Sunday, April 27, 2008

It is All About Relationships and Love


(L-R) Libra Finley (my oldest daughter)and my oldest sister, Betty Holmes



Betty Holmes served as MC at our mother's 85th birthday celebration.



L-R Natalie and her three boys. She is married to my nephew Ranu who is my sister, Gwen's son.



L-R Part of Reggie's family - He is in the middle and is my brother. He is with his two daughters Tynisha and ______ and his girlfriend to his right



L-R my brother Jerome and his youngest daughter, Tasheka Vaughn on the left and his friend Gwen Powell on right. His older daughter, Takara Tuff also attended but is not featured in this picture.



L-R My nephew Ranu and his wife, Natalie and their three sons.




My oldest sister Betty and her grand daughter on left and step grand daughter on the right and new infant grandson in his mothers arms. We all prayed for him because he was having a surgical procedure to relieve a blockage. We are knowing him to be in perfect health and wholeness! My nephew, Keith, father to two children and son of my sister Betty.



L-R Brenda (my sister); Gwen (my sister); Corlissa (my niece); and Shavonda (my niece) and her son Demetrius. Shavonda will soon be returning for a 3rd tour to Afghanistan. We hold her in prayer.



As I get older I seem to get wiser. What I know for sure is that life is all about a sense of being connected, relationships with family, and friends, ones sense of self, work that has meaning and purpose, nurturing an ongoing relationship with that which is sacred and divine in life and leaving something that says, “I passed this way.”

Attending my mothers 85th birthday with my nine siblings, our children and our children’s children in Detroit the weekend of April 26 was an experience that I will carry in my heart for a life time. We laughed and cried and celebrated and acknowledged one another and drew from our rich and deep well of religion and spirituality. We are far from being the Huxtables. However, we have come a mighty long way over our life time. And it was good to be able to see and experience the fruits of our efforts. If I felt that way as a sibling, I can only guess a my mother’s feelings of gratitude and amazement at having come from far with so much.

Like any family we have had our ups and downs, our feuds and falling outs. But we are still standing. And for that I am eternally grateful to Spirit. I am grateful for a mother and father that taught us right from wrong. I am grateful that they cared enough to stick around. They were both far from perfect and we were less than perfect children. But they showed their love in their own ways while wrestling with their demons.

My mama was a praying woman, a church going woman and a staunch Christian. She is the source of my spirituality. She was a devoted mother while we were growing up and determined that we would “make something of ourselves.” Having raised three children through three marriages I know the perils and challenges of raising children. One of the most important responsibilities in society does not come with an instructional manual. Yet, as hard as it sometimes was being a single parent it never occurred to me to walk away from my children. That was simply never an option.

Yet my mama paid a price for choosing her children over a life that included her dreams for herself. She did not get to live her own life. So her life after my daddy’s death and once all my siblings grew up and left home is even a sweeter time. Because she finally gets to do with her life what she wants to do. Serving the Lord and serving her children is what she derives so much pleasure from. I hope in the twilight of her life she knows that she has been an inspiration to her children and others. I hope she knows that her life matters and that she has made a difference. And that the things that she was not able to teach me that I managed to learn the on my own because of the foundation she provided. And that were I not so absorbed in my own woundedness that I would have been able to see that.
Blessed Be! Rev. Dr. Qiyamah

Detroit: The Beauty Shines Through in a City in Crisis


















Detroit: The Beauty Shines Through in a City in Crisis

The spring unlike winter time makes me more generous of spirit and more inclined to seek the high road in matters. Such was the case recently when I traveled to Detroit the weekend of April 26 for my mother’s 85th birthday. Walking along the waterfront with my older daughter Libra, I took the preceeding pictures. Spring is evident in the blooming dogwoods, daffodils and tulips everywhere. The shimmering and rolling waves of the sky blue Detroit River played host to the fishermen and boaters seduced by a combination of the weather and beckoning water. Momentarily, I forgot about the serious fiscal and moral challenges that plague the City of Detroit. Instead, I luxuriated in the beauty and history of Detroit where I spent the first twenty-three years of my life. Like feuding lovers, I am ready to bury the hatchet, claim this friendship and remember the good times we shared together over the years. The pictures taken along the waterfront and Jefferson Avenue capture a fragment of what makes Detroit so beautiful. Yet, I cannot help adding that for every such scene there are dozens that portray the devastation of Detroit and its people. I only hope and pray that the tide of progress can turn around things for the citizens of Detroit who deserve so much better.

Blessings! Rev. Dr. Qiyamah

Friday, April 25, 2008

New Beginnings


L-R mom (Elvina W. Vaughn) and Rev. Qiyamah - Detroit 2007


L-R Haniyyah friend) and Libra (daughter)- Detroit 2007



L-R Betty (sister); Libra (daughter); Brandon (grandson); James (ex and friend)- Atlanta 2006



L-R 1st row mom & Rev. Q 2nd row L-R Gwen (sis); Brenda (sister); nephew; Jerome (brother) and Betty (sister)Atlanta



L-R Libra and Kaleema April, 2008 Chicago, IL My youngest daughter, Kaleema, came to Chicago for a human rights conference and so her sister, Libra, joined us and we had a wonderful weekend of it! I can't remember the last time we were all together in the same place.


Rev. Q!



L-R Mom and Libra

The following is a sermon that I delivered at vesper services on Wednesday, April 23rd, my mother's 85th birthday:

Spring is the traditional time of year when we celebrate new beginnings, when we are hopeful and our gratitude abounds.

Recently I saw a sign on a department store window that read:

Please pardon our appearances. Magical things are in store!

Spring strikes me as a magical time with shoots pushing almost magically above ground and blooms appearing almost magically.

Spring represents the start of new beginnings when hope is ever present and reigns supreme – full of enchantment and magic!

We begin to shed some of our cumbersome clothes. I say hello to my long lost friend, the sun that kisses my face and skin and I speak to individuals on the street and I feel a generosity of spirit that winter simply does not invite. Frankly, winter makes me cranky.

But enough about the weather. This sermon is about new beginnings.

I have two stories to share with you.

The first story is about my mother and her reflections on turning 85 today

The second is about my daughter and her dark night of the soul

Mother
A couple of years ago I hired a facilitator for a weekend family retreat. My intent was to address some issues that were inhibiting our ability to be close as extended family. Only five member’s attended. But it was a case of the right people at the right time in the right place. The next day when some tension surfaced between one of my sister’s and my mom I was amazed to hear my mom, “I would like for us to take a time out and then resume this conversation at a later time.” My mom was not a time out mom when I was growing up. She was a kick ass mom and take no prisoners. She had clearly been listening when the facilitator walked us through effective communications. My amazement was an indication that I was holding my mother hostage. In my mind she was still the mother of my childhood – totally devoted to our wellbeing, quiet and not very sophisticated. A woman whose life had been subsumed by a violent and possessive husband and the demands of too many children. Yet, her encounter with my sister taught me that she was still growing and learning well into her 80s and that she could assimilate new information and apply it immediately. She had also learned to advocate on her behalf.
I was not guilty of ageism. No, I was guilty of momism. Not seeing my mother as a human being capable of a life outside of my existence, nor seeing her as capable of choices and certainly not rebirthing herself. Instead, I saw her as my mother, with practically no identity or personality. But while I wasn’t looking she was working to heal from the affects of an abusive marriage and societal restrictions based on her gender, race and class.

