Oct 10, 2009

Who Are Our Lepers Today?


When I was a child I remember one of the earliest "religious" movies that I saw was called "Father Damien, Leper Priest" with Ken Howard (from "The White Shadow" TV show) playing the lead role. I remember being moved very much by this priest who volunteered to go to a leper colony to serve the people there even though he knew he was putting his own life in danger.

What I really remember though was not this huge act of self-sacrifice, but rather how Fr Damien really embraced all aspects of the people's life there. I remember him learning their language so that he could pray with them in their own language. His early attempts would be ones in which he would make the people laugh with his mistakes which often made his sentences sound silly or even lewd. But he just rolled with it, trying his best, which is really an example for all of us in our daily lives. It was this simplicity that stuck with me and has led me to try to understand people of other cultures and has always made welcoming a large part of my ministry to all people.

In a moving scene in the newest movie, Fr Damien outstretches his arm to shake a young boy's hand, despite knowing that the young man has Hanson's Disease, better known as leprosy. While we hear about lepers in the gospel, that word was really applied to any kid of skin ailment that rendered someone "unclean" or more probably "contagious." In fact, people were required by law to remove themselves from society or to shout in the streets should they remain "unclean, unclean" so that people wouldn't touch them. Hanson's disease is what we normally associate lepers with in today's modern parlance. But the same holds true. These were contagious people that nobody would touch out of fear and furthermore, that modern society had eliminated from society and placed them on an island of their own and would conveniently forget about them. There wasn't anything that doctors could do for them and those with the disease would often feel bad about themselves and about how they longed for human contact. They were pariahs, people that nobody wanted anything to do with.

Damien, saw that need for human embracing and he did so with love, the love that God had for these people that they needed to understand. Damien awakened an entire culture to believe that God had not run afoul of them. That God had not forgotten them, exiling them to a lost continent to waste away. God was truly here with them, suffering with them and leading them to a deeper and more intimate experience of the cross than one might expect on the surface.

Damien is going to be raised to Sainthood today. And his life beckons us to consider some of the same deep questions he faced:

Who do I place on a island and conveniently forget about?
What role do I play in reconciling those who long for human contact with God and the world?
Who are our lepers? The people nobody wants anything to do with?

We have murderers and prisoners and child molesters who we all "put away and out of our sight" and conveniently remind ourselves of their guilt but never of their humanity. We have the unborn who we often think of as an inconvenience, especially for young teens who get pregnant. instead of providing care we settle for death for the child in the womb and we tell the teen that they simply can handle the pressures of parenthood and adolescence while not really offering any real assistance whatsoever. Many of us place our elderly in their own exiles, forgetting about them in nursing homes and never taking any time for a visit much less a daily one.

We don't have to go to Molokai to find our own lepers.

And by the same token, we don't have to go to Molokai to see Fr Damien either. We need to look into our own hearts and into the heart of Damien's example as well. It is there that we find God tugging at our heart and begging us not to forget all those who can be easily forgotten.

So let us pray to St Damien today that he might show us the way to our own human heart's deeper longings for others. To which "forgotten land" might you have need to visit or re-visit?

Who have you forgotten? It is only your embrace that they long for today.


6 comments:

St Edwards Blog said...

This is very beautiful. I am ever reminded of the story of St. Francis, who, as it is told, hated the lepers in his early days, before his conversion. Apparently those who suffer this disease also emit (or at that time they did) a terrible odor and it would sicken Francis.

Fast forward to the day that Francis had a change of heart, true metanoia at this point. He went to the where these disenfranchised and rejected brothers and sisters lived and literally physically embraced them.

And you hit it, as you always do - we don't have to do that externally. In fact we must do so internally if transformation is to happen in the name of Jesus Christ. Our own inner lepers cry out and we continue to flee.

Thank you for this thought provoking post. I recall the film with Ken Howard and I look forward to this newer one.

Peace, Fran

god googler said...

Via Facebook:

From David Dawson:

Mike, this in my opinion is your best written commentary to date. It hits a chord because I try to base my life off of Fr. Damien. He was compassionate yet persistant. He did not back down in the face of the many obstacles he encountered. I think he is one of the best examples of Christ living within us.

god googler said...

Via Facebook

From Fr Bob Collins, SJ:

Here's a light article about the return of the Leper Priest's body through San Francisco on the way to Belgium:
http://www.americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=11872
and a more serious comment:
http://www.americamagazine.org/blog/entry.cfm?blog_id=2&id=84600968-3048-741E-7994686946350005

Tc said...

Nicely said.

Might I suggest another group of modern lepers?

Gay people.

The Church won't touch them with a 10ft crozier.

Pax.

Anonymous said...

I first heard of Fr. Damien only a week or so ago when NPR did a great story on leprosy and interviewed the author of "Squint", Jose Ramirez. What an amazing man and amazing example for us all.

Pax.

W said...

Sex offenders are the new lepers.

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