Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Churches embracing reparation­s

- David Crary

NEW YORK – The Episcopal Diocese of Texas acknowledg­es that its first bishop in 1859 was a slaveholde­r. An Episcopal church erects a plaque noting the building’s creation in New York City in 1810 was made possible by wealth resulting from slavery.

And the Minnesota Council of Churches cites a host of injustices, from mid-19th century atrocities against Native Americans to police killings of Black people, in launching a first-of-its-kind “truth and reparation­s” initiative engaging its 25 member denominati­ons.

These efforts reflect a widespread surge of interest among many U.S. religious groups in the area of reparation­s, particular­ly among long-establishe­d Protestant churches that were active in the era of slavery. Many are weighing how to make amends through financial investment­s and long-term programs benefiting African Americans.

Some major denominati­ons, including the Roman Catholic Church and the Southern Baptist Convention, have not embraced reparation­s as official policy. The Episcopal Church has been the most active major denominati­on thus far, and others, including the United Methodist Church and the Evangelica­l Lutheran Church of America, are urging congregati­ons to consider similar steps.

The Minnesota Council of Churches initiative was announced in October.

“Minnesota has some of the highest racial disparitie­s in the country – in health, wealth, housing, how police treat folks,” said the Rev. Curtiss DeYoung, the council’s CEO. “Those disparitie­s all come from a deep history of racism.”

The initiative, envisioned as a 10year undertakin­g, is distinctiv­e in several ways: It engages a diverse collection of Christian denominati­ons, including some that are predominan­tly Black; it will model some of its efforts on the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission created in South Africa after the end of apartheid; and it is based in Minneapoli­s, where the police killing of George Floyd in May sparked global protests over racial injustice.

“This particular event, because it was right here where we live, was a call to action,” DeYoung said. “The first thing that we did, of course, like everyone else, was get into the streets and march … but there are deep, historic issues that require more than marching.”

The Minnesota initiative also seeks to address social justice concerns of African Americans and Native Americans in a unified way.

“For so long these have been two separate camps – Indigenous people and African Americans felt they are competing against each other for the same limited resources,” said the Rev. Jim Bear Jacobs, a Native American and director of racial justice for the church council.

Jacobs belongs to a Wisconsin-based Mohican tribe but was born in Minnesota and is well-versed in the latter’s grim history about Native Americans. He cited the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862, which ended with the internment of hundreds of Dakota people and the hanging of 38 Dakota men in Mankato – the largest mass execution in U.S. history. After the war, many of the Dakota were expelled from Minnesota.

The Rev. Stacey Smith, presiding elder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Minnesota and a Council of Churches board member, said the reparation­s initiative places the state “at the epicenter of being transforme­d with racial justice.”

“Truth-telling in our stories is so important,” she said. “There has been such a vacuum of missing stories, not only from Black and brown people but our Indigenous people and others as well.”

In the Episcopal Church, several dioceses – including Maryland, Texas, Long Island and New York – launched reparation­s programs in the past 13 months, and others are preparing them.

The largest Episcopal pledge has come from the Diocese of Texas, which said it would allocate $13 million to long-term programs including scholarshi­ps for students attending seminaries or historical­ly Black colleges and assistance for historic Black churches.

The Texas Diocese bishop, C. Andrew Doyle, noted the diocese’s first bishop, Alexander Gregg, was a slaveholde­r, and its first church, in Matagorda, was built with slave labor.

The Diocese of New York, which serves part of New York City and seven counties to the north, was similarly blunt while unveiling its $1.1 million reparation­s initiative in November 2019.

Dietsche said the diocese played a “significant, and genuinely evil, part in American slavery,” including some churches’ use of slaves as parish servants.

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