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Wednesday, June 11, 2008

If the shoe fits ...


Suspicious vehicle pulled over and surrounded by the police, service revolvers drawn, perp dragged out of the vehicle and cuffed. For once, police got the upper hand on one of Winnipeg's legions of psychopathic car thieves.

But this time their perp wasn't a car thief (or a psychopath). He wasn't even a perp. He was Fresh I.E., a Christian minister and Grammy-nominated rapper. How did the police screw up so badly? They claim they ran the plates on Fresh's pearl-white Chrysler 300C and it came up stolen. Later, police claimed a dispatcher had miskeyed Fresh's plate number and it was the miskeyed plate number that came up stolen. Hmmm.

Fresh claims it was racial profiling. He claims he was pulled over by the police because he was a black man driving a fancy car. I don't think so. I see a lot of 30-something black guys driving mid-size sedans and they don't get pulled over ... ever.

In this case, a picture is worth a thousand words. Fresh loves the gangsta look. He even posed gangsta for the papers after his incident with the police. That's his prerogative, but gangsta culture revels in its demented and destructive hatred for law and order. If Fresh wants to roll gangsta, then guilt by association is going to be a way of life for him. Wear it with pride, brother. And stop whining and complaining about racial profiling. It has nothing to do with race. Not every black man shares your sense of gangsta style. And this was about style, not skin color.

For me, the most disappointing aspect of Fresh's fifteen minutes of fame was his failure to embrace the creative tension presented by his double roles as rapper and minister of Christ. That's an incredibly unique and powerful combination of roles, which should evoke an incredibly unique and powerful response to his situation. Instead, Fresh used his bivocational identity to thumb his nose at the police: "Fooled ya, suckas. I might dress like a homey from the hood, but I'm really a Christian minister. And now you goin' down."

What a waste. As a gangsta-style rapper and Christian minister, Fresh was custom-fitted for last week's showdown on the streets. He was the right person at the right time to show us the right way to rise above our cultural malaise. Last Tuesday, Fresh was admonishing pastors at a city-wide prayer meeting to support our police in prayer. On Friday, he was calling for their heads, claiming he was a victim of racial profiling.

Late last week, the police issued an unequivocal apology for their actions. Fresh stuck to his story and re-iterated his suspicions of racial profiling. This past Sunday, we gave Fresh an opportunity to share his story -- and perhaps some sober second thoughts -- on the GodTalk Radio Show on CJOB. What better place for a rapper/Christian minister to set the record straight than a live talk radio show about God? We were delighted when Fresh's manager confirmed his appearance on the show. We were disappointed when Fresh opted out.

I'd hate to think that getting all up in 5-0's face is the best Fresh can do. Show us the way forward, bro. You might be just the person we need for our moment in time. There aren't too many other rapper cum Christian ministers out there! No one else can fill your shoes.

Give the chief of police a call. Make a joint statement for the media.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree with your presepective here Greg-good post.
Jason Parks

14 June, 2008 07:04  

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    Name: Rev. Greg Glatz
    Location: Muddy Waters, Manitoba, Canada

    I'm the lead pastor at Central Baptist Church and the lead guitar player for the Royal Unruh Band (RUB). Lead pastor + lead guitar player = rock 'n' roll preacher. I'm also working on a doctorate in postmodern missiology with Leonard Sweet. I have one amazing wife, two great kids, and twelve guitars. You can catch me most Sunday mornings at the church house, or tune in the GodTalk Radio Show on Sunday nights from 9-11 (Central) on CJOB 680 AM or www.cjob.com.



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