Wednesday, September 19, 2012

"Sanctuary" Reflection - Looking in the Mirror


Melissa Hillman

English 15

Professor Lennon

September 17, 2012

Looking in the Mirror

                In this essay I will be reflecting on the selection titled “Sanctuary” out of Frankie Lennon’s memoir titled Mee Street Chronicles: Straight Up Stories of a Black Woman’s Life.  In this selection, the author describes a place in five different ways for the reader.  I believe the author does this so that the reader can fully understand the significance of the place and the effect it had on her life.  Each story in this selection tells us, as readers, one thing the author learned of herself from this place she called her “Sanctuary”.  In the Webster’s Dictionary a sanctuary is defined as “a building set aside for worship.  A holy place.  Asylum of safety and security.  Place of refuge or protection.  A Christian church.  Reservation where animals or birds are sheltered and may not be hunted or trapped”.  I would like to take you through each of these stories and hopefully by the end you will understand them in more detail.

                The first story is titled ‘The Ebony Showcase’.  “When you walked in to the lobby, you could tell she had been a queen, but her reign had ended and that she had fallen on hard times.”  The Ebony Showcase Theatre is what the narrator is describing in this quote.   Located on the corner of Washington Boulevard and Rimpau in the heart of Los Angeles, California.  This was a place of history, where you could see the aging on each seat, on the red curtains with the threadbare patches, and in the faded colors of the walls.  The narrator came to this place out of curiosity, not for the place itself but for what the place held inside of it.  Every Sunday the services of the Unity Fellowship Church of Christ were held here.  It was in 1987 when the narrator came across this church for the first time.  The minister was an openly gay man named Reverend Carl Bean.  He started this church for all those who were hiding in the closet about their sexuality.  So that they too could have a place to be themselves.  This is one thing that drew the narrator to this place over and over again.  It gave her a sense of security to be with and around people just like her; a sanctuary.

                The next story that the narrator tells us is titled ‘Affirmation’.  The narrator shares with us that every Sunday morning at the service Reverend Bean would open up with words of affirmation.  Sharing words of affirmation is a way that a person can positively assert someone they care about or can relate to in one way or another.  It is a way that we can heal others with the power of words.  He would start by saying, “Wherever you identify yourself along God’s rainbow, know that you are not in error.  You are God’s creation.  You are not a mistake.  Homosexual, Lesbian, Transgender, Heterosexual, Bisexual.  God made you the way you are.  So love yourself and know that you are very special!”  Sunday after Sunday, hearing these words gradually began to change the narrator’s view of reality.  It changed how she viewed herself; not only on the inside but on the outside as well.  She finally saw herself as a whole person. A true sanctuary of God.

                The third story is titled ‘The Welcome Table’.  The motto of Unity Fellowship Church of Christ is that “God is Love and Love is for Everyone”.  A lot of people were attracted to this church based on this motto alone.  No one was excluded because of their race or the color of their skin, by who they found attractive or what gender they were.  Every person was welcomed with open arms at Unity Church.  The narrator learned that it is not God who discriminated but people that blamed it on the teachings of God who were the true discriminators.  By the late 1980’s, there was a new branch of discrimination. A virus that became a new kind of leprosy; this virus was AIDS.  It mostly preyed on the population of gay men.  Giving people another reason to fear their kind; the ones that they called “not normal”.  Minority AIDS Project of Unity church did the exact opposite of this.  It welcomed and helped people who were ill.  It gave them strength and hope that there was someone out there for them to lean on in this time of pain and suffering.  This is another thing that set apart Unity from all other churches and communities and what also kept the narrator going back every Sunday.  I guess she felt that if she could give a sense of security to others, she would start finding security in herself; as a black lesbian woman in that time and era of segregation.

                The second to last story the narrator tells us is titled ‘The Bible’.  By this time, in 1989, Unity has moved to a bigger location at 5149 Jefferson Boulevard.  Unity has gotten so big that it was standing room only on Sundays.  On Sundays their choir, the Voices of Unity, would sing their hearts out.  The narrator tells us that song was an old African and, now, African American way of healing.  She says, “Song freed us from the worries, the uncertainties, the torments.”  I personally see some significance in the name of the choir itself; The Voices of Unity.  People singing together in perfect harmony the songs of our Lord to bring together the people of the community in a place of worship and security.  They helped others see themselves as creations of God and not freaks of nature and abominations.  They brought people together under the love of God and into the security of his arms.  After song and praise, Reverend Bean would ask the congregation to take out their Bibles.  He told them that they had to “…confront the thing that preachers had used to terrorize us: The Bible.”  The Bible was the tool in which people used to threaten the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender community as well as women and the people of color.  Reverend Bean not only preached the word of God, he also taught the congregation the lessons in which God wanted them to learn through His words.  Everyone can interpret The Bible in different ways.  We just have to make sure it is in the safety of others as well as ourselves the way we interpret the readings in The Bible.  Unity Fellowship Church of Christ was not only a sanctuary to the narrator, but a place to learn about freeing herself and others from oppression and injustice.

                Last, but not the least, is the story titled ‘The Pigeons’.  In this story, I personally believe we hear more of the author’s voice than the narrators.  The author explains perfectly the symbolism of the pigeons in the story.  These birds had gotten trapped in the Ebony Showcase Theatre.  In a building where they would stay for the rest of their lives until they found their own way out.  The author says, “Like the pigeons, we had been flying frantically here and there – for all of our lives, really – flapping and bumping, lost and looking for a place we could simply be free.”  I believe that the author found exactly that at this place, at the Unity Fellowship Church of Christ.  No oppression, judgment, or segregation.  It was a place where she could be free to be herself and also learn about her true self.  It was where she felt the safest and most secure.  It was her sanctuary.

                In each story we can learn something, either about the author or about ourselves.  I believe that the importance of the selection “Sanctuary” is to teach us to truly be comfortable with ourselves.  To know that we are not abominations or freaks of nature but that we are all created in the image of God.  We are all temples of the Holy Spirit.  Each and every one of us, whether we are white or black, woman or man, gay, lesbian, heterosexual, homosexual, transgender, or bisexual.  As individuals, we need to find the sanctuary within ourselves so that we can be all that we are capable of.  To become the best version of ourselves we can.  To truly live in the works of God and to help others find their own sanctuary.