Election Day prompts online 'Conversation on Race'
By John Coleman*
Nov. 3, 2008 | WASHINGTON (UMNS)
A
series of pre-Election Day commentaries exploring race and racism in
the church and U.S. society is featured on the new Web site of the
United Methodist racial justice advocacy agency.
Titled "A Conversation on Race," the series presents at least 15 commentaries through Nov. 4, with one or two highlighted each day on the home page of the United Methodist Commission on Religion and Race.
As Election Day approached featuring the first African-American
major-party nominee, the commission asked about 50 United Methodist lay
and clergy leaders of all races to share their observations and
opinions from a faith perspective. More than a dozen responded.
"The church has always had a place and a voice in the public
discourse around racial justice, and there is no time more significant
than now to hear what people of faith are thinking," said Jeneane Jones,
the commission's associate executive for public media.
The series is a way to hear from the faith community on the eve of an
historic election, according to Jones and Erin Hawkins, chief executive
of the commission. "We want to know how much of this political race is
all about race and how much of it is about something more, something
deeper," Jones said.
The commission is asking for reader responses to commentaries already
posted but also seeks new writings after Election Day, especially those
that offer diverse, faith-based perspectives.
The commission plans to feature the series on its Web site through
the end of 2008 and possibly into mid-January, when the church will
observe Human Relations Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Day and the
inauguration of the new U.S. president.
"The General Commission on Religion and Race has been watching
this political drama unfold with great interest, and at least we are
heartened by the fact that the discussion of race and racism in America
has at times been pushed to center stage," reads the series
introduction. "Our desire is not to offer a useless repetition of what
has already been said, but to search for new insights and inspiration
with a faith perspective, shared by old and new voices for a new time."
Contributors include people in ministry at all levels of the
denomination—in local churches, seminaries, annual conferences,
racial/ethnic caucuses and general agencies.
"We want to know how much of this political
race is all about race and how much of it is about something more,
something deeper."
–Jeneane Jones
"People of faith must view race as we view sin, as an
ever-changing challenge, complete with victories and failures," writes
retired Bishop Woodie White, the commission's first chief executive, who
served from 1968 to 1984 and is now bishop-in-residence at Candler
School of Theology in Atlanta.
"We have not crossed over that ever-widening chasm that
separates people based on differences in their color and culture,"
writes Monalisa S. Tuitahi, an immigration attorney who heads the the
Pacific Islander National Caucus of United Methodists."There is great
fear that keeps us living in the status quo without enough meaningful
attempts to connect, understand and accept each other in our
different-ness."
"In my discussions during campaign calls with voters … I have
discovered that 'I'd rather not say' is often the code phrase for
'I can't vote for a black man,'" observes Kathy FitzJefferies,
chairwoman of commissions on Religion and Race in the Western North
Carolina Conference and Southeastern Jurisdiction.
"We need to be faithful to our historic positions against racism and
injustice," writes the Rev. David Maldonado, former chairman of the
United Methodist Hispanic/Latino caucus, MARCHA. "But to do so requires
serious reflection on how racism is alive within our own church."
*Coleman is director of communications for the United Methodist Commission on Religion and Race.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Resources
A Conversation on Race
Commission on Religion and Race
Racism |