This is a woman that only wanted three children and ended up with twelve pregnancies. A woman with a year of college married to a man with a third grade education, a self made man but limited formal education nevertheless.
In an interview that I recently conducted with her she said:
When I came along I wasn’t able to use birth control. One baby after another is hard. If when you get married you can plan your children to get time to know one another and space them. You need time to do things for one another. When I came to Detroit I came with the intention of taking up nursing. So I was never able to do these things. I accepted it because I felt God had a plan for my life whatever happened.
So many learning abilities and new opportunities have opened up (for women now). I grew up in a small town (in the South). There were probably opportunities that I didn’t know about. I wasn’t streetwise. I was bought up in a religious way and didn’t know about a lot of things. Although, as I look back I have no regrets. I know God had a plan for my life. I have no regrets even in my marriage. I don’t look back on it as a tragedy. I look at it as God’s plan for my life. If it hadn’t been then I wouldn’t be able to be where I am at. I matured and I understand life. I just feel so blessed.

New beginnings! Even at 85 years old. She is pretty amazing. She exercises and appears to be in her 60s or 70s. She is totally devoted to the church. My mother still knells at her bedside morning and night for prayer. She evokes the power of a prayer warrior. I believe that her prayers and those of my ancestors have prayed me, my people and others through life’s passages, celebrations and challenges and on to new beginnings.

My last Story is about my daughter and her dark night of the soul

During her first year of law school my youngest daughter called me one night in a complete meltdown. She was feeling unable to compete – not bright enough; not capable enough. You know that dark night of the soul when we simply cannot find any evidence of our worth and value. We believe everyone else is so much more than we are - brighter, more attractive and more socially engaging. I knew as I listened to her that it was time to remind her of our people and our roots. She knows the story but she needed to hear it again. I talked with her for over an hour. When I got off the phone I wrote down my conversation with her.
The resulting poem is titled, It is That Time and That Place.
It is now time to call on the memories of the ancestors when they thought they could not walk another step toward freedom – and yet they did;

It is that time and place to call on the memories of the ancestors when the darkness of their lives threatened to take away the hope and light and they reached a little deeper and prayed still another prayer to get through the long nights
to witness still another sunrise.

It is that time and place to remember the oceans of tears shed to deliver us to this time, to remember the bent knees and bowed backs and the fervent voices asking, begging and beseeching for loved ones sold off.

It is time to remember the laughter and joy though they had far less, and little reason for optimism and yet they stayed on the path towards a better day.

It is time to hold fast to the unchanging hands and hearts and prayers of the ancestors that have brought us this far.

It is time to make them proud and show them and ourselves what we are made of
To show them that their prayers and sacrifices and lives were not in vain and did not go unnoticed, nor have they been forgotten.

Did you not know that this day would come?

Did you not know that we would have to change places and that you would be the one praying and working for better times?

Did you not know that just as our ancestors were delivered that you would also be delivered?

Have you not seen the greatness and power of the Creative Energy in the Universe called God that moves and has its being through human agency?

Have you not seen God in your neighbor’s faces? In the homeless, in the battered woman? The trafficked child? The undocumented worker? The dispossessed?

It is that time and that place now to know that we must leave a legacy for our children
And for all the children.
It is that time and that place.

We are the ones we’ve been waiting for!
And for that, let us be eternally grateful for new beginnings!

I have shared the stories of my mother and my daughter in this season of new beginnings, in this place of new beginnings and among individuals considering New Beginnings. Let us take pause and reflect on the new beginnings in our lives.


Amen and Blessed Be!

Saturday, April 12, 2008

The Gates of the Heart Were Flung Open and Love Poured Forth: Honoring the Ancestors in Costa Rica




















L-R Kaleema (my daughter), Rev. Qiyamah and Stephanie Berry (my friend and Kaleema's godmother)


While it has only been three months since my incredible journey to Costa Rica it feels like a lifetime ago. Some days it feels like a dream because it was so incredible and almost surreal. I now have some pictures to prove that it was all that!

In the process we met an incredible brother from the States, James Doberman, broadway actor and singer who is now a world class photographer. You can be the judge from the pictures. You can also go to his website to view his gallery of pictures taken around the world (google his name since I have lost his web address).

Back to our pictures - So my daughter Kaleema, my friend Stephanie Berry and I all dressed in white and went out on photo shoots with James. I was not prepared for what occured. It was literally enchanting and magical!
Blessed Be! Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman

The Gates of the Were Heart Flung Open and Love Poured Forth!
by Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman


It started as a simple invitation from my daughter Kaleema to visit her in San Jose, Costa Rica where she was interning at the Interamerican Human Rights Court through Northeastern University where she was a law student. Momentarily, I reviewed all the reasons why it was not practical for me to go. Fate had already set into motion a $400 travel voucher from American Airlines which allowed me to pay only $135 out of pocket. The Universe was saying Y-E-S-S-S to me and I was stepping out on my tenuous but growing faith. I had just endured a grueling year of non-stop classes after having sold my home and packed up my cat and everything that my little Prius car could hold and headed off to Chicago, IL. to complete seminary.
Once I fully embraced the invitation I almost immediately knew it wasn’t just about my presence but that my friend of 35 years, Stephanie Berry, also my daughter’s godmother should come so that we could do the writing she had been encouraging me to do – to write about the ups and downs of our lives, including the movement years that we shared in Atlanta, Georgia in the 1970s. We were two young black women coming of age in marriages during that time, and we had grown to be strong and had weathered some hard times and had known and still know some hard times. Steph said yes and the adventure began.

From the moment that my daughter’s invitation was offered, the gates of my heart were flung wide open and my demons and angels surfaced to show me the reality of my soul and God poured forth love and compassion as I stepped pass the whispers telling me that I couldn’t afford it and that it wasn’t a good time. You know, all the stuff that we tell ourselves when we are on the brink of true greatness and moving out of mediocrity.

Diva Personalities
Kaleema was ready to create having an adventure because of the legal work she is doing with the InterAmerican Court of Human Rights which is requiring so much left brained work as is the case in law school. Stephanie Berry, a celebrated, creative, talented and energetic actress/activist was ready to move her life to the next level and claim her power. And then there was me - moving into a new phase in my life after spending all of 2007 taking over 13 classes back to back in order to finish this marathon in academia. So now that I had finished what next? I thought South Africa? Who knows!

San Jose
I arrived in San Jose on January 28, 2008, a day later than my original itinerary. Chicago was experiencing a heat wave with temperatures in the 60s when I departed. When I finally arrived in Fort Worth, TX their record high was in the 80s. That same week both destinations reversed their heat waves, sending folks scurrying for their coats and boots with freezing temperatures. The reality of global warming is more real for those traveling across country directly experiencing and hearing the puzzled comments from fellow travelers and residents about the unpredictable and strange weather patterns.

