I sit overlooking a lake near Orlando, Florida. The UUMA's Committee on Ministry for Anti-racism, Anti-oppression and Multiculturalism is on retreat. We talk of situations, of problems and solutions. We share our own stories. The UUA has organized a transformation committee to do this work. They have wisely chosen to look at one institutional change at a time. We look at cases. Situations involving ministers in real concrete situations facing the processes and procedures that our community of faith has instituted to regulate and regularize our interconnections.
Our conversations are deep and sometimes when we look at a case we jointly experience the pain of doing this work. The Lake is good, and reminds us that we are sustained and renewed always.
Against Racism and Oppression: January 2006 Archives
We live in time of symbolic politics when both Democrats and Republicans are more concerned with their image than with substance. Politicians who do nothing to advance the concerns of People of Color or address the growing racial divide in our nation will parade their admiration for Martin Luther King, Jr. today. While there are some excellent representatives of the people who are also Democrats, most Democrats support for the issues of communities of Color is week,. But still the Republicans actively oppose these measures. We are stuck in the politics of the better of two evils, because Republicans whose rise to power was a direct result of openly exploiting the "white backlash" are the most brazen in saying one thing while doing quite the opposite. It is important to understand both political parties, lest one become misled by their rhetoric.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson writes: "If he were alive, King would almost certainly oppose GOP economic policies, which squeeze the poor. ..there is much in King's background and social philosophy that Republicans have repackaged to suit their aims. Nevertheless Martin Luther King, Jr. is an icon to exploit and exploit him they will.
Also check out this article by Hutchinson on manipulation of King's legacy.
There was a struggle to make Martin Luther King's birthday a legal holiday, now there is a struggle to make it mean something. Resolve that Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Birthday doesn't become another shopping holiday, but a commemoration. Make a day of service, not a day off.
MLK Day timeline
€¢ April 4, 1968 Dr. King was assassinated.
€¢ U.S. Representative John Conyers of Michigan introduced
legislation to create a federal holiday to commemorate Dr. King.
€¢ 1973 Illinois became the first state to adopt MLK Day as a state holiday.
€¢ 1985 U.S. officially observes Martin Luther King Day for the first time.
€¢ January 20, 1986 The United States observed the first federal MLK Day.
€¢ January 18, 1993 Martin Luther King Day holiday was observed
in all 50 states for the first time.
Religious liberalism arose not on the basis of abstract principles, but within a concrete social context. Unitarian Universalist church historian Conrad Wright probes how some of our principles reflected the historical conditions of the time (and place), and suggests that subsequent social changes challenge those principles. Conrad Wright writes in Walking Together:
"Liberal religion articulated a value system that derived its strength from the social arrangements made possible by the discovery of the resources of the New World. But those resources were not limitless. The infinity of the private individual was plausible enough on the shores of Walden Pond, when there was no closer than Concord Village a mile away: it is hollow rhetoric on the streets of Calcutta or in the barrios of Caracas. The progress of humankind onward and upward forever may have seemed an axiom grounded in history to James Freedman Clarke: it seems something less than that to the residents of Middletown, Pennsylvania. The principle of religious toleration was easy for Jefferson, who could not see that it did any injury to his neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no gods, but the principles of toleration takes on a sharper edge when the decisive differences are not in the realm of speculative theology, abut on the question of apartheid and what it is others should be forced, despite their opinions, to do about it."
So what is permanent and what is transient about liberal religion? Contemporary religious liberals assert that it is a religious principle to work to build a world of peace, democracy, equality and justice - we may disagree whether such a world can be attained, and just what such a world might look like, but social justice and overcoming violence and coercion have become foundational to our religious community. Our spiritual ancestors shared these values with us.
Yet Wright points out that their understandings of these principles were based on their peculiar social situation. He doesn't mention, but I will, that one particularity of that social situation of early American religious liberalism was that it rested on power, and privilege. That power and privilege was based on an accumulation of wealth that resulted from: the conquest of North America, and its peoples; the privatization of the land; the institution of slavery; and the exploitation of impoverished laborers in a rising industrial society. North America's economy today is the product of that historic accumulation.
