Texarkana Gazette

Black Catholics want action from church

- By David Crary

NEW YORK — Black Roman Catholics are hearing their church’s leaders calling for racial justice once again after the killing of George Floyd, but this time they’re demanding not just words but action.

As protests against racism and police brutality continue nationwide, there are rising calls for huge new investment in Catholic schools serving Black communitie­s; a commitment to teach the complex history of Black Catholics; and a mobilizati­on to combat racism with the same zeal the church shows in opposing abortion.

“As a church, we’re very good with words. The church has made clear it stands against racism,” said the Rev. Mario Powell, a Black priest who heads a Jesuit middle school in Brooklyn.

“What’s profoundly different this time is folks aren’t looking for more words — they’re looking for actual change,” he said.

Noting that hundreds of Catholic inner-city schools have closed in recent decades, he’s among those urging church leaders to make the necessary spending to reverse that. He also said all Catholic schools should teach the history of Black Catholics in America.

“It’s a history of discrimina­tion and oppression,” said Powell, 38. “It’s also a very rich history that should be celebrated, of a population that has overcome a lot.”

In 2018, after what it called an accumulati­on of “episodes of violence and animosity with racial and xenophobic overtones,” the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a pastoral letter condemning racism and vowing to combat it. Numerous bishops issued similar statements following Floyd’s death under the knee of a white Minneapoli­s police officer.

Professor Shannen Dee Williams, a Black Catholic who teaches history at Villanova University, argued in a June 15 article in the National Catholic Reporter that such responses are insufficie­nt.

The recent statements “fall way short when it comes to acknowledg­ing the church’s role in the contempora­ry crisis and direct complicity in the sins of anti-Black racism, slavery and segregatio­n,” she wrote, noting that the church was a major slaveholde­r in several states and engaged in segregatio­n of parishes, schools, hospitals, convents and seminaries for decades after emancipati­on.

In an interview, Williams said the U.S. church hierarchy should formally apologize.

“We want them to own up to that history, and then atone for it,” she said.

The same day her article appeared, Archbishop Wilton Gregory of Washington, D.C., the highest-ranking Black leader in the U.S. church, joined eight fellow bishops from his region in acknowledg­ing the church’s “sins and failings” on racial justice.

“Prayer and dialogue, alone, are not enough. We must act to bring about true change,” their statement said, calling for greater equality in health care, education, housing and criminal justice.

Black Catholics’ somewhat marginal place in the U.S. church is illustrate­d by statistics compiled by the national bishops’ conference.

According to the conference, there are about 3 million African American Catholics, roughly 4% of the nation’s 69 million Catholics. But there are just 250 Black priests, or less than 1% of the total of 36,500, along with eight active Black bishops out of more than 250, or about 3.2%.

Some are calling on church leaders to engage more energetica­lly with youth at the forefront of the protest movement.

Earlier this month scores of young Black Catholics staged a march in Louisville, Kentucky, to protest racial injustice and also signaling they want their local church leadership to do more.

One of the speakers, retired priest John Judie, included the church in a list of institutio­ns that have favored white people over Black people.

In an interview, Judie said some young people in the archdioces­e are uncertain about their place.

“When is the leadership going to sit down with the young adults who organized that protest and listen to what drove them to do this?” Judie said. “So far, I’m not seeing it happen.”

That’s a notion shared by Ansel Augustine, who was a youth minister at his parish in New Orleans as it rebuilt after Hurricane Katrina.

“We see our youth and young adults leading these movements, putting their faith into action,” said Augustine, now executive director of cultural diversity for the Washington archdioces­e. “Now is the time to empower them.”

Ralph McCloud, who directs the anti-poverty program of the national bishops’ conference, said such steps are under way.

“We’ve begun with the listening sessions, hearing the very painful stories of people who’ve been victims of racism within the church and without,” McCloud said.

 ?? Ruby Thomas/The Record via AP ?? ■ Catholic protesters walk from the federal courthouse building June 6 in downtown Louisville, Ky., to 12th and Broadway in the “Black Catholics Unite: Stand For Justice March” organized by young adults. Black Catholics across the U.S. hear their church’s leaders once again calling for racial justice, but at this volatile moment they say they want action as well as words.
Ruby Thomas/The Record via AP ■ Catholic protesters walk from the federal courthouse building June 6 in downtown Louisville, Ky., to 12th and Broadway in the “Black Catholics Unite: Stand For Justice March” organized by young adults. Black Catholics across the U.S. hear their church’s leaders once again calling for racial justice, but at this volatile moment they say they want action as well as words.

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