I spent the first week indoors writing and telling myself that I came to write and not to be a tourist. That was one truth. The other truth is that I was scared to go out by myself among people that I could not communicate with. I had spent six months in Ghana by myself and so how was this so different? This was a new fear, unable to communicate and to possibly be thought of as the “other.” Meanwhile, my daughter was planning her escape out of Dodge (San Jose). She has a knack for event planning and finding great accommodations in our price range. I thought we would wait for Steph who was arriving the following week. However, my daughter was eager to get to the ocean. Thus, we traveled to Puerto Viejos, four and a half hours away. It is an area located on the Caribbean Ocean that mostly derives its income from tourism. We stayed in a little retreat center, Tierra de Suenos (Place of Dreams) that was so beautiful and peaceful that it is difficult to describe. It was just what the doctor ordered. We stayed until the following week although Kaleema should have returned to work much earlier.

Return Trip to Playa Chiquita and Puerto Viejo
Once Steph arrived in San Jose were wasted little time getting outselves to Puerto Viejo. The three of us arrived and it seemed like nothing had changed. The ocean welcomed us with it rushing waves sending us greetings and letting us know we that we were missed. It felt so good to see familiar faces in the little town that had managed to survive our absence and now greeted us as we had never been away. Everything was just as we left it. Cars bustling down the streets, street vendors selling fruit and jewelry. Wannabe surfers carrying surf boards with dreams of riding the next big wave and sporting white boy dred locks. Bicyles are the favored mode of transportation for the hoards of tourists and many residents seen pedaling into town from the outskirts along the dusty road. During the day some of the vendors located on the main road wash down some of the dust with water hoses.

Our first day I eagerly laid out the necklaces that I had bought each of us. Along with the necklaces I had selected beads for necklace making. I included a box of crayons, scissors, markers, construction paper and even postcards depicting Costa Rica. I arranged these gifts on the counter and eagerly anticipated the girls fussing over them. They did and it was like Christmas every day. Our days began with, “Daily Word,” a spiritual reading to plant seeds for the day in my minds. As the unofficial chaplain I took my job seriously to foster a sense of the Divine among us. All this was followed by exercise and a small breakfast provided by staff. When we returned on this second trip we had a bungalow with a refrigerator that we stocked with a few essentials. We did arts and crafts and jewelry making. We had decided early on that each of us would have a day that we were responsible for planning. Thus, each day was different and yet reflected an emphasis on things we each wanted to do. We threw a party while we were there and treated ourselves with gifts, dinner and engaged our creative muses.

Kaleema and Steph went next door to the Yoga Center and participated in classes. They described what it was like to look out into the lush tropical forest that was immediately in front of them as they moved through varied but familiar yoga poses. I stuck with my tried and true cardio kick boxing. The point is that we did the things we needed to do to rejuvenate body, mind and spirit. We had some incredible experiences, eating at the little outdoor stand, Vida Sana where we had my favorite dish, gallo pinto and plantenos (rice, beans and plantains). We went into town on a daily basis to the Chili Rojo Restaurant which was Kaleema's favorite eating place. Chili Rojo is directly across the street from the ocean and when cars were not parked there we had a direct view of the ocean's majestic waves and its almost hypnotic sound that reminded me of times on the beach when holding a huge conch up to ones ear and hearing the roar of the ocean. That sound was almost at arms length calling seductively to us. The sunsets were to die for.

Photo Shot

We commissioned James Doberman, a professional photograher and a brother from the states. We dressed totally in white and then went on photo shoots. At one point we were at the ocean and frolicking in the water and flirting with the camera when Steph began to sing an African chant. I almost wanted to weep it was so beautiful and so right for the moment. More than once we stopped and gave thanks for the opportunity to be present in the land of our people and for the beauty around us. We did something similar at one of the waterfalls near San Jose that we went to. My daughter cut off her friendship bracelet that she has worn since the eighth grade (she is 31 now) and then tossed it into the water to be carried over a waterfall as we said some words with her standing barefoot in the cold mountainous waters.

Rituals
The three of us are about ritual without really naming it as such. Sometimes it was very intentional and structured. Other times it was spontaneous and just right for that moment. Sometimes one has to simply go with the Spirit and move when the Spirit says move. Our friend and photographer, King James, appeared to be sorely in need of some loving and delightful non-sexual energy. So after our party waned and our other guests left, with incense burning and soothing music in the background we did a good old fashioned foot washing for King James. If you can picture a brother with short twists, designer glasses, walking around with his lap top and a hunting knife tucked into his waist sitting with me washing his feet and pronouncing and naming the healing energies of the ancestors you might have a glimpse into that ritual. That night he was even packing a small revolver and a full sized pellet rifle in a gun case slung across his shoulder. He travels with his dog "Bones" although he bought all four of his hyper and undisciplined dogs that we had to send packing that night since they were creating so much chaos. At any moment King James upon request can burst forth with a medley of show tunes and tap dancing that soothes his wilderness soul almost as much as the nearby rainforests he frequents. The foot washing allowed the giving and receiving of loving energy in a non-sexual exchange in both a symbolic and physical healing and transformation. It also demonstrates the power of humility and stewardship. I sensed that it was important for me to do the footwashing as part of my initiation into ministry. I needed to heal the energy that was preventing me from being in a healthy loving relationship. In that moment King James represented all the Black men in the Universe that needed a moment out from life to just be in a safe place and know that they are loved and that they are the children of God regardless to what others say and do. And I needed to remember that about them. I am so thankful to Steph for suggesting this ritual which is still practiced in many faith communities and among sister circles during crone ceremonies and special events. One minister on New Year’s Eve that I recall, washes the feet of all her congregation members.

I also met a Euro American botanist that teaches at the University of Wisconsin and also teaches cocoa farmers how to maximize their production and profits. He owns a small farm house and has been going back and forth between the States and Costa Rica for 30 years. I was exposed to a group of African Americans that are creating a life for themselves in new and different locations outside the States. What an amazing trip.

Conclusion
Costa Rica was a wonderful healing experience that addressed the healing of body, mind and spirit. Using our various areas of expertise we explored some writing possibilities. On the very last day and less than an hour and a half back in San Jose Steph walked us through breathing and movement exercises, including writing exercises to help us get in touch with our bodies and our inner thoughts. As I write these words I am wearing a necklace that I made while I was in Costa Rica. I have made four other necklaces since then, something that I have not done for many years since I used to make prayer beads. The trip has left a permanent impression on me. I am so thankful for the respite I received in the midst of my busy and sometimes chaotic life. I am grateful for the time I was able to spend with my daughter and friend. I feel like we experienced something that strengthened our bonds and tied us together in a way not previously known.

