(1870s depiction by Fred Barnard of Bob Cratchit holding Tiny Tim)
This was my Christmas
2017 column for the Jackson Free Press in
Jackson, Mississippi, a column that looks to Charles Dickens to give us some
hope for better things in 2018.
OXFORD, Miss. – I settled comfortably into my favorite chair
one recent night and popped in a DVD of the best Christmas movie ever, the 1951
version of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol”.
No one ever portrayed a better Ebenezer Scrooge than
Scottish actor Alastair Sim, who plays to perfection the “squeezing, wrenching,
grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous old sinner” whose
ghost-and-spirit-inspired conversion later in the story will have him declaring,
“I’m not the man I was!”
“I have endeavored in this ghostly little book to raise the
ghost of an idea,” Dickens once wrote about his 1843 tale. “May it haunt
(readers’) pleasantly, and no one wish to lay it by.”
I’ve seen the film a dozen times, yet I keep discovering new
things in it. “You were a good man of business,” Scrooge tells the ghost of his
dead partner, Jacob Marley. “Business!” cries out Marley, rattling the heavy
chains his life of greed and lack of compassion for the poor earned him in
eternity. “Mankind was my business! Their common welfare was my business!”
Dickens scholar Norrie Epstein says the writer “never failed
to weep” whenever he read his story out loud.
I’m afraid he’d be sobbing uncontrollably today if he saw how his “ghost
of an idea” has fallen on deaf ears.
Here in Mississippi, nearly one out of every three children
live in poverty worse than that of Tiny Tim, whose father Bob Cratchit is so
poorly paid by Scrooge than he can’t get Tim the medical treatment he needs to
save his life.
In fact, Tiny Tim might consider himself fortunate even to
be alive if he were in Mississippi, which has the highest infant mortality rate
in the nation. Mississippians are more likely to die prematurely than people
from any other state. The fact is Mississippians, young or old, typically don’t
live as long as people from other states.
When Bob Cratchit begs to take Christmas day off, Scrooge grumbles,
“a poor excuse to pick a man’s pocket every twenty-fifth of December.” Who knows
how the old miser (before his conversion) would’ve reacted if Bob had slipped
and hurt himself after coming back to work on December 26?
Probably much like Mississippi’s Republican leadership. With
their gutting of the state’s Workers’ Compensation protections in 2012,
Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant and his fellow Scrooges in the state Legislature
have made sure workers here are the nation’s least compensated for work-related
injuries and thus the least protected. They are among the country’s most
at-risk workers. A Mississippi worker is twice as likely to be killed on the
job as the typical U.S. worker.
In fact, no one really knows how bad workers have it here in
Mississippi because this is one of the nine states that refuse to collect reliable
data on serious workplace injuries. Yet hear Gov. Bryant’s response to the 2012
Workers’ Compensation gutting—which added a host of hurdles for workers to jump
before they can qualify for compensation: Mississippi has “the most
job-friendly environment in America.” Friendly for whom? You know.
Here’s another way to say it: employers in Mississippi don’t
have to worry about the “humbug” of being responsible for the safety of their workers.
Like Dickens himself, I confess to shedding a tear or two
every time I get toward the end of “A Christmas Carol”. After Jacob Marley
scares the wits out of the skinflint and then the spirits of Christmas Past,
Present and Future do their work on him, Scrooge is a changed man. No more is
he the soulless moneylender who tells a Christmas donation seeker that the poor
might be better off dead. That way they could help “decrease the surplus
population.”
At the end, Scrooge is indeed a new man, one whom people
would come to say, “no man could keep Christmas as well as Ebenezer Scrooge.”
Dickens offers us hope at the end of his tale. Indeed, isn’t
hope the very heart of the Christmas story? Maybe there’s hope even in poor ol’
Mississippi, hope that political leaders one day will see in those less
fortunate a common humanity—not simply shirkers or ne’er-do-wells—and thus
realize “their common welfare” is the business of us all.
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