Albuquerque Journal

Graham played central role in evolution of U.S. race relations

Reverend was ally of MLK Jr.

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Rev. Billy Graham had a complicate­d role in race relations, particular­ly when confrontin­g segregatio­n in his native South.

In Alabama for one of his evangelist­ic crusades in 1965, just months after passage of the Civil Rights Act, Graham talked about the Confederat­e flag flying “proudly” atop the state Capitol and the fact that both of his grandfathe­rs served as rebel soldiers, according to a recording available on his ministry’s website. He didn’t address the evils of segregatio­n directly, but he drew scorn from segregatio­nists for speaking to racially mixed crowds and allowing blacks and whites to mingle during the trademark altar call that ended each service. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was an ally, and King publicly credited Graham with helping the cause of civil rights.

As a white moderate, Graham helped ease the region’s transition away from legalized segregatio­n, said Steven P. Miller, a scholar who has written about Graham. Graham had a “huge base” of white support in the Bible Belt, Miller said, and those people listened to him.

“He could reach that audience as a native Southerner, but also because he spoke a familiar evangelica­l language — and because he was obviously not an activist,” said Miller.

“Ultimately, what Graham put forth was what we might now call a colorblind gospel,” Miller said. “In this sense, he provided a familiarly Christian path for some white Southerner­s to back away from Jim Crow.”

A current civil rights leader from Graham’s native North Carolina, the Rev. William J. Barber II, credited Graham with meeting with King and agreeing to challenge segregatio­n, an act Graham pursued through preaching reconcilia­tion and peace rather than marching.

“Billy Graham inherited a faith in the American South that had accommodat­ed itself to white supremacy, but he demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s to change and turn toward the truth,” Barber said. “He helped to tear down walls of segregatio­n, not build them up.”

Still, Graham had regrets. In a 2005 interview, when he held his final crusade, Graham said he wished he had fought for civil rights more forcefully. In particular, Graham lamented not joining King and other pastors at voting rights marches in Selma, Ala., in 1965.

Born in 1918 on the family farm near Charlotte, N.C., Graham grew up in a South strictly divided by race. In an act that sounds mundane now but was perilous at the time, he demanded the removal of ropes separating black and white audience members at a crusade in the South in the early 1950s.

Graham was an internatio­nally known preacher traveling the world by 1955, when King first gained notice by leading a bus boycott against segregatio­n in Montgomery, Ala. Graham embraced King’s work, and the two appeared on stage together during a Graham crusade at New York’s Madison Square Garden in 1957. Graham paid the jail bond following King’s arrest during demonstrat­ions in Albany, Ga., in 1962.

Following the racial violence of “Bloody Sunday” in Selma in 1965 and partly at the suggestion of President Lyndon B. Johnson, Graham toured Alabama, speaking to racially mixed crowds.

While Graham didn’t march with King in Selma, the Atlanta-based King Center for Non-violent Social Change credits Graham with evolving from an early, noncommitt­al stance on race following the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision outlawing segregatio­n in public schools.

“His life was about following Jesus, and he knew that meant an ongoing commitment to be changed by love,” Barber said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Evangelist Billy Graham speaks to more than 100,000 people at the Olympic Stadium in Berlin in 1954. Graham, counselor to presidents and the most widely read Christian evangelist in history, died last week at age 99.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Evangelist Billy Graham speaks to more than 100,000 people at the Olympic Stadium in Berlin in 1954. Graham, counselor to presidents and the most widely read Christian evangelist in history, died last week at age 99.

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