We are planning to return in August, 2008. This time I will be conducting research on violence against Afro Costa Rican women in and around Limon and Puerto Viejo. Limon is the location where the majority of Afro Costa Rican's are located. I look forward to this return visit though on a more somber note to find out how serious the issue is among Afro Costa Rican's and to working on my Spanish. In a future post I will share what I have learned about domestic violence in general.
Blessings! Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Blessing Diversity in Unitarian Univeralism



(Unitarian Universalist Ministers, seminarians and Directors of Religious Education of color at a recent Retreat in Burlingame, CA)

The following reflections were written by Rev. Bill Sinkford, the President and first African American elected to the Unitarian Universalist Association. I have devoted a fair amount of space to the life and activities of Unitarian Universalists (UUs) or more particularly to UUs of Color and so I thought that it might be helpful to hear from our elected leader.
warmest regards, Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman


Blessing Difference
WILLIAM SINKFORD
Posted March 21, 2008 9:56 AM
As the first African American head of a predominantly white denomination, I still get asked whether I have any insights to offer other leaders in my position...We have long known that the most segregated hour in America is 11 o'clock on Sunday morning.

Rev. William Sinkford is president of the Unitarian Universalist Association.
________________________________________
When I was elected President of the Unitarian Universalist Association in 2001, reporters called me a "black shepherd with a white flock." The novelty of my ancestry eventually became less newsworthy than my liberal theology and my progressive stance on various social issues. But as the first African American head of a predominantly white denomination, I still get asked whether I have any insights to offer other leaders in my position. I also get asked by my constituents, "How can we make Unitarian Universalism more racially diverse?" I think the answers to these two questions are closely related.
First, the reality for African Americans is that in order to exercise more influence in "mainstream" organizations, we must accept that we will always be a numerical minority. The challenge for us is to work successfully within that reality. This is also true in religious life, where we have long known that the most segregated hour in America is 11 o'clock on Sunday morning. Although Unitarian Universalism is certainly open to welcoming new congregants of color, I sometimes joke with my colleagues in historically black churches that they shouldn't lose any sleep worrying that we'll steal their members.
I tell Unitarian Universalists - most of them well-intentioned white folks - that it's not spiritually grounded for us to seek to acquire a few more black and brown faces in the pews. This approach might have the advantage of making current members feel better about themselves, but diversity for its own sake fails. It fails because it doesn't address the complexity of history and community, and it does nothing to challenge the structural racism that dominates American society in all areas. As a spiritual leader, I'm called to make those two tasks central to my mission.
I'm proud of my faith's history of leadership in the abolition and civil rights movements, but I don't fool myself that my presidency will magically transform Unitarian Universalism into a genuinely multicultural denomination. That will take decades, if it happens at all. Meanwhile, we are working hard to become racial justice advocates within our churches, our local communities, and American society as a whole. If we truly succeed in this, the numbers will take care of themselves.
Unitarian Universalists discovered this principle through our work on behalf of bisexual, gay, lesbian, and transgender people. This important justice work was neither quick nor easy. Our discernment process was long and hard, and we had to confront ignorance with truth and fear with hope. In the early days, some nay-sayers warned that if we took up this work, we'd become known as "the gay church" (as if there was something wrong with that). Well, after several decades of supporting equality for BGLT folks - ministers, congregants, and citizens in the wider population - what actually happened was that our membership started to reflect the demographics of America as a whole. The percentage of openly BGLT folks in our congregations, including clergy, grew to the point where it is now about the same as in general society, and part of this shift was due to long-time members feeling safer about being out. We believe that closets have no place in our churches. For other religious organizations, this level of inclusion and visibility might seem threatening, but for us, it feels like justice.
We also found that our welcoming policies also attracted progressive straight folk, people who wanted to belong to a church that stands on the side of love. Attracting allies is a key benefit to becoming more welcoming. White, straight allies might not contribute to numerical diversity, but they are vital to the success of any program of deep, meaningful social change.
This vital work for BGLT equality is just beginning to take hold in other religious groups, including the so-called "Black Church" (which is far more socially and theologically diverse than we are often led to believe). It is my fervent hope that these groups come to understand that this is deeply religious work. My prayer is that more and more faith communities will recognize and affirm that all of us, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity, are children of God.
For the past decade or so, the Christian right has tried to divide religious communities by focusing on hot-button topics like marriage equality and a woman's right to choose. For a while it looked like they were succeeding, but lately I'm finding signs of hope in some of the most unexpected places. Religious communities, including evangelicals and even Southern Baptists, are beginning to shift their focus to pressing justice issues such as global warming, environmental racism, and poverty -- issues that touch us all, whatever our race, creed, gender, or sexual orientation.
If we can come together to address these challenges, religious communities can become a force that moves the entire society toward the Beloved Community. Along the way, we may also find that our differences can be blessings rather than curses, and that our divisions pale in comparison to the common humanity we share. The heart of the gospel abides: Love thy neighbor as thyself.
Permalink | Comments (1)
________________________________________
________________________________________
1 Comments
By Mildred on March 21, 2008 3:05 PM
Excellent commentary, and, I wonder if all those who are so "outraged' at one man's version if his life in America would be attending a church where blacks would felt comfortable? I think not many, hence the reason the 11 o'clock hour on Sunday is still one of the most segregated in the country, and, one of the reasons all this "faith and religion" needs to be removed from the political arena, since, I can say I don't agree with any of the faiths that the 3 last candidates believe in, and, it shouldn't be a barometer of anything, since at last check, not everyone in the country was a Christian, and, they need to keep it private.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Migrants and the Politics of Gender in Caribbean Costa Rica, 1870-1960


(photo by Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman)

Several individuals inquired about my post on AfroCaribbeans in Costa Rica. While doing research on violence against women in Limon and Puerto Viejo in Costa Rica I ran across the book posted below and have included the excerpt for readers.
Blessings! Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman


The Company They Kept
Migrants and the Politics of Gender in Caribbean Costa Rica, 1870-1960
by Lara Putnam
Copyright (c) 2002 by the University of North Carolina Press. All rights reserved.



Chapter 1
The Evolution of Family Practice in Jamaica and Costa Rica

Distant markets and local initiative have long set goods and people in motion around the western edge of the Caribbean Sea. The migrations that accompanied the booms and busts of export agriculture in Limón in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were episodes in a well-established trend. In coming chapters I seek to compare gender roles and kinship practices in Limón between groups and over time. But what are the baseline cultural patterns against which to measure change? Which are the relevant group boundaries? The answers are not self-evident. The story of each people in the region is a Rashomon tale in which the boundaries of embattled identities are revealed to be themselves the results of previous conflicts and past convergences. Claims about racial essence, national character, and cultural divides came to dominate political rhetoric in the region in the twentieth century. Such arguments depended on a willful forgetting of the stories that went before. Diversity, capitalism, and change did not reach the Caribbean shore on an iron locomotive driven by Yankee impresario Minor C. Keith. By the middle of the nineteenth century no population in the region had been untouched by the world market and European expansion—though the terms of the engagement had varied sharply across localities and over time. No polity was ethnically homogeneous—though some nations were more committed to making that claim than others. Even within a single place, among a self-identified people, patterns of gender and kinship defied simple generalization. No model of domestic authority was unquestioned—though domestic hierarchies received stronger official backing in some places than in others. No gender roles were universal—though some individuals had more culturally sanctioned alternatives than others.

