Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PRAYING FOR THE ADDICTED

- By Peter Smith

John Cabon, center, 63, of Swissvale prays on Sunday at St. Paul Cathedral in Oakland during a Mass of Remembranc­e and Healing for those affected by drug addiction. The service was presided by Bishop David Zubik, who started the service with 15 to 20 seconds of silence where he asked attendees to think about somebody whom they would especially like to pray for on that day. “I have a big family, and it’s in my family,” Mr. Cabon said of addiction. “I pray for them all and everyone who needs it throughout the world.” Story in Local News,

With pulsing gospel music, festive dance and a soaring call-andrespons­e sermon that packed in a call to renewed social activism, the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh marked its 100th anniversar­y year in a gathering that drew several hundred to Central Baptist Church in the Hill District.

The league — which aims to empower African-Americans through such areas as education, economic developmen­t, health care and civil rights — held its celebratio­n in a worship service to salute the strong historic connection between the organizati­on and the black church.

The Urban League Youth Choir set the tone early with rousing gospel pieces, accompanie­d by worship dancers in the aisle, that often brought the congregati­on to its feet.

The keynote speaker, Bishop Vashti Murphy McKenzie, raised the octane level further with a rapid-delivery sermon that drew on a lesser-known passage from Genesis. It tells of how the biblical patriarch Isaac revived old wells that had been dug by his father, Abraham, and also dug new ones as well in the face of repeated opposition from neighbors who were hostile to both father and son.

Bishop McKenzie — who in 2000 became the first woman bishop in the history of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and currently presides over the denominati­on’s Texas churches — said Isaac built on and expanded on his father’s legacy. In the same way, people today need to build on the legacy of the Urban League and other forebears

in the civil rights movement.

It will not be easy, she said, warning of current attempts to roll back the gains of that movement.

“Just like Isaac, we may have to fight our mother’s and father’s enemies all over again,” she said, each sentence punctuated by organ riffs and amens. “They will come back in a new 21st-century way. We may have to fight for things we are taking for granted — again. We may have to fight for the right to vote — again. … We may have to fight residual racism, sexism, ageism and classism — again. We may have to sit in again. We may have to march again. We may have to demonstrat­e again.”

But she urged worshipper­s to take heart from the work of their forebears.

“If God did it for them, God will do it for you,” she said. At the same time, “Our future is not going to be handed to you on a silver platter. You are going to have to roll up your sleeve and sacrifice.”

The celebratio­n came just a day shy of the centennial of date when the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh’s first executive director, John T. Clark, opened its office for business on Feb. 12, 1918. One of the founders was the pastor then of Central Baptist, the Rev. G.B. Howard.

A lineup of Allegheny County’s most prominent politician­s, some of them quoting Scripture, came to the microphone to salute the league’s work and commit their support to it.

Esther Bush, president of the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh, called on the members to continue the work of the league into another century.

“What we can do is lend our time and talent through volunteeri­ng and our treasure through donations of any magnitude, to assure that the work of the Urban League will continue until the need for the Urban League’s work no longer exists,” she said.

“Our vision is for one Pittsburgh, diverse and united, a Pittsburgh that offers an open, welcoming and even playing field for all of our citizens,” she said.

 ?? Stephanie Strasburg/Post-Gazette ?? Reed Dance II dancer Jaumair Garland, 15, of Mount Washington performs to an arrangemen­t of “We Shall Overcome,” sung by the Urban League Youth Choir Sunday at Central Baptist Church in the Hill District during a celebratio­n marking the Urban League of...
Stephanie Strasburg/Post-Gazette Reed Dance II dancer Jaumair Garland, 15, of Mount Washington performs to an arrangemen­t of “We Shall Overcome,” sung by the Urban League Youth Choir Sunday at Central Baptist Church in the Hill District during a celebratio­n marking the Urban League of...
 ?? Stephanie Strasburg/Post-Gazette ??
Stephanie Strasburg/Post-Gazette
 ?? Stephanie Strasburg/Post-Gazette photos ?? State Rep. Austin Davis, center left, D-Allegheny, 28, of McKeesport and Esther L. Bush, center right, Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh president and CEO, take photos. Mr. Davis was sworn in Feb. 5 as state representa­tive for his Mon Valley district,...
Stephanie Strasburg/Post-Gazette photos State Rep. Austin Davis, center left, D-Allegheny, 28, of McKeesport and Esther L. Bush, center right, Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh president and CEO, take photos. Mr. Davis was sworn in Feb. 5 as state representa­tive for his Mon Valley district,...
 ??  ?? The Urban League Youth Choir sings a hymn of praise during a celebratio­n of the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh’s 100th anniversar­y year.
The Urban League Youth Choir sings a hymn of praise during a celebratio­n of the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh’s 100th anniversar­y year.

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