So religious liberalism arose in a social context, and the social context was based on a history which many of us would describe as unjust, exploitative and contrary to the principles that we espouse. Our contemporary Unitarian Universalist movement exists in a social context as well, and many of us would argue that the social order in which we exist is contrary to our values, and principles. The difference between us and our spiritual ancestors may be that we are aware of the contraction, that we can understand that our religious values call upon us to transform our social situation.
The founders of religious liberalism saw the best hope for their values in their new republic, and its unfolding destiny. Today, Unitarian Universalists are much less optimistic about the wonders of an American future, than our spiritual ancestors.
One of the tasks of Unitarian Universalist theology is to articulate what is the basis for our optimism. We continue to articulate an optimistic theology and social vision. But what is the basis for that optimism. If not the republic, then have we really come to embrace a set of abstractions; such as the triumph of reason and science, the potential of human beings to do good, or love overcoming evil?
What does it mean to affirm the goal of a world community of peace and justice? And what are the means toward that end?
Below are some quotes that help reveal the less visible aspects of racism.
Today, racism is far more camouflaged than it was [before the civil rights movement.] It is buried in institutional practices. It is hidden in coded language and subtle messages some people get when they shop, or look for a place to live or for a taxi, or have dealings with the police.
Project Hip-Hop, 1997
Racism is so universal is this country, so widespread and deep seated, that it is invisible because it is so normal.
Shirley Chisholm, 1970
If we tell ourselves that the only problem is hate, we avoid facing the reality that it is most nice, nonhating people who perpetuate racial inequality.
Ellis Cose, 1997
Black people know that sometimes their greatest enemy is. . . white people of power who would never utter a racist sentence in public, yet who quitely and privately do everything they can to keep black people as the slave class in this society.
Carl Rowan, 1991
Is Micheal Moore's vision of a more democratic, more inclusive United States distorted by white privilege? Kenyon Farrow & Kil Ja Kim seem to think so, they write:
"[W]e think Michael Moore is a white nationalist. . . .
Some will be confused by our use of white nationalism since it's a term usually reserved for "extremist" organizations. To the contrary, we consider white nationalism to be normalized in US social relations since by white nationalism we mean the project of nation building that is driven by the experiences and history of white people. White nationalism, however, is more than just being white-centric, per se. Rather, white nationalism is the project of maintaining or expanding the white nation-whether established along state lines or as socially created communities or both-in ways that reflect the anxieties, fears, dread and aspirations of white people. As such, in a white nationalist discourse, whiteness and US civil society as well as the racialized and sexualized project of citizenship that maintains both are not confronted. Instead the point of departure for a white nationalist approach is: what stands in white people's way of being able to claim the nation as rightfully theirs? A white nationalist project therefore is fixated with what government forces, "subversiveness" from below or shifts in the global economy threaten the rights of the white citizenry.
I find this critique of Moore challenging, because if he is engaged in revisioning the white nation state then Unitarian Universalists need to probe deeply into the vision behind our social justice statements and resolutions. Does this critique extend to Unitarian Universalism? Kenyon Farrow & Kil Ja Kim's complete critique of Moore can be found on
Paul Dorn writes: "As with many features of life in the US, transportation is rife with class contradictions. National transportation policy, especially since WWII, has effectively been controlled by GM, Exxon, and their associates (not coincidentally the biggest cabal of capitalist villains on the planet). These corporate interests have used their considerable political influence to ensure that highways get funded and transit systems don't, creating an extensive system of subsidies to encourage driving and discourage alternatives. The automobile-centered US transportation system has been created to maximize profits, not to enhance personal mobility.
The prioritization of automobiles by government transportation planners has had numerous detrimental effects, with the most damaging impacts borne by poor and working class people."
The idea of taking concrete steps to remedy and to prevent discrimination - in employment, housing, education and access to programs - for all historically marginalized and oppressed racial and cultural groups and for women originated in the 1960s. It was modeled on the GI bill of rights and other programs to support veterans. In the 1970s affirmative action programs were instituted to include people with disabilities.