The pages that follow offer a tale of two colonies, the island of Jamaica and the province of Costa Rica. I seek to trace evolving patterns in relationships between men and women and families and states. Official interest in popular kinship was frequently non-existent, occasionally intense. In the final years of the eighteenth century imperial agents made unprecedented efforts to engineer family practice in the colonies, as the British Crown tried to stimulate slave populations' natural increase and the Spanish Crown sought to halt racial mixing by putting the weight of law behind a particular definition of family honor. In both cases, such targeted projects had minimal impact. Instead, the most powerful effects of official policies on kinship practice were indirect. Within each society the evolving articulation of economic elites, state institutions, and labor regimes set the terms of popular access to land, credit, and markets. As the structural conditions men and women negotiated in their daily lives changed over the first half of the nineteenth century, so too did the families they created and the role they allotted the state within their family practice.

The Western Caribbean in the Atlantic System
More than 5,000 years ago footpaths and coastal waterways wound from the heart of modern Mexico to the highlands of modern Colombia. Below Lake Nicaragua, in the narrow southern extreme of Mesoamerica, three mountain chains run from northwest to southeast in what is today Costa Rica. By the years 1000 to 1500 c.e. climate, geography, and long-distance ties had shaped three distinct sociolinguistic regions in the area. The Central Region included the temperate highland basin and the valleys leading south to the Pacific coast; Gran Nicoya encompassed the tropical dry forests and savannas of the Pacific lowlands of modern Nicaragua and northwest Costa Rica; Gran Chiriquí spread over the isthmus of Panama and along the rain forests and mangrove swamps of the Caribbean coast well into what is now Nicaragua. Perhaps 400,000 people lived in these three regions combined.[1] Until the 1500s the rise and fall of expansionist empires elsewhere had important cultural repercussions here, but limited political and demographic impact. With the arrival of military-commercial emissaries from the city-states of Castille and Aragon all this would change.


The indigenous polities of Gran Nicoya were "pacified" and distributed as encomienda grants to individual Spaniards in the 1520s and 1530s, those of the Central Region four decades later. This was a land of sparse opportunity from the colonizers' point of view. Descendants of Spanish adventurers who had not ended well eked out an existence in the eastern Central Valley, outside the city of Cartago where colonial officials and wealthy locals clustered. Forced resettlement had combined the tattered remnants of indigenous communities into a handful of pueblos in the Central Valley and central Pacific coast. "Free mulattos and pardos," descended from African slaves who had managed to secure their own or their children's freedom through purchase or manumission, made themselves indispensable in the colonial militias. Mulatto cowboys ran the Pacific plains cattle ranches of Cartago's wealthy. On the alluvial flood plains of Matina on the Caribbean side, African slaves cultivated the cacao groves of absent masters, and perhaps a few trees of their own as well. Indigenous people from the southern mountains were periodically forced to labor on the Matina plantations of well-connected elites. Cacao was sold illegally to Jamaica-based traders for guns, clothing, and African slaves.[2]

As sugar plantations spread from Barbados to Jamaica, Nevis, and the Leeward Isles, more than 300,000 enslaved Africans were brought to Britain's Caribbean possessions in the second half of the seventeenth century. Among West Africans arriving in Jamaica men outnumbered women by roughly three to two. European planters much preferred to purchase male laborers, while regions within West Africa varied widely in their eagerness to export female slaves. There, enslaved women were crucial to production and reproduction alike. Women performed the bulk of agricultural labor, and female slaves were integrated into their owners' households as additional wives or as wives of their owners' male slaves.[3] Jamaican planters' plans for their human chattel were less complex. The vast majority, men and women alike, were put to work in the cane. If to European observers black women's fieldwork seemed proof of their de-sexed nature, on other points West African and European gender assumptions coincided. Technical or supervisory positions were naturally to be filled by men, domestic labor to be performed by women. In theory, under the plantation system slaves were economic inputs, not economic actors. But Jamaican markets came to depend on the economic initiative of the enslaved, who kept the island supplied with "hogs, poultry, fish, corn, fruits, and other commodities."[4] Kinship ties rather than formal institutions guided production, services, and commerce within the slaves' economy.[5]

The customs that shaped sex and succor among West Indian slaves were those reconstituted by bondsmen and women themselves, within confines laid out by overwork, abuse, and early death. Developing kinship forms were shaped by the specific cultural assumptions brought by enslaved men and women; the greater or lesser heterogeneity of the slave population; the pace of arrival of "Salt-water Negroes"; the strictures of plantation size, work regime, and owner's fortunes; and the distance and degree of contact with other plantations or towns. Given the multiple sources of diversity, the broad similarity of kinship patterns developed among Caribbean slaves is striking. Households with more than one co-residential conjugal couple were rare. Only men of particularly high status had multiple wives, usually in separate households. Women typically entered into co-residential unions after the birth of their first or second child. The small size or sex imbalance of some plantations encouraged a commuting family culture, in which travel between locales maintained contact between husbands and wives, parents and children.[6]

The Caribbean islands had become by the end of the eighteenth century "the most valued possessions in the overseas imperial world, 'lying in the very belly of all commerce,' as Carew Reynell so aptly described Jamaica."[7] The booming trade with the island plantations far outshone the entrepït trade with the rimlands. Yet European demand for indigo, cacao, turtle-shell, turtle meat, and sarsaparilla continued to bring traders and collectors to the Caribbean lowlands of Central America. Much of this commerce was controlled by the Miskitu, an expansionist indigenous tribe that came to incorporate large numbers of Africans and their descendants: survivors of a legendary shipwreck, escapees from the Honduran mines, refugees from the growing slave economies of the Western Caribbean islands. Miskitu hunted green turtles (Chelonia mydas) at their feeding grounds southeast of Cape Gracias a Dios and at their nesting grounds at Turtle Bogue, midway between Matina and Bluefields. Local manipulation of imperial rivalries prevented either Spain or England from gaining control of Mosquitia, whose population had grown to 20,000 by 1759.[8] Two and a half centuries after "conquest," colonial rule in southern Mesoamerica remained limited to the central highlands and Pacific plains, with only a handful of guard posts and two small settlements in the vast Caribbean lowlands. This was in spite of the unprecedented numbers of troops and decrees dispatched into the region in the last decades of the eighteenth century as part of a broad effort by the Bourbon monarchs of Spain to make bureaucracy more responsive, tax collection more efficient, trading monopolies more profitable, and colonial borders more secure.

