The Guardian (USA)

Rev Calvin O Butts III, pastor who fought poverty and racism, dies aged 73

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The Rev Calvin O Butts III, who fought poverty and racism and skillfully navigated New York’s power structure as pastor of Harlem’s historic Abyssinian Baptist church, died on Friday at age 73, the church announced.

“The Butts family and entire Abyssinian Baptist church membership solicit your prayers for us in our bereavemen­t,” the church said on its website. No cause of death was given.

Butts began serving as a youth minister at Abyssinian in 1972 and was senior pastor there for more than 30 years. He also served as president of the State University of New York at Old Westbury, on Long Island, from 1999 to 2020.

His post at Abyssinian gave Butts one of the most prominent pulpits in the US. The church traces its roots to 1808 when a group of Black worshipper­s who refused to accept segregatio­n at the First Baptist church of New York City left to form their own congregati­on.

The church’s current home on 138th Street in Harlem is a massive Tudor and Gothic revival structure dedicated in 1923 and designated a city landmark in 1993.

Earlier pastors at Abyssinian included Adam Clayton Powell Sr and his son Adam Clayton Powell Jr, the first

African American to be elected to Congress from New York.

Butts was known for working with political leaders across the ideologica­l spectrum. In 1995, the Republican state governor, George Pataki, appointed Butts to two state boards that controlled economic developmen­t grants to businesses.

That same year, Butts hosted thenCuban leader Fidel Castro at Abyssinian, where the fatigues-wearing communist received a hero’s welcome.

Butts surprised many by endorsing Hillary Clinton over Barack Obama in the 2008 Democratic presidenti­al primary, saying the endorsemen­t “was not and is not and will not become a racebased decision for me”.

Butts later said he was “overjoyed” when Obama was elected as the first Black president of the United States that November.

Butts’s impact extended far beyond his church’s walls. In 1989, he establishe­d the non-profit Abyssinian Developmen­t Corporatio­n to develop moderate-income housing, retail, schools and other projects in the surroundin­g neighborho­od.

Butts helped mobilize church leaders to support programs for Aids patients in the 1980s and more recently set up a Covid-19 vaccinatio­n clinic at Abyssinian to encourage community residents to get immunized against the virus.

“The kind of conspiraci­es we saw in the past were real but they do not exist about these vaccines,” Butts said last year in a reference to the racist history of episodes like the Tuskegee syphilis study that left many Black people mistrustfu­l of medical authoritie­s.

Butts courted controvers­y in the 1990s by preaching against violent and misogynist rap lyrics. He had parishione­rs bring recordings of the offensive music to church to be steamrolle­d in June 1993 but then ended up dumping the CDs in front of a Sony office in midtown Manhattan instead of smashing them.

“Rap is an extremely powerful art form,” Butts said at a debate with the rapper Ice-T. “It comes from the creativity of African people. And anything that comes from our creativity is powerful, and it grabs. And therefore we want to make sure that as it grabs it also shapes in a constructi­ve and redemptive way our young people to continue our progress against the evils that try to crush us.”

Tributes to Butts poured in Friday. “He was a dominant faith and academic leader for decades,” the Rev Al Sharpton said in a statement. “We knew each other for more than 40 years, and while we did not always agree we always came back together.”

New York’s governor, Kathy Hochul, called Butts “a force for moral clarity, a voice for his Harlem community, a counselor to so many of us in public service” and said she was proud to call him a friend.

Butts is survived by his wife, Patricia,

three children and six grandchild­ren.

 ?? ?? The Rev Calvin O Butts III in New York on 8 February 2021. Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA
The Rev Calvin O Butts III in New York on 8 February 2021. Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA

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