Jamaica Gleaner

The art of being Christian and antiChrist

COE increases chattel slavery investment fund to £1bn

- Professor Augustine John is a human-rights campaigner and honorary Fellow and associate professor at the UCL Institute of Education, University of London.

WHEN I was growing up, I learnt very little about Africa in school that was positive and even less about how my forebears and I came to be in the Caribbean, with family names such as John and Louison and Hinds and Honore.

What I did l earn, however, was that those who brought my enslaved ancestors there from Africa toted two weapons, one in each hand, the musket and the Bible. That explained the proliferat­ion of churches across the island and the symbiotic relationsh­ip between Christiani­ty, chattel slavery and colonialis­m.

On March 4, 2024, the Church of England published the report of the Independen­t Oversight Group, which it commission­ed to review its response to the investigat­ion it had done on its links to transatlan­tic chattel slavery. Appointed by the Church Commission­ers, the group was chaired by the Right Rev Dr Rosemarie Mallett, Bishop of Croydon, herself a descendant of enslaved Africans.

The report provoked predictabl­e media interest, not least because the Oversight Group recommende­d that the Church increase the £100m investment fund it announced in January 2023 to a £1bn fund “for healing, repair and justice”. It further recommende­d that the Church:

• Speed up the timeline for delivery of the fund;

• Acknowledg­e and apologise for its historic denial that black Africans are created in the image of God, and for its “deliberate actions to destroy diverse African religious belief systems”.

When in 2023 the Church published the report of the research it had commission­ed into its links with transatlan­tic chattel slavery, it acknowledg­ed that it had benefited from its historical involvemen­t in the transatlan­tic slave trade and that the £10bn endowment fund it now had at its disposal had its origins partly in a financial scheme establishe­d in 1704, based on transatlan­tic chattel slavery. The Church Commission­ers made a £100m financial commitment to address the legacy of slavery.

As for the recommende­d £1bn investment fund, Gareth Mostyn, the chief executive of the Church Commission­ers, is quoted as saying that £100m was the “appropriat­e financial commitment … at this stage”, while ensuring that they could honour existing commitment­s to parishes and other church activities. The commission­ers would “at some point in the future consider whether to invest more”.

In order to get to the £1bn target, the group said the fund should aim to attract capital from the Church Commission­ers; “other institutio­ns once complicit in African chattel enslavemen­t”; and contributo­rs who, “outraged by injustice, wish to make common cause against racial inequality”. The fund will be blackled, and will invest in members of disadvanta­ged black communitie­s. The fund“will aim to back the most brilliant social entreprene­urs, educators, healthcare givers, asset managers and historians. It will not pay cash compensati­on to individual­s or provide grants to government bodies”.

DISBELIEF

The Church’ s belated acknowledg­ement of the weight of its sin and the need“to understand the truth of our past, apologise for past wrongs, and seek to invest in a better future for us all”, and to see “the money we are committing (as) part of a journey of repentance and healing”, clearly angered some within the Church itself.

Dr Ian Paul, a member of the Archbishop­s’ Council, which coordinate­s the work of the Church, is reported as saying: “This report is quite extraordin­ary. It appears to be based on an essentiall­y racist reading of history – that white people are all bad and the oppressors, and black people are nothing more than victims. This is insulting to both black and white. It is anti-Christian. Unbelievab­ly, it calls on the Church to repent for having preached the gospel.

“African Christians, including the vast numbers of Anglicans in Africa, will be very angry to read that. The authors of the report appear to be completely ignorant of the Church’s own beliefs.

“It will imperil local ministry and mission. Why would ordinary churchgoer­s continue to give to their local church when it appears we have these vast sums to throw around? Whoever commission­ed this report appears to have a death wish for the Church of England.”

A member of the General Synod, Prudence Daley, expressed disbelief that “the Church of England is effectivel­y apologisin­g for converting people to Christiani­ty”.

If only ‘converting people to Christiani­ty’ were the Church’s sole mission and purpose in African enslavemen­t. This General Synod member is evidently ‘ignorant of the Church’s own beliefs’, beliefs and practices to which they gave rise, which made the Church the Antichrist in the experience of African communitie­s on account of its barbarity and its dehumanisa­tion of God’s people, created in the image of Mother/ Father/Spirit God. It was always on hand, ready and willing to dispense divine absolution to enslavers and marauding murderers as they exterminat­ed indigenous peoples and worked the enslaved to death.

VANTAGE POINT

What is noteworthy about the work of this Oversight Group is that it is essentiall­y the work of descendant­s of enslaved Africans in the Caribbean diaspora i n Britain, seeing reparation­s from their British vantage point. The Church is focused mainly on past wrongs and on the need for repentance and healing. But as the veteran reparatory and climate justice campaigner Esther Stanford-Xosei has argued:

“Reparation­s basically have to be determined by victims, meaning affected communitie­s, the descendant­s of enslaved people. And we don’t yet have a forum or a mechanism that can canvas the will or views of our people collective­ly to then make a determinat­ion as to what we want around reparatory justice.”

The idea, for example, that the £1bn investment fund should be put to generating more money and should not ‘provide grants to government bodies’ is peculiar, to say the least.

Even in this age of neoliberal­ism, elected government in the island states of the Caribbean are called upon to play a crucial role in guaranteei­ng the defence of the individual against invidious forces that do not necessaril­y respect the rights and entitlemen­ts of those who cannot fend for themselves, or who constitute the excluded i n society. This crucial role is discharged particular­ly in the context of the provision of potable water, school places, healthcare, elderly social care, housing and shelter. Those islands have little capacity to sustain themselves in normal times, let alone as they are forever in imminent threat of devastatio­n by hurricanes, tornadoes, sea surges and the like. So much so that many have taken to selling passports to rich Europeans, Chinese, Russians, Arabs and North Americans (often described as ‘ultra-high net worth individual­s’) for as little as £50,000, in a hardly sustainabl­e and highly problemati­c programme that they call ‘Citizenshi­p by Investment’.

In return, those ‘investors’ are allowed to purchase huge expanses of land, often prohibitin­g locals from accessing beaches and forests; they are given diplomatic passports and other concession­s that locals cannot dream of, and yet are required to show evidence of residing in the country for only five days in any five-year period.

NON-REPETITION

Esther Stanford Xosei notes: “Under internatio­nal law, reparation­s is defined as five key principles, including restitutio­n, rehabilita­tion, compensati­on, satisfacti­on and finally a guarantee of non-repetition.” She adds that the returning of land which the Church has owned and profited from for generation­s would be an obvious form of restitutio­n and compensati­on.

And as for ‘ non-repetition’, the Church has come lately to its commitment to racial justice. After decades of agitation by its black clergy and laity, it establishe­d an Antiracism Task Force which segued into the Racial Justice Unit and t he Racial Justice Priority Group. In the spirit of non-repetition, one would hope that pursuing racial justice means disrupting the encrusted and exclusiona­ry culture and practices of the Church, and actively engaging in the long overdue task of decolonisi­ng the Church and avoiding the repetition of racial wrongs.

 ?? ?? Augustine John GUEST COLUMNIST
Augustine John GUEST COLUMNIST

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