Race and Honor in Late Colonial Costa Rica
For tightened lines of transatlantic authority to be effective it would be necessary to shore up the internal frontiers of colonial society as well. The Spanish American bureaucracy was designed to rest upon a population neatly split among racial categories, which determined legal obligations and privileges and in theory corresponded to economic position. Geographic, occupational, and administrative divides were meant to maintain Indian tributaries, black slaves, and Spanish nobles as stable and distinct social groups. But by the eighteenth century the rapidly growing numbers of castas (people classed by themselves or others as of mixed ancestry) indicated the breakdown of such divides. Booming indigo production around San Salvador drew indigenous workers from their communities of origin. Growing urban economies provided entrepreneurial opportunities for the children and grandchildren of domestic slaves. Intermediate social identities like mestizo and mulatto swelled accordingly, comprising by 1776 the majority within every province of the Kingdom of Guatemala except Guatemala itself.[9] The economic dynamism the Bourbons sought to advance was destroying the social order according to which they meant its fruits to be reaped. Thus the Bourbon state directed its attention to matters of sex and status in the colonies. The Royal Pragmatic of 1778 widened parental control over marriage choice in order to halt the spread of unequal unions that "gravely offend family honour and jeopardize the integrity of the State."[10] Subsequent edicts within the colonies defined precisely which socio-racial groups were subject to consent requirements, thereby delineating those whose couplings were beneath state notice and those who, despite known African ancestry, might have honor to lose.[11]

By 1801 the population of the province of Costa Rica had reached 52,591—which is to say, slightly less than the total number of African slaves imported by Jamaican planters over the previous five years.[12] Contemporaries guessed that 2,500 more indios lived beyond the colony's effective borders, in Talamanca, Bocas del Toro, and Guatuso (the densely forested valley south of the Río San Juan). Census-takers tallied 4,942 Spaniards, 8,281 Indians, 30 blacks, 8,925 mulattos and zambos, and 30,413 ladinos and mestizos.[13] But other documents of the era suggest that in practice racial labels were rarely used to identify social collectives. Rather, the populace was divided into a tiny elite of Spaniards and European immigrants, known as gente noble or gente de bien, and a heterogeneous but culturally converging mass of gente del com£n—common folk.[14] Over the course of four generations the numbers of people claiming mixed racial heritage, when asked, had mushroomed. Mestizos surged from 4 percent of the population in the 1720 census to 58 percent in 1801, a change in racial identification that must have been the result of both widespread extralegal unions and frequent category shifts. This is evident in marriage records from Cartago, for instance, where church unions between mestizo partners went from 18 percent of all marriages in 1738-47 to 78 percent in 1818-22, without a single marriage between a Spaniard and an Indian being registered in the entire period.[15] The growth of the mestizo category seems to have reflected not a late-blooming sexual intimacy between Spaniards and Indians, but the increasing geographic and social integration of certain mulattos, pardos, and indios into white society. "Mestizo," a racial category that was officially sanctioned but not claimed in practice by any social collective, was adopted as a euphemistic reclassification—a sort of de facto, plebeian cédula de gracias al sacar.[16]

The Royal Pragmatic was meant to prevent just this sort of convergence, to shore up the colonial order by making legal marriage the bulwark against racial straying by men and women of pure or near-pure Spanish descent. In Cuba, where plantation slavery was expanding rapidly in just these years, the Pragmatic was indeed used toward this end.[17] But in late-eighteenth-century Costa Rica the nexus of race and production was quite different. When the Pragmatic was issued in 1778, mulattos, zambos, mestizos, and ladinos already outnumbered españoles by 3.7 to one in the province, and a single generation later the figure was nearly eight to one. Poor whites participated alongside those labeled mulattos and mestizos in the settling of the western Central Valley, and all faced a similar panorama of hard toil and insecure land rights. In Cuba the institution of slavery stood between poor whites and the black majority. In Costa Rica self-purchase and informal manumission had reduced the total of slaves to a hundred at most, and race was ever less salient as an axis of difference among the gente del com£n. Conjugal households, not plantations, structured rural production. In the words of one man facing eviction, "I have a cane field, trapiche [cane grinder and boiling house], house, plantains, fruit trees, and cattle . . . all of which I have planted with the sweat of myself and my woman and my children."[18] The male-headed nuclear family the petitioner described was entirely consistent with the kin forms promoted by church and state, and perhaps two-thirds of households were united by the sacrament of marriage.[19]

Peninsular authority in Central America ended with a whimper rather than a shout. Disenchanted with the liberal Cortes governing Spain in the wake of the Napoleonic invasion, and wary of the social unrest accompanying independence movements to the north and south, Guatemalan aristocrats declared the provinces independent in 1821. Absorbed by elite rivalries and struggles for primacy among highland towns, the new national governments of Central America devoted even less attention to the Caribbean lowlands than late colonial officials had. States pressed territorial claims in treaty negotiations with Britain but in practice conceded a British sphere of influence from British Honduras to Greytown (San Juan del Norte). The pre-Columbian Gran Chiriquí had become a land sparsely populated by refugees, entrepreneurs, and survivors. Some, like the Miskitu, had embraced the possibilities offered by European clients and strategic warfare. Others, like the Bribri of Talamanca and the negros de Costa Arriba in Panama, had fled from violence and commerce, abandoning coastal resources for upstream isolation. The African-descended settlers of Matina had worked within the colonial economy, through no choice of their own, and some had prospered. All of these populations had been shaped by the Atlantic system, by European sparring and the slave trade. Their existence as collectives was witness to the opportunities for maneuver offered by the fringes of empire.

Nineteenth-Century Transformations: Jamaica after Slavery
After 1789, antislavery activism in England was given a huge boost by events in French Saint-Domingue, where enslaved African rebels successfully ended European rule of the most profitable colony in the world. The biological reproduction of creole slave populations came to seem the fulcrum of the plantation system's survival, and the black woman as mother became a centerpiece of transatlantic debate. Great Britain outlawed slave traffic by her merchants in 1807. Planters espoused a new paternalism and swore that plantation populations, now free of African troublemakers with their illnesses, barbarisms, and armed rebellions, would accommodatingly reproduce themselves. They did not. Faced with slave owners' failure to improve plantation conditions or stimulate slave populations' natural increase, the British Colonial Office pushed the Amelioration Acts through Parliament in the 1820s, stipulating that "[s]laves should be given religious instruction; marriages and families should be protected; physical coercion, especially whipping, should be controlled if not abolished; and manumission should be encouraged."[20] Planters had long held that abolitionist agitation in Britain and missionary activity in the Indies would destroy the discipline necessary to maintain the plantation system, and they were not wrong. Slave rebellions shook Barbados in 1816, Demerara in 1823, and Jamaica in 1831. The accounts of missionaries who fled to England in the wake of the rebellions' repression helped turn the tide of opinion in favor of immediate abolition.

The same moral vision that inspired abolitionists' struggle against slavery dictated particular plans for its replacement. In the eyes of reformers the establishment of male-headed, nuclear, Christian families among former slaves would be both the means of creating a new working class and the ultimate proof of their crusade's success.[21] But the struggle to define the terms of free labor would sculpt Jamaican families along far different lines. Freedmen seem to have been eager to undertake well-paid work, especially when set by the task, but balked at coercive rental agreements and wages arbitrarily set and intermittently paid. Even graver than black men's refusal to commit their labor power to the estates full time was black women's frequent refusal to work there at all. In the separation of women and children from waged labor the postemancipation family looked rather more like the clergy's idealized bourgeois union than it did the planters' idealized dependent proletariat. Yet women's flight from the estates hardly represented a retreat into godly domesticity. For the next 150 years female higglers would be the mainstay of Jamaican public marketing.[22]

