Sunday, April 20, 2008

Connecting to Literature: The "Aha" of Passover



Books have been a major influence on my thinking and some have changed my life. I was taught in library school that connecting to books and literature was the highest goal of reading. The use of books in counseling to foster mental wellness is called "bibliotherapy" and reading books and listening to stories have led to radical social change (think Gutenberg and Voltaire).

Today's topic was Passover at my church. I missed most of the service because I was teaching a Sunday school class. However, the bit that I did get to hear was about the connection between the Passover story in the Bible, which ends in the liberation and exodus of the Israelites, and the hopeful possibility it contains, that one day, all enslaved people will win release. The spiritual that we sang, Wade in the Water, reminded me of something that I think about as I go about Charleston looking at all of the beautiful old "pyramids" built by African hands; how the literary connection they made between those Biblical stories and their own situation of slavery became an impetus to push for freedom. Moses and the Egyptians was more than just a tale, it was an inspiration and a plan.

Books, and the stories and ideas they contain, are powerful things. Stories speak to us in the language of the unconscious. New ideas are like a strong wind to push us forward, sometimes to unexpected places. Literacy and freedom go hand-in-hand.

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