The burning of black church, a long
smoldering phenomenon, sparked news stories in the summer of 1996 and then,
flames quickly doused by a fire-retardant mixture of guilt and self-interest,
the public once again falsely assumed that the fire of racism was controlled if
not out. This nation’s inability to
include and maintain a healthy diversity threatens to intensify as we arm
ourselves against one another though gun, bomb and torch. The real significance
of burnings should be determined by those whose churches have recently burned.
The members of each faith community in this country need to take note of an
attack on any faith community.
“The church stands as a symbol of
black pride and self-sufficiency,” said Rose Sanders, a black lawyer in Selma,
Alabama. “Burning one is as close as you can come to a lynching without killing
somebody.” Meanwhile investigators often dismiss the idea of deliberate arson
due to a climate of white supremacy. Others hold to the belief that the fires are
a mere coincidence. From January 1995 through June 1996 more than 60
African-American and multi-racial churches, most in the southeast, were burned.
Whites often fail to recognize the
significance of the black church, tending to believe there is nothing racial
about the fires today. The attack on black churches is an attack on the heart
of the black community, its political, social, educational and spiritual
center. Whites, motivated by genuine care sometimes raise money to help rebuild
burned black churches. If they are able to find a conspiracy by a few on the
radical fringe they can exonerate themselves from the racism that still smolders.
But racism is a problem much greater than arson. Rebuilding structures does not
dismantle racism. Simply sending money does not include African-Americans in
the ecclesiology of a nation which believes it has the soul of a church.
Once again the black church is the
target of violence. Dominant whites
still exclude African-Americans from full participation in the community of the
nation and exclude themselves from the black church. A conspiracy theory is not
new either. Vincent Harding, African-American historian, noted that near the
end of the Detroit rebellion of 1967 Lyndon Johnson made a special address to
the nation. He was frightened and so was all of America. Johnson suspected that
a black revolutionary conspiracy was at work. Harding wrote, “The nation was
frightened, confused . . . . In spite of what Lyndon Johnson suspected, there
was no organized, national black revolutionary movement.” The conspiracy theory
is a way to isolate the issue and relegate the problem to a few. Racism is more
insidious than that and the African American struggle for freedom is more
powerful.
Although 1996 investigations found
no organized conspiracies, it was no coincidence that the fire at New Liberty
Baptist church in Tyler, Alabama, was set just two days before thousands
gathered to commemorate the Selma demonstrations that led to the passage of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Studs Terkel wrote in his 1992
book, Race: How Blacks and Whites Think
and Feel about the American Obsessions, that race obsesses everybody, even
those who think they are not obsessed. An obsession rules us, as a god might;
the original sin of racism remains a powerful obsession. Racism is real. It
goes beyond prejudice and discrimination and even transcends bigotry, largely
because it arises from outlooks and assumptions of which we are largely
unaware.
Many Anglo-Americans believe that
for at least the last generation blacks have been given more than a fair chance
and at least equal opportunity if not outright advantages. Moreover, few feel
obliged to ponder how membership in the majority race gives them powers and
privileges. Albert ("Pete") Pero said that we must go beyond the fact that some people don’t want to be
bothered by multiculturality. We must move beyond the attitude that somebody
“played the race card. This isn’t a game of cards." He went on to say that, "God created all these people and that the Spirit sparks a fire of love . . . so you don’t have to
burn the guy who seems to be creeping up on you."
The Black Church is a sign of hope and at least an implicit challenge to the belief system of white privilege in the United States. Will black churches be hope or threat to a nation which has come to doubt its own role in being a redeemer nation to the world?
Most important, we must
come together locally in houses of faith and in the network of faith
communities and talk, and listen, and dialog, no matter how difficult. People of color know a great deal about white
Americans—they must in order to function in this country. Whites remain
remarkably unaware of the lives, feelings and hardships of people of color. The
latter are weary of educating white people. On the way toward trust, we need to
listen, not judge, debate or defend, but simply listen and see what the flames
signify.
[The above are direct words from an
article I published in 1997 in Currents in Theology and Mission after the rash of burnings of black churches. I
write them again today—no update necessary.]