Times Colonist

Religious groups try to ease crises with aid projects

- AYSHA KHAN

Groceries. Prepared meals. Face masks. Prayer requests. Housing. Rent assistance. Mental health care. Spiritual guidance. Career advice. Transporta­tion.

The requests for help keep coming at Forefront Church, at all hours of the day and night, and Zanifa Franck keeps responding.

“If you need aid and we have it, we’re going to give it to you,” says Franck, direct deacon for the Brooklyn church’s active 12-member care team, launched at the pandemic’s onset in an effort to live out Forefront’s antiracist mission. “There’s no parameters or criteria or rules for how you get aid.”

Like many volunteers involved in the current resurgence of mutual-aid projects, Franck says her efforts are driven both by the understand­ing that existing welfare systems are broken — and that it’s her duty as a believer to step in.

“The foundation of being a radical Christ follower is truly believing that every human, whether they’re Muslim or Buddhist or anyone, deserves access to power and access to basic necessitie­s of life,” Franck told Religion News Service. “For whatever reason, society has not allowed you to have access. So if I have it, I need to share it.”

Through mutual aid, community members take up the responsibi­lity for caring for each other. Members of mutual aid networks look to one another to share resources and fulfil needs, rather than relying on interventi­on from external institutio­ns such as government­s or nonprofits.

Activists say the pandemic has exposed the failures and inequities of these institutio­ns.

Over the past four months, as state unemployme­nt sites have crashed, federal stimulus checks have been delayed and food banks stretched thin, mutual aid and direct action have emerged as popular vehicles for neighbours to support one another. Initiative­s have sprung up in neighbourh­oods across America, as a map by Town Hall Project illustrate­s, focused both on coronaviru­s relief and on supporting Black Lives Matter protests.

These community-led projects are organizing infrastruc­tures to link those with food, masks, funds and other resources to those without. From Orlando’s Episcopal Church of St. John the Baptist to The Table D.C. church network to Chicago’s Anshe Emet synagogue, faith groups across different traditions are getting involved.

A block away from where George Floyd was killed by a police officer, dozens of volunteers have for weeks gathered at the Minneapoli­s Baha’i Center to support locals in need. It began with handing out water bottles to protesters and rapidly spiraled into a full-on donation intake and distributi­on centre for first aid supplies, canned food, hygiene products, diapers and more.

“Next thing you know, the centre is filled with supplies and we’re setting up tables out front,” volunteer Rishad Dalal said. “We set up a system for intakes, we have runners and organizers. We’re just trying to fulfil the needs of our neighbourh­ood.”

Activist Asma Mohammed Nizami has not been able to leave her home just outside Minneapoli­s because of immunocomp­romised family members. But that hasn’t stopped her from staying up until 7 a.m. every day for weeks, co-ordinating mutual aid efforts with the Twin Cities Mutual Aid Project.

Through her Twitter account, group chats and phone calls, Nizami is providing local volunteers and protesters updates by the minute on which donation sites are open, what their needs are, where rides are available, where medics are needed and the street-by-street movement of the National Guard. Through her organizati­on Reviving Sisterhood, she’s also been paying for hotel rooms for families who recently lost their homes.

She points to a tradition of the Prophet Muhammad, who compared his followers to a human body. In their mutual compassion, he described, “when any limb aches, the whole body reacts with sleeplessn­ess and fever.”

The premise of mutual aid is rooted in such solidarity, organizers explain, as opposed to charity.

“With charity, you can be very removed from the idea of what you’re fighting toward,” said Boston-based organizer QueenCheye­nne Wade. “With mutual aid, you get around these bureaucrat­ic systems and are directly giving those resources to the community, to the people.”

A co-founder of the Greater Boston Marxist Associatio­n and a lead organizer in the Muslim women-led Boston Mutual Aid Fund, Wade has been co-ordinating ride sharing, food, water and personal protective equipment for vulnerable communitie­s in the Boston area as well as local antiracism protesters.

As more people get invested in today’s anti-racist mutual aid efforts, they’re tapping into a long history of mutual aid in Black liberation movements, Wade said.

“A lot of Black Americans have this saying about making something out of nothing,” she said. “We’re taking our faith in our community, in ourselves and what is given to us — which is nothing — and building that into something greater.”

The country’s first independen­t Black churches, which served as a rare refuge for Black people to worship away from white control, emerged out of the Free African Society, a faith-based mutual aid network formed in 1787 to support widowed, orphaned, sick and unemployed Black people. In the ’60s and ’70s, the Black Panthers fed and educated kids and provided medical care for free. The

Nation of Islam, too, promoted Black economic self-sufficienc­y with food co-op programs, collective farming projects and businesses.

“We’ve always had to figure out how to take care of our community, to take care of our neighbourh­oods and take care of our seniors, even when the economy is booming,” the Rev. Traci Blackmon, associate general minister of justice at the United Church of Christ, told NPR this month. “So in some ways, we’re ahead of the game with this, because we know how to survive with less, because we’ve always had to survive.”

Black communitie­s have used co-operative economic activities as a tool for survival since Africans were first brought to America. As Jessica Gordon Nembhard’s “Collective Courage” explains, such solidarity practices included enslaved people pooling funds to buy one another’s freedom when a slave owner was willing to sell; and the formation of co-ops for Black farms, grocery stores, gas stations, schools, housing and more throughout the last century.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, more Americans belonged to fraternal societies than any other kind of voluntary associatio­n besides churches, historian David Beito explained in his 2000 book From Mutual Aid to the Welfare State. Men and women from working-class, African American and various immigrant background­s formed lodges, fraternal societies, social welfare organizati­ons and extensive mutual aid networks, making health care, insurance and other needs accessible to all.

Assistance from public and private institutio­ns was not only insufficie­nt but also stigmatize­d. Fraternal aid instead “rested on an ethical principle of reciprocit­y,” Beito wrote. “Donors and recipients often came from the same, or nearly the same, walks of life; today’s recipient could be tomorrow’s donor, and vice versa.”

Some of these historic faithbased efforts are still going. Take the Mutual Aid Agency, born in the late 1800s out of the Anabaptist tradition as “an alternativ­e to worldly insurance,” or Thrivent Financial, the result of a merger between the Aid Associatio­n for Lutherans and Lutheran Brotherhoo­d fraternal benefit societies.

In the years since the Depression, historians say, government welfare, insurance companies, credit unions, non-profit organizati­ons and religious charities have taken over these roles, and mutual aid has largely fallen out of vogue.

Now again, as volunteers have done after countless economic crises, natural disasters and other upheaval, community members are building new grassroots networks to support their communitie­s.

“With COVID-19 and the added separation that we are feeling from people, it’s definitely forcing people to think of different ways that they can show solidarity and engage in being an accomplice in these struggles,” Wade said.

 ??  ?? Laura Porras, right, prepares bags of fresh vegetables as Justin Ruiz, 17, left, and Porras’s niece Ana Karen Porras, 14, help in the vestibule at Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd in Brooklyn, New York.
Laura Porras, right, prepares bags of fresh vegetables as Justin Ruiz, 17, left, and Porras’s niece Ana Karen Porras, 14, help in the vestibule at Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd in Brooklyn, New York.

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