(with grateful acknowledgment to Pastor Martin Niemöller for his poem,
“First They Came” – saying it better than I ever could.)
*****
First they came for our neighbors to the south and north, and imposed severe tariffs…
and though it seemed foolish I did not speak out,
because I know so little about economics.
Then they came for USAID (and called it “criminal”)…
and I was uneasy but I did not speak out,
because I do not receive funds from them.
So they came for healthcare and research institutes like APHL and JHPIEGO (and more…)
and I wondered if I should speak out,
because I have now-unemployed friends there who help the most marginalized.
And today they came for faith-based charities like Lutheran Services in America…
and though I am not a Lutheran I must speak out,
because I know heroes there who serve the poorest of the poor for their entire careers.
And tomorrow they’ll come for NGO’s that I helped start…
and I have retired but this is personal,
because we need the change our colleagues bring to the world.
And the day after tomorrow...
perhaps they'll come for the very thing you and yours cherish
so speak...together...before there's no one left to speak for you.
*****

Wow. Well said.
author of – The Injustice of Place: Uncovering the Legacy of Poverty in America
calling evil good and good evil, the richest man in the world has decided that the richest country in the world should stop serving the poorest people of the world.
Dr. King said, “We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” While I agree with Dr. King, I also assert that what is being done in this administration has the potential to affect “everyone” directly. So, the poem is spot on!