The Real America

I’m not sure who Adam is or where this came from but to me it represents the best of what the United States can be.

[A Maryknoll colleague sent it to me. Thanks, Roberta!]

Are you ready for some good news? I know I am.

We are told, over and over, that America has gone cold on the rest of the world. That we have decided the people on the other side of the ocean are a threat to be kept out. That the welcome mat got rolled up and put away for good.

Then a soccer team from the North African nation of Algeria showed up in Lawrence, Kansas, and within a week the whole town was wearing green.

For today’s Good News Sunday, I want to tell you about one of the best things happening in this country right now. It is happening at a soccer tournament, and it has almost nothing to do with soccer.

The World Cup is here, 48 teams playing across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Each team in the tournament picks a base camp, one town to live and train in between matches. Germany set up shop in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Spain is training in Chattanooga, Tennessee. And Algeria, playing two of its games up the road at Arrowhead, picked Lawrence and made it home for the summer.

What the people of Lawrence did with that is the part I can’t stop thinking about.

It started small, with a whole town of people who had never given Algeria much thought deciding, more or less overnight, that this was their team now. Flags went up in shop windows. Folks pulled on the green jerseys. People drove over just to catch a glimpse of the players. And then a local news crew stopped an older gentleman on a Lawrence sidewalk, standing in front of a storefront draped in a whole row of Algerian flags he had clearly just gone out of his way to find.

They asked him what he actually knew about the country whose colors he was flying. He grinned, paused for a beat, and said something along the lines of: not much yet — but we want to welcome you here. There is no agenda in that man. Nothing performative. Just a neighbor, thrilled to his bones that these strangers chose his town, and perfectly at ease with the fact that he has a lot left to learn about them.

The welcome only got bigger from there.

The University of Kansas, the state’s flagship school that calls Lawrence home, sent its marching band out to the training ground. They had spent the previous days learning Algeria’s national anthem, note for note, and they played it as the players walked out for practice. Think about what that means for a moment.

These men are thousands of miles from their families, living out of a hotel in the American Midwest, preparing for the biggest sporting event of their professional lives. And the first thing they hear when they step onto the grass is the sound of their own country’s song, played by a hundred American college kids in red and blue who learned it just for them. Several of the players stopped walking. A few of them looked like they weren’t sure what to do with themselves.

Algeria did its part, too. The team opened a training session to the public and spent the afternoon out on the grass with neighborhood kids, walking them through drills, signing autographs, posing for pictures. There are children from small-town America who are going to be telling the story of the day they trained with a World Cup team for the rest of their lives. And the Algerians have spent the last week calling themselves honorary Kansans, falling hard for a corner of a state most of them could not have found on a map two months ago.
But it’s not just Lawrence.

This is happening all over the country, in towns you would never expect.

The city of Alexandria, Virginia threw a street festival with an evening of Croatian food and music, and wrapped a city bus in the team’s red and white. After crowds in Spokane, Washington flocked to watch Egyptian superstar Mohamed Salah, a brand-new Egyptian restaurant in town suddenly had locals lining up for food most of them had never tasted. All told, 19 American communities that are not hosting a single match still raised their hand to take in a national team and call them neighbors for a month.

There is a story we get told constantly about who we have become. That Americans have soured on outsiders. That we have decided the rest of the world is a threat. That we look at people who do not talk like us or pray like us or come from where we come from and see a problem instead of a person.

And then a college town in Kansas goes and learns every note of a North African country’s national anthem, just so a group of strangers feel at home for a few weeks. An old local stands in front of a row of its flags and tells them, in so many words: we don’t know much about you yet, but we are awfully glad you came.

That is who we actually are when nobody is telling us to be afraid. The band on the field, playing somebody else’s song as if it were their own. The neighbor who knows next to nothing about you and waves you in anyway. We forget it sometimes. The good news is that it takes about one afternoon to remember.

That, my friends, is good news for your Sunday.

— Adam

Rainy Week (not season)

This is the rainy season in Cambodia (i.e., lots of rain every day) but Kentucky has also had its share of precipitation this week. This is a back road near my sister’s house and the rain ended an hour ago, but a little creek there is still pouring lots of water onto the low-lying road. It was a bit deeper than I wanted to navigate on an ELECTRIC bike so I turned around and detoured.

Once again…

When I got on my bike yesterday, I found the left brake lever just flopping loosely. A hinge pin was missing on the caliper. Today I took the bike to the shop that sold it. They looked for a replacement part in their junk box but didn’t have one and will have to order it. To give me back my front brake, the tech put a bolt in the in hole and tightened it with a set screw and that will hold till they get the proper part.

Mary Queen of Peace Parish

Today I had mass at Mary Queen of Peace parish and it was delightful. First, I bicycled there, about 9 miles, partly to test how uncomfortable I would get in the really warm weather we’re having. I forced myself to go slower than usual and it turned out OK. Second, Mary Queen of Peace is in the area of Angela Merici High School where I taught and two sisters–twins–who were in my class there introduced themselves. Meeting the former Angela Merici High School girls, now grandmothers, has been one of the joys of my return. These sisters had learned sign language and rode with me to the Kentucky School for the Deaf.

America and God?

O God who loves us, on this Independence Day, we pause to thank You for the blessings of liberty, peace, and the pursuit of happiness. We honor the sacrifices of those who secure our freedoms and protect our lives, and we ask that You watch over them.

Guide our nation’s leaders with wisdom and compassion. Heal our divisions, and help us to build a society rooted in justice, unity, and mutual respect for all people. May we use our freedom to serve one another and strive for the common good.

Fourth of July in Cambodia

It’s one hour away from the 4th of July in Phnom Penh (they’re 11 hours ahead of us) and there will be a celebration there! It’s organized by Freedom 250, though, which is the Trump administration organizing group instead of America250, the congressional bipartisan group that started planning for this anniversary in 2016, so it remains to be seen what will be the tone of the Phnom Penh celebration, whether it’s focused on the anniversary of the country or on its current president.

Caring for all of creation

I hope to get out everyday on my bicycle. On the days when I’m not going to mass or to a meeting, I often ride in Louisville’s beautiful Cherokee Park. On the scenic loop around the park I noticed that there are not only water fountains for me but that they incorporate a watering bowl for dogs and other pets. That is really important this Fourth of July week when the U.S. is expecting record temperatures especially east of the Mississippi.