June 2020
I am now a Spanish teacher at a school in the heart of downtown Los Angeles, where my wife Kasey and I now live.
As we end our year with our students, the faculty, staff, and student body of our school have been reflecting on and grieving, once again, the systemic injustices and racial inequalities found in this country, especially after the deaths of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd. My current department was reflecting on the conversation of race and how it pertains to the Spanish classroom - and I was appreciating how you all included this concept in your classes while I was at Wheaton.
Whether it was discussions about communal guilt in books like Fuenteovejuna or Crónica de una muerte anunciada, lectures and readings on the role of race in Latin America, or conversations about anything from Naufragio to Nuestra América, I have found my time in the Spanish Department at Wheaton College to be helpful in inciting conversations about race in our classroom. It was many of you who had conversations with me about othering, scapegoating as a political strategy, family separation, liberation theology, welcoming the stranger, Gustavo Gutiérrez, Oscar Romero, Bartolomé de las Casas... the list goes on.
As I wrap up this year with my students and colleagues, I would have been remiss to not send an email of deep gratitude to you all for fostering a space to discuss such topics, and for ingraining in me the reality that the type of spiritual practices the Lord calls us to are those that strive "to loose the chains of injustice and untie the cords of the yoke, to set the oppressed free and break every yoke" (Isaiah 58:6). For this, I cannot thank you enough.
I pray that the Lord continues to use you in powerful ways and that - like me - the students of Wheaton College continue to know Him more fully because of you all.
Muchísimas gracias.