Martin Luther King, Jr. put it this way in the 1967: "This is a day which demands new thinking and the reevaluation of old concepts. A society that has done done something special against the Negro for hundreds of year must now do something special for him, in order to equip him to compete on a just and equal basis." Unitarian Universalists have supported affirmative action to eliminate discrimination and advance equality for four decades. Beginning in the 1970s Unitarian Universalists extended affirmative action to overcome discrimination based on sexual orientation. The second and sixth principles are wishful thinking without a commitment to affirmative action.
Affirmative action programs have been among the most effective instruments in deconstructing institutional racism. But those who are privileged by racism have raised many counter arguments seeking to discredit affirmative action.
It was argued that affirmative action constituted some kind of reverse discrimination. Manning Marable effectively answers that argument: "Given the fact that the average white household's net worth is ten times that of a black families, and that the overwhelming majority of leaders in business, government, banking and the media are upper-class white males, the argument that whites suffer "reverse discrimination" is absurd. Justice demand affirmative action based on race and gender to address continuing patterns of inequality in America."Some of the anger generated against affirmative action stems from illusions stemming from the ideology of Whiteness as Kenneth B. Clark pointed out: "The illusion of classlessness among whites led them to believe that all whites had opportunities to succeed until blacks came along. every psychologists knows there are individual preferences in every group. Every white applicant for say, a policeman's job, believing he'd get a job or promotion were it not for affirmative action, is engaging in a fascinating sort of idiocy."
Another objection has been raised is that somehow affirmative action confers a stigma, that the woman or minority who has a job has it not because they are qualified, but because they benefit from affirmative action. Answering that objection is Andrew Hacker "How, it is asked, can people go through life, knowing that they have been hired not on their inherent talents, but to fill some quota or to satisfy appearances? Not surprisingly, white people seem to do most of the worrying about this apparent harm to black self-esteem. In fact, there is little evidence that those who have been aided by affirmative action feel many doubts or misgivings. For one thing, most of them believe that they are entitled to whatever opportunities they have received . . . . Nor should it be forgotten what feelings of unworthiness seldom plague white Americans who have profited from more traditional forms of preferment." [How many Veterans complain about Veterans preferences?]
On January 6th of 1832, William Lloyd Garrison along with 15 others, founded the New England Anti-Slavery Society at the African Meeting House in Boston.
By 1833, Garrison helped establish the American Anti-Slavery Society with fellow abolitionists Arthur Tappan, Lewis Tappan, and Theodore Dwight Weld. This organization sent lecturers across the North to convince whites of slavery's brutality.
Links to:
Today in history
Anti Slavery Society
William Llyod Garrison
We have long since grown accustomed to thinking of Blacks as being "racially disadvantaged." Rarely, however, do we refer to Whites as "racially advantaged," even though that is an equally apt characterization of the existing inequality.
Harlon Dalton, 1995
As a white person, I realized I had been taught about racism as something which puts others at a disadvantage, but had been taught not to see the corollary aspects, white privilege, which puts me at an advantage.
Many, perhaps most, of our white students in the United States think that racism does affect them because they are not people of color: the do not see "whiteness" as racial identity.
In my class and place, I did not recognize myself as a racist because I was taught to see racism only in individual acts of meanness by members of my group, never in invisible systems conferring unsought racial dominance on my group from birth.
Peggy McIntosh, 1988
Whiteness in a racist, corporate controlled society is like having the image of an American Express Card. . . . stamped on one's face: immediately you are "universally accepted."
Manning Marable, 1997
Leadership is crucial, but as Paul Robinson reminded us, leaders derive their power from a much deeper source.
The faces and the tactics of the leaders
may change every four years, or two, or one,
but the people go on forever.
The people - beaten down today,
yet rising tomorrow;
losing the road one minute
but finding it the next;
their eyes always fixed on a star
of true brotherhood *, equality, and dignity
- the people are the real guardians
of our hopes and dreams.
Paul Robinson, 1952
* for a reading I would substitute "true solidarity" for "true brotherhood."
Image was created by the subject and shared with the MoveOn library of photos for the budget fight back.







