Baltimore Sun

Md. Episcopal Diocese awards 1st round of reparation­s grants

- By Jonathan M. Pitts

The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland has awarded $175,000 in grants to six community groups in its first distributi­ons from a historic $1 million reparation­s fund.

The diocese announced Thursday that it will present grants of up to $30,000 to groups dedicated to “restoring African American and Black communitie­s.” Three of the winners are based in Baltimore and three in other areas of the state.

The city awardees are St. Luke’s Youth Center, a collaborat­ive of families in the Poppleton and Franklin Square communitie­s of Central Southwest Baltimore that provides young people with “resources, life-enriching experience­s and a safety net of support”; the Samaritan Community, a nonprofit organizati­on that operates a food pantry and clothing store and offers counseling and other services from an office in Bolton Hill in West Baltimore; and Next One Up, a nonprofit group based at Belvedere Square in North Baltimore that provides support services to young men experienci­ng “significan­t obstacles” on their paths to success.

The other recipients are Anne Arundel Connecting Together, a consortium of 24 organizati­ons that works to encourage and empower volunteers as they press for community-service improvemen­ts; I Believe in Me Inc., which uses a mentoring program to provide “growth in self-esteem and build character” for at-risk youth between ages 6 and 16 in Frederick County; and Calvert Concept Charitable Corp., a Southern Maryland startup that aims to address social injustices by “facilitati­ng home and business ownership to create family wealth across generation­s.”

The Right Rev. Eugene Taylor Sutton, the bishop of the archdioces­e, and other officials presented representa­tives of the groups with oversized novelty checks in a ceremony at the seat of the diocese, the Cathedral of the Incarnatio­n in North Baltimore.

The Samaritan Community won a grant of $25,000; the others received $30,000 each.

Sutton said this first round of awards represente­d a milestone in a process that began under his predecesso­r, the Right Rev. Robert W. Ihloff, who initiated discussion­s more than 20 years ago about how the diocese might contribute to a process of reparation­s for slavery and racial injustice.

Those conversati­ons intensifie­d when Sutton, the first African American to lead the diocese, took over from Ihloff in 2008.

At his direction, members of the diocese — an ecclesiast­ical body with roots in the 1600s that includes nearly 120 churches and 44,000 parishione­rs in Central, Southern and Western Maryland — embarked on a research campaign that fleshed out what officials had long known: the diocese was complicit in perpetuati­ng slavery and the forms of racial injustice to which it gave rise.

They learned about the many white Episcopali­an Marylander­s who were slaveholde­rs or openly supported enslaving Black people. Others, they found, helped foster racist practices such as redlining, the policies by which banks and insurance companies refused to lend to homebuyers in predominan­tly Black areas, and conspired to exclude Black Episcopali­ans.

Many new churches in the diocese — including the cathedral — were built with the aim of helping white congregant­s flee older parishes that were growing more diverse.

Such practices, Sutton has said, establishe­d disparitie­s of opportunit­y whose effects continue to reverberat­e through the culture. That leaves institutio­ns such as

the diocese, whose membership is 90% white, morally responsibl­e for closing the gap.

“Many people in the United States wonder, ‘Why reparation­s?’ ” Sutton said. “‘I did not own slaves. No one in my family owned slaves. And I love everyone.’ Today is part of that answer.

“The legacy of 350-plus years of discrimina­tion against persons of African descent have taken a toll on this nation, and it has affected

all of us. None of us may have been guilty, but all of us have a responsibi­lity. Today is an indication of the responsibi­lity that we are taking.”

To that end, the diocese 18 months ago set aside $1 million as a seed fund for supporting nonprofit groups within its territoria­l boundaries that work toward bolstering African American communitie­s. The amount represente­d 20% of the diocese’s operating budget.

More than 30 proposals from across the diocese were submitted for the first round of grants, and

an eight-member task force made the selections. Diocesan officials said they will use a similar process to distribute grants at least once a year for the foreseeabl­e future.

Aje Hill, the founder and director of I Believe in Me, thanked not just the diocese and its members, but the other awardees.

“It’s ordinary people doing extraordin­ary things that make it possible for us to meet our mission and meet our students and our youth directly where they are,” Hill

said. “To you other organizati­ons, you are true heroes . ... Don’t take this lightly, because to be seen as worthy by a credible diocese like this means they truly believe in what we do. I commend you for the work, the consistenc­y, and the love

that you’re providing for others.”

 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? The Right Rev. Eugene Taylor Sutton, left, Episcopal bishop of Maryland, congratula­tes Darlene Clark as she sheds tears of joy as she, Jermaine Glover, behind, and Amanda Talbot, not pictured, of St. Luke’s Youth Center receive $30,000 on Thursday at the Cathedral of the Incarnatio­n.
KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN The Right Rev. Eugene Taylor Sutton, left, Episcopal bishop of Maryland, congratula­tes Darlene Clark as she sheds tears of joy as she, Jermaine Glover, behind, and Amanda Talbot, not pictured, of St. Luke’s Youth Center receive $30,000 on Thursday at the Cathedral of the Incarnatio­n.

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