It was through the purchase of land that former slaves found the autonomy to manage their households' labor as they saw fit. Sales and registration of holdings under ten acres soared in the years immediately following abolition, with perhaps 20 percent of the former apprentice population residing on such plots a mere seven years after emancipation.[23] Evidence of the kinship forms that sustained and were sustained by rural Jamaicans is found in "family land," a customary institution created in the generations immediately following abolition. In the kinship system defined by church law and common law, property was inherited along lines set by legal marriage, legitimate birth, primogeniture, and male precedence, or it was sold. In contrast, family land was, in the words of a modern informant, not to be sold; not selling it. If me even dead, it can't sell. Not selling. It's fe the children: all the children." Who counted as "the children" was expansive, for in direct contrast to the British-defined legalities of kinship, family land evolved with bilateral kin reckoning, equivalent male and female access, and entitlement for all recognized (not only legalized) children of corporate members.[24] It is significant that conjugal ties did not establish membership. Life stories of the second generation of Jamaican freewomen describe rural households anchored by mothers and grandmothers in which male mates were valued but not necessarily permanent members. Such unions were not casual—quite the contrary. A co-residential union implied definite obligations, a marriage all the more. Aunty Lou, born 1875, described the proprieties of female labor: "But you coulden expect him a woman an have him husband, fi go dig [yam] hole! . . . Mi sey dem never work for himself. And him have husband! You hear dere now? Him no have no occasion. Dem woulden allow dem fi go work. Dem go a ground and when dem dig food dem carry it go out a market go sell."[25] Tending and marketing provision crops were appropriate activities for a married woman. Digging yam holes or seeking wage employment were not.

Church formalities were selectively incorporated into local practice. By the second decade of the nineteenth century, baptism had increased dramatically among the enslaved, although marriage had not, even among young Christian couples who together brought their children to be baptized.[26] Marriage grew more common after abolition, though less so than missionaries had hoped. From the start of record keeping in the 1870s through the present day, births out of wedlock have accounted for 60 to 70 percent of live births in Jamaica. While disregarding church doctrine on conjugal unions and sex, Jamaicans embraced other possibilities Christian ritual offered. The 1850s and 1860s saw an outpouring of religious enthusiasm with the creation of Revivalism, myalism, and obeah, all of which combined West African and Christian elements.[27] Christian orthodoxy in style of worship and in family practice was ever more closely tied to class position. Like rising merchants and industrialists in Britain two generations before, members of the emerging Coloured middle class sought to make Christian piety and wealth the twin pillars of their claim to political voice.[28]

Thus Jamaican freedmen and women sought both autonomy and advancement. They purchased land for residence and farming and created customary institutions such as family land, which spread the security landownership offered among as many descendants as possible. Smallholders raised crops and animals for market and soon grew the bulk of "minor staple" exports: coffee, ginger, arrowroot, plantains, and allspice. Wage labor when the terms were right was a desirable complement to independent farming, and in the decades after emancipation it was those regions in which land for purchase and estates for employment existed side by side that saw the largest population growth. Yet over the course of the 1850s and 1860s the conditions faced by freedpeople and their sons and daughters steadily worsened.[29] Jamaican sugar had been in trouble for some time. Cuban plantations combining state-of-the-art technology, fertile soils, and enslaved labor surged after the 1780s, and the expansion of British interests eastward meant West Indian planters now competed against cane growers in India, Mauritius, Singapore, Java, and the Philippines as well. Mismanagement and labor struggles in the 1840s and 1850s accelerated the decline of Jamaican sugar. Planters insisted that only with a labor force available on demand—as freedmen and women refused to be—could production recover. The Jamaican government spent roughly ten times as much on the importation of indentured workers in these two decades as it did on education, achieving a net increase in the workforce of perhaps 10 percent. Given plantations' low productivity, indentured labor could not make Jamaican sugar competitive on the world market, but it did manage to drive wage rates well below subsistence levels. The very survival of the Jamaican working class in an era in which an adult male laborer could barely earn enough to feed himself is testimony to the efficiency with which family networks channeled and husbanded disparate resources.[30]

Meanwhile, British officials were ever more sympathetic to planters' insistence that the people's racial nature required a heavy hand. Vagrancy laws were tightened, access to unoccupied lands restricted, and whipping reinstituted for crimes against property.[31] If in spite of it all some freemen and women managed to put together household economies that combined just enough land, just enough produce, and just enough wages to maintain a measure of rural autonomy, others did not. Former estate artisans swelled the ranks of the Kingston poor. Appalled missionaries watched gangs of boys "swear, swagger, and fight, bluster and blaspheme with a volubility and a recklessness such as is most painful to witness," while "hordes of the lowest prostitutes . . . join [the] banks of [black] soldiers, walk with them, laugh with them, jeer and fight with them . . . following these soldiers in their very walks, their breasts, shoulders, and arms exposed and bare."[32] Little could affront bourgeois observers more than the sight of potential workers unwilling to accept the wages of poverty—unless it was the sight of potential wives selling domestic comfort for cash. This was the milieu that would supply the first West Indian recruits for U.S. contractors seeking a tractable labor force for construction projects on the Central American isthmus.

Costa Rica and Coffee
The southernmost and least populous of the United Provinces of Central America in 1823 would be a generation later by far the most prosperous of the region's independent states. Capital accumulated in short-lived mining and dyewood booms was channeled to a new crop, one for which soil, climate, and world market conditions could not have been more favorable: the mildly addictive stimulant coffea arabica. Coffee exports soared from 8,000 quintales in 1840 to 100,000 quintales in 1848. The typical Costa Rican coffee farm in these years covered less than five manzanas (eight and a half acres) of land, densely planted with upward of 1,400 coffee trees. Yet the bulk of exports came from holdings ten times that size.[33] Predictable tensions between smallholder and estate production were evident in plantation owners' complaints about peasants' "'lack of interest' in sustained wage labor."[34] Lacking both inherited institutions of labor coercion and, as yet, the political clout to create them, employers resorted to economic incentives. Average monthly wages rose from 7.5 pesos in 1844 to 15-18 pesos in 1856 and 25-30 pesos by 1870 and still barely mobilized enough workers for harvest. Unable to reduce costs by monopolizing land or labor, local elites dedicated themselves to raising profits by controlling processing and export. The rise of wet-pulp processing in the 1840s consolidated the position of those select few able to build large beneficios (processing mills) and link them to both local suppliers and overseas buyers. In the 1820s and 1830s processed beans were sent by oxcart to the Pacific port of Puntarenas and then shipped to Valparaíso, Chile, for re-export to Europe. Direct shipment to London along the same route began in 1840.[35]

