Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Kneeling during the anthem isn’t disrespect­ful, it’s a protest steeped in religion

- By Ansley L. Quiros For The Washington Post

Last week, the National Football League announced that the league’s owners had come to the “unanimous” decision that “everyone should stand for the national anthem.” While players will be permitted to remain in the locker room in private protest, public displays will result in fines to the player’s team. The policy ostensibly aims to sidestep controvers­y that distracts from the game, damages ratings and reduces profit margins. But in actuality, the announceme­nt provoked a firestorm.

The NFL Players Associatio­n expressed skepticism, promising to study the policy to see if it violated the collective bargaining agreement and insisting on kneeling players’ patriotism and good faith. Meanwhile, National Review cheered the new rules, comparing kneeling to flag-burning: “extreme” and “radical,” even if protected by the First Amendment. And of course the White House could not resist gloating, with Vice President Mike Pence tweeting that the NFL’S decision was a victory for the country and the Trump administra­tion.

While pundits, politician­s and the twitterver­se debated the move’s consequenc­es and constituti­onality, few considered the longer history of kneeling in protest. Doing so makes clear the conscious and conscienti­ous choice these players are making – as well as the unexpected religious origins of their protest.

In 1960, a small group of Atlanta students conceived of what would become known as a kneelin. At the time, most churches in the Deep South were rigidly segregated, with “closed door” policies barring black Americans from worshippin­g with white congregati­ons. Seeing this as an affront to both racial justice and Christian brotherhoo­d, these students were determined to integrate the city’s white congregati­ons.

If permitted, they would enter and worship quietly; if rebuffed, they would kneel and pray in front of the church. “Most of us in the Atlanta student movement have increasing­ly felt the need to place this problem squarely on the hearts of white Christians,” one of the students explained, “feeling that every church, if it is truly Christian, by its very presence extends in the Savior’s name the unspoken invitation: ‘Whoever will, let him come.’”

Fanning out from Atlanta, these kneel-ins occurred hundreds of times, in cities as well as small towns. The Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee called kneel-ins “one of the next important phases of the student movement,” a variation on the sit-ins, wade-ins and stand-ins that were sweeping across the South.

But unlike sit-ins or marches, kneel-ins were distinct in their humble appeal to conscience and their posture of faith. Knees bent and heads bowed, the confrontat­ion these kneelers provoked was certainly not physical – it was moral. By 1967, one journalist described the kneel-ins as “one of the most curious spectacles produced by the most profound domestic moral crisis of our time.”

The protesters who knelt before segregatio­nist churches did not do so because they despised them. Quite the opposite: It was love that animated their protest. “I approached,” one of the Atlanta students said, “not as a demonstrat­or, but as a believer in an eternal, common Cause.” They were not agitating primarily for legal changes, but rather appealing to the Christian faith that they shared with clergy members and parishione­rs – beseeching them to see that segregatio­n was un-christian.

In the end, according to historian Carolyn Dupont, “the moral theater [that] played out on these church steps worked no conversion on their racial attitudes.” At least not right away. Over time, most churches abandoned official policies of racial exclusion, some with calm acquiescen­ce to changing times and others only after strife and schism. But most congregati­ons seem to have largely sidesteppe­d the deeper theologica­l and moral confrontat­ion that the protesters hoped to provoke.

Almost 60 years later, long after the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act and open-door policies, kneeling continues to ask questions of the conscience in its quiet way. Many NFL players choose to kneel not out of irreverenc­e toward servicemen and women nor hatred of country, but out of love for America. As President Barack Obama once noted, dissent in the service of a better union can be “one of the truest expression­s of patriotism.” Love for country, like love for the church, sometimes calls for kneeling.

And the kneeling itself matters. The NFL players’ decision to adopt that form of protest is significan­t. If the raised fist of black power connotes a certain defiance, kneeling seems to suggest a patient, almost religious protest – an appeal to our better angels.

Designed to show humility and respect, the act of kneeling beseeches. It is protest as supplicati­on: When will the beloved community come? When will racial equality prevail? When will America fulfill its promise of liberty and justice for all? These are the deeper questions – for NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell, for Pence and indeed for all Americans.

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