United Methodists show hospitality to marchers

Protesters head for a rally from the parking lot at Nolley
Memorial United Methodist Church in Jena, La. The church opened its
doors to provide water and hospitality during the Sept. 20 march. A UMNS
photo by the Rev. Dan Krutz.
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A UMNS Report
By Linda Green and Yvette Moore*
Sept. 21, 2007

The Revs. Martha Orphe (left), Lyndle Bullard and Ramonalynn Bethley stand in front of Nolley Memorial United
Methodist Church. A UMNS photo by the Rev. Dan Krutz.
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A United Methodist church welcomed demonstrators while a churchwide
agency called for equal justice in the wake of racially charged events
at a high school in Jena, La.
On Sept. 20, tens of thousands of people from across the United
States converged on tiny Jena to show their support for six black
students facing criminal prosecution in the beating of a white student.
The students, who have become known as the "Jena Six," were charged as
adults for attempted murder in the beating, but charges were later
reduced following protests of racial bias. The white student was treated
and released from the hospital the same day and attended a school event
that evening.
The beating was the latest in a series of incidents at and around
Jena High School that included a group of white students hanging nooses
from a tree at the school.
While businesses in Jena, a small, rural town of 3,000, were closed
Sept. 20, the predominantly white Nolley Memorial United Methodist
Church remained open and provided hospitality to some of the primarily
African-American marchers.
The church had erected a sign with the denomination's welcoming
message of "Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors" at the edge of town,
"but I am not sure they saw the sign," said the Rev. Lyndle Bullard,
pastor of Nolley Memorial.
When he, members of the 400-member congregation and annual conference
officials arrived at the church at 7 a.m., the parking lot was full,
and cars were also parked in the cemetery. "We just started greeting
people and finding out where they were from," Bullard said. "We thanked
them for coming and welcomed them to Jena. We talked about hospitality.
"We were the only church that was open in Jena," he said. "As the
sign said, we were open. We did the right thing. We could have closed
and said, 'we don't want you here,' but that was not an option. It was
obvious that the only option was to be open."
The size of the march concerned Jena citizens so much that many
closed businesses and left town, the pastor said. One automobile dealer
moved the cars out of town. News reports estimated that between 20,000
and 50,000 people attended the Jena rally.
"But the people (the protesters) were wonderful, and it was a great surprise," Bullard said.
The Rev. Darlene Moore, pastor of Camphor United Methodist Church,
Baton Rouge, attended the Sept. 20 rally with members of the
congregation and students from Louisiana State University.
"Throughout history, many people have had to stand up for what is
right," she said. "So must the church stand up for justice. After all
our country has been through, why do we have this climate today? There
are things that all Christians can do to make a difference. First
and foremost, we must read the Bible and live by the Bible, practicing
those teachings. We can organize and participate in dialogues that build
a climate of listening to one another and respecting each other."
Working for healing
"The United Methodist Church in Louisiana is continuing to play a
role of support as the parties involved seek justice, reconciliation and
healing," said Betty Backstrom, director of communications for the
Louisiana Annual (regional) Conference. "Bishop William W. Hutchinson,
along with other statewide ecumenical leaders, recently participated in
conversations with church and community leaders in Jena in an
effort to resolve the issues at hand. ... The entire conference is
praying for justice and for healing as we assist in finding ways
to work toward a godly resolution."

Marchers gather Sept. 20 in Washington for a regional
rally supporting the "Jena Six." A UMNS photo by
John Coleman.
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The Jena rally was one of many held around the United States on Sept. 20 in support of the Jena Six.
Some commentaries and editorials have observed that the Jena Six
situation may have sparked the next movement of African-American youth.
College students from across the United States traveled to Jena to make a
stand for racial justice and equality as their parents and grandparents
did in the 1950s and 1960s. They were concerned not only about the Jena
Six case but about inequality throughout the country.
"It is important that young people of all races are paying attention
and responding to this controversy," said Erin Hawkins, top executive of
the United Methodist Commission on Religion and Race. "Many of them
have experienced racism, violence, threats and unfair punishment from
authorities. Some can relate to what has happened to their peers in
Jena. Some fear it could happen to them."
Women’s Division speaks out
The Women's Division of the United Methodist Board of Global
Ministries issued a statement on the case and sent letters urging
Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco, Louisiana Attorney General
Charles Foti and U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Louisiana
Donald Washington to intervene.
"What is happening in Jena is the reflection of much deeper
institutional racism in our nation," the statement said. "Fifty years
after the gains of the civil rights movement, we are witnessing a 'new
Jim Crow' racism that functions through unequal schools, courts and
police forces that disproportionately criminalize and jail poor young
black and Latino youth.
"Like our Methodist foremothers whose local missionary societies led
the Southern anti-lynching societies and created The United Methodist
Church's first Charter for Racial Justice Policies in 1952, we are
compelled to speak out about what Jena, La., means for us as a nation
today."
The letter from the Women's Division called on the government officials to:
- Investigate and monitor the criminal cases against the youth;
- Guarantee the youths' constitutional right to fair and equal treatment under the law; and
- Pursue justice in the situation.
The division called on United Methodist Women members to send similar
letters to government officials in Louisiana and elsewhere. The
division asked members to pray for the Jena community, in particular:
- For the six young men and their families, and that they receive justice;
- For justice, healing and reconciliation for all the families of Jena;
- For the faith communities of Jena and of Louisiana, that
they continue efforts to bridge the racial divide and witness to God's
work of justice and mercy in the world;
- For the United States to mend "a failed criminal justice
system that incarcerates black men at alarming rates in an unequal
application of the law."
*Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in
Nashville, Tenn. Moore is executive secretary for communications for the
Women's Division of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries.
News media contact: Linda Green, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Resources
Women's Divison
Commission on Religion and Race
Louisiana Annual Conference |