By midcentury food crops and pasture had disappeared entirely from the landscape around San José, replaced by the shiny dark green of row upon row of coffee trees. Cane, cattle, and corn were farmed several days' walk to the west now, in the valleys around the thriving towns of Heredia and Alajuela. There peasant settlers grew food for sale back east and tended young coffee shrubs of their own that would soon bear fruit. Denuncias de tierras baldías (concessions of government land) in the western valleys tended to be large, many over 2,400 acres in the 1830s, the majority 600 acres or more in the 1840s and 1850s. Large claims were often subdivided and portions resold to migrants and potential laborers, whose purchases were made possible by access to credit, including advances against harvests or labor and short- and long-term cash loans.[36] The risks of borrowing were clear in the rashes of foreclosures that accompanied market downturns in 1848-49, 1856-57, 1874-75, and 1884-85.[37] Yet detailed analysis of lending patterns shows not a sharp division between haves and have-nots but rather multiple ties between have-lots, have-somes, and want-mores. "The vast majority of creditors were not wealthy, did not lend large sums, nor did they have more than two or three debtors. . . . Access to borrowing was socially biased, but it was neither an exclusive privilege of the wealthy nor a means for massive expropriation of the poor."[38] Investment in coffee also took the form of deferred consumption in peasant households, especially on the agricultural frontier. Settlers planted coffee seedlings alongside food crops destined for market and got by on wages, crop and cattle sales, and home-grown produce during the three to five years in which the coffee they cultivated yielded nothing at all.[39] Husbands and sons worked part-time for wages throughout the year. In the harvest months wives and daughters joined them picking coffee on nearby estates. Private land titles were increasingly important for such families, both as surety for loans and as a safeguard on the investment that mature coffee shrubs represented.[40]

In Jamaican family land we saw an institution evolved to transmit property along kinship lines quite foreign to those enshrined in law. Among Costa Rican peasant proprietors we see in contrast a broad adherence to both legal principles and legal mechanisms of property transmittal. The poorest families, urban and rural, passed along what goods they had without recourse to the costly legal inheritance system. But for those who claimed title to real property—the majority of country folk by midcentury—use of mortuales (wills) and postmortem inventories was crucial. Spanish jurisprudence held that all legitimate children must receive equal portions of their parents' estate. Nineteenth-century parents followed both the spirit and the letter of equal property division between daughters and sons, often in the form of land, tools, or capital advanced to a child leaving home to form an independent household.[41] Church marriage, household formation, and the start of sexual reproduction increasingly coincided for Costa Rican women. In the Central Valley births out of wedlock dropped rapidly from their late colonial high of around one-third of all births. Where coffee was most established, illegitimacy rates were lowest, holding steady around 10 percent across the second half of the nineteenth century. In contrast, outside of the Central Valley illegitimacy rates were 50 percent or higher, far more typical of Latin America as a whole.[42] Enthusiasm for church marriage was of a piece with the centrality of legitimate inheritance to smallholder life in the coffee regions. In the cities rather different family patterns were emerging, with the proportion of female-headed households (30 to 40 percent) twice as high as in rural villages, and the fraction of female heads who had never married (40 percent) notably higher as well.[43]

While inheritance law as practiced in this period insisted on gender parity, civil and criminal law insisted on male primacy. No one thought male authority could or should be absolute. Husbands were required to administer their wives' property sensibly; to feed, clothe, and house their wives and legitimate children as best they could; and to get their way without using excessive physical force. Male authority was contingent and partial, but when push came to shove husbands and fathers usually found they had the strength of law behind them. And the law, in the form of municipal councils, alcaldes (mayors), courts, and justices of the peace, was rapidly following the coffee frontier across the Central Valley. Judicial records confirm the increasing role of legal forums in domestic disputes.[44]

* * *

Despite their disparate pasts and divergent futures, by the mid-nineteenth century the fertile inland valleys of Costa Rica and Jamaica had arrived at structures of agricultural production with distinct similarities. The great majority of rural people in each country would at some point in their lifetimes hire themselves out for a daily wage, contract themselves by the task, work a neighbor's land in a noncash exchange, and cultivate provisions and export crops on land they claimed as their own. This was true of both men and women in both countries. For a married woman to work for wages other than at harvest time was an insult to her virtue and her husband's virility in both societies, although straitened Jamaican peasants found themselves forced into such a compromise more often than their Costa Rican counterparts. Overall, Jamaican women enjoyed a far wider range of culturally sanctioned economic roles. The higgler who worked her land, marketed its produce, and administered the profits herself had no equivalent in nineteenth-century Costa Rica. On the other hand, elite women in early republican Costa Rica played a variety of public commercial roles that might have raised eyebrows among the Jamaican plantocracy or Coloured bourgeoisie.[45]

In each country plantation owners complained repeatedly about the shortage of laborers, which they correctly linked to the availability of unoccupied land for squatting or colonizing. Of course the difference between squatting and colonizing is not merely in the eye of the beholder but rather in credit and titling policies, and it is here that the differences between the two agrarian regimes come into focus. Jamaican elites sought to mobilize labor through economic coercion at its most heavy-handed, while the colonial state faltered between conflicting commitments to the protection of new Crown subjects and the stability of the plantation system. In Costa Rica coffee planting was shaped from the start by an open frontier and the absence of institutionalized forms of obligatory labor. Costa Rican elites relied on economic incentives rather than direct control, and the national state they dominated was to find in this arrangement a wellspring of ideological and practical support. In the eyes of the emergent Liberal elite, national expansion, both economic and territorial, would depend on the properly channeled initiative of peasant producers. "Poblar es gobernar [To people is to govern]" ran the slogan of the day.[46] This vision underlay the extension of credit and titles and fostered a climate of official support for the family structures assumed to inhere in settler households.

Rates of marriage and illegitimacy may reflect patterns in relationships between men and women. They may also reflect patterns in relationships between families and the state. Where the structure of public power is such that men and women make active use of the courts, we would expect the legal proprieties of kinship to exert a greater pull on popular practice. Rural society in the nineteenth-century Central Valley of Costa Rica displayed a remarkable degree of overlap between church ideals, state legalities, and popular kinship practice. In Jamaica the opposite was true. As men and women from each of these sites traveled to the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica they would form families in a variety of ways. The spectrum of domestic and conjugal forms that they created would look quite similar across migrant groups, and quite different from the elite ideologies and legal proprieties of kinship in either of the lands from which they came.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Detroit Reflections During these Somber Times


Mother/India and Child/Riley at Easter Dinner

India and Riley


Some of the family and friends assembled for Easter dinner at my brother and sister in law's home, the Rev. Michael and Sandra Vaughn


Earlier in the evening most of the family and friends were gathered in the basement watching the game. However, the concluding hours before heading to our various destinations were spent talking about and dissecting the horrendous situation facing the citizens of Detroit.

Today, indeed was a sad day in the history of Detroit. The Mayor, Kwame Kilpatrick and his former Chief of Staff, Christine Beatty were charged with twelve counts of felony including conspiracy to obstrut justice and purjury.The mood is very somber in Detroit as people contemplate what all this means in the face of the following realities: Detroit has the highest unemployment rates in the nation and the third highest foreclosures. The city is in crisis and the current mayor and his posse' appear unable to step up to the task at hand. The times call for those with integrity and vision to step forward, unite and to lead the city out of the economic, physical, emotional and spiritual deterioration that has characterized this city for too long.
Blessed Be! Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman

Monday, March 17, 2008

Beauty in Nature

I am so starved for spring and for gardens and plants. So it was such a treat to visit Burlingame, CA recently where so many flowers were in bloom in the neighborhood surrounding the Mercy Retreat Center. The colors and the variety of flowers were amazing. Coming from Chicago where practically everything is struck dead until the spring time it was a joyful time.

Unfortunatly, spring can't come too soon for me. So it was such a delight to walk through the neighborhood and take these pictures and remember springtime.
Blessed Be! Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman