity and collective destiny while affirming our unique and complex experiences.

There is also something quite decolonial or precolonial about astrology because it reconnects us to the earth and nature and literally places us among the planets. Our charts are determined by what was happening in the universe at the moment of our birth and each planet and its position can provide guidance for every aspect of our life. 

This expansive offering is a stark contrast to the rigid, binary gender rules imposed on us by Christian Supremacy. These are the rules that perpetuate notions of women as property and heterosexuality for the sake of procreation as the only acceptable form of sexuality.

For those of us who have been kicked out of faith communities, the stars have always been there, and it’s refreshing to be invited to think more deeply about our unique existence and how we want to be in the world, and co-create our experience with the universe rather than being scolded for not living up to a repressive, dogmatic standard. No one has been condemned for being an ‘unnatural’ Gemini or a ‘disobedient’ Taurus.

Another appeal of this precolonial/decolonial sophistication is that astrology is generally always generative. Astrology done well is rarely ever disparaging. It provides people with a sense of autonomy while connecting us to our past and our futures. It allows us to participate in our own lives in more intentional ways.

Ultimately, what makes astrology appealing, particularly to queers, is the ability to interpret it as you see best for your life. In Christian Supremacy, there’s no room for self-determination, critical thinking, or even feelings about the life instructions given in the Bible. It’s very authoritarian and patriarchal, and if you question or disobey, you’re either condemned or kicked out of the community.

Horoscopes provide guidance without the pressure to be and do anything that doesn’t feel right for you. It’s not for everyone and that’s also part of the appeal; there’s no pressure, just an invitation to think more deeply and expansively about your life and your purpose.

Grace Nichols is the Kinship Minister for Soulforce. They are passionate about transformation through creativity and revolutionary relationship building. They are a Scorpio Sun, Gemini Moon, and Capricorn Rising.

Filed Under: Blog Post

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