







Our unique identity within Unitarian Universalism as a diverse, anti-racist People of Color community, carries with it both responsibilities and opportunities. Therefore, we covenant with one another to:
Change the racial status quo in the Unitarian Universalist Association,
Develop tools and strategies to work together,
Remain together and present with one another through disagreement and conflict,
Connect to this organization and one another throughout our professional and personal affiliations with the UUA,
Provide vision and leadership for the Journey Toward Wholeness,
Hold one another accountable in our efforts to become an anti-oppressive faith community.
As People of Color* mobilized in an anti-racist collective, we unite to:
Work for self-determination, justice and equal opportunity,
Empower our various ministries,
Celebrate our diverse heritages,
Overcome racism through resistance,
Transform and enrich Unitarian Universalism through our multicultural experiences.
* The United States is a race based society made up of a dominant White group and several other racially defined groups which have been and continue to be oppressed in specific ways. While race is a social construct created by the dominant White group to oppress and exclude the other groups from the power and resources of the society, race has also been used by oppressed peoples to build group solidarity and a culture of survival and resistance.
Racism has also created barriers which separate oppressed groups from one another. While each oppressed group is affected by racism differently and each group maintains its own unique identity and culture, there is also the recognition that racism has the potential to unite oppressed people in a collective of resistance. For this reason, many individuals who identify as members of racially oppressed groups, also claim the political identity of being People of Color. This in no way diminishes their specific cultural or racial identity, rather it is an affirmation of the multiple layers of identity of every individual.
Yesterday evening the U.U.A.s People of Color organization known as DRUUMM (Diverse Revolutionary Unitarian Universalist Multicultural Ministries) celebrated its annual meeting with a large gathering of over seventy people. There were youth and young adults, there were several older veterans of the struggle, and all the generations in between.
As a sign growth and maturity each of DRUUMM's several identity caucuses was well represented: Latino/a, African descent, Native peoples/ American Indian, Asian and Pacific Islanders, Youth, and Young Adults, and Queers of Color.
The meeting was brought together by Manish Mishra, DRUUMM's outgoing President who told of the experiences of being President and some of the accomplishments of the Steering Committee in the last year.
The Mel Hoover "Beloved Community Award" for outstanding service to the People of Color in the UUA was given to two persons this year, Dr. Norma Poinsett and Rev. Dr. Bill Jones. Norma is a long time African American activist having served on the Black Concerns Working Group, and Professor Jones is well known for his penetrating analysis of racism within American society and within our own Unitarian Universalist Association. Both also served on the UUA Board of Trustees.
A new steering committee was elected that included:
President -- Danielle Di Bona
First Vice President -- Leslie Takahashi Morris
Second Vice President -- Mel Hoover
Treasurer -- Robette Ann Dias
Recording Secretary -- James Coomes
Corresponding Secretary -- Joseph Santos Lyons
Multicultural / Families of Color Coordinator -- John Gilmore
Communications Coordinator -- Monifa Johnson
GA Coordinator -- Clyde Grubbs
Outreach Coordinator -- Tony Blumfield
UUA liaison --- Sofia Betancourt
The meetings sent prayers and well wishes to Leno Sottile, son of Robette Dias who was injured while on duty as a fireman the day before, and to Robette who left Fort Lauderdale to fly home to be with Leno.
People So Bold! is proud to announce that a standing caucus of Native Peoples/American Indians gathered in Fort Lauderdale on Thursday, June 26th for a late lunch and conversation about their work together. While not all of the identifiable Native American DRUUMM members were able to make the caucus meeting, it was the first time that most of the identified Native American DRUUMM members came together.
The conversation identified three main areas of work for the caucus during the coming year: outreach to other Native American Indians within and around our Unitarian Universalist movement and congregations; building awareness of Native American Indian history and issues among Unitarian Universalists; and advocacy work around issues of racism and cultural misappropriation as they impact the Native American Indian experience within our congregations and the denomination at large.
Those who gathered shared their stories and articulated several common concerns, and agreed that they would continue to discuss a name for the caucus. There were several candidates for a name, First People, Native People, and American Indian were considered, but it was agreed to let a decision on the name sit and see what comes up as we caucus some more.
Qiyamah Rahman writes of the recent Religious Professionals of Color retreat in the Bay Area of California
http://qiyamahinislam.blogspot.com/2008/03/unitarian-universalist-ministers.html
<a href="http://technorati.com/claim/pqqsd9ykb9" rel="me">Technorati Profile</a>
This is a republication of an interview with John Buehrens, then President of the Unitarian Universalist Association, by the UUA magazine the World in 2001. Joining with and attempting to give leadership to the Association's antiracism work as a white man he admits was "a very humbling experience," In the interview, he discusses how the UUA began to work with Crossroads Ministries and incorporated the power analysis into its efforts to become more diverse. He also discusses the accomplishments and some of the resistance anti-racism was encountered. He is honest about some of the reasons behind this resistance.
The World started with the question of how far he thinks the UUA has come on the Journey toward Wholeness.
JB: There were a number of false starts. It took a while to figure out that what is needed is a spiritual transformation of a predominantly white, middle-class religious movement to become aware of its own enmeshment in cultural and institutional racism.
The resolution passed at General Assembly in 1992 is a plea for a more racially inclusive movement. In other words, let's have more people of color in the UUA. There was a problem with that, though. White liberals wanted more people of color around to reduce their guilt feelings, using people of color as trophies and tokens. When people ask me how we can find more people of color, I tell them, "Stop trying; don't go fishing for people categorically."
Another basic course correction has been learning that racism hurts all people of color. This thing started out as basically a black-white issue. But the rise of Latino/a voices; the presence and the transformation work of someone like [UUA staffer] Robette Dias, who's a Native American; the growing number of persons of color of Asian background--all of this has had to come out on the screen.
World: How did the change in thinking get started?
JB: A big task force met in St. Louis in 1993 and had to select a methodology for trying to advance this diversity agenda [called for in the 1992 resolution]. And when they realized it couldn't be about diversity without dealing with racism, they had to pick consultants who would help us become aware of our own enmeshment in cultural racism. They turned to the Crossroads Ministries. The Crossroads model is not perfect for us, so there's been a big adaptation of that. The approach that Crossroads helped us find recognizes that there are power dynamics involved in cultural and institutional racism, but it recognizes that change comes about in people.
You have little light bulbs going off in people's heads in the middle of our antiracism training where they realize, "Oh my God, if I'm not part of the solution, I'm part of the problem. If I don't actively attempt to do something about further distributing opportunity and power to people who historically have been excluded, and where the culture reinforces patterns of exclusion, I'm just helping to perpetuate racist patterns." And those patterns also manifest themselves in our congregations and in our association as a whole.
World: How big a struggle is it to grapple with antiracism?
JB: I'm constantly realizing, "Oh, that's another dimension of this that I never quite got right." It's very humbling working on this stuff. Some people believe that there are those who get it and those who don't. I don't buy that.
There are going to be differences of opinion all along the way, and there are going to be mistakes, where insensitive things are done or people run. People get into the notion that, "I thought I could expect that there wouldn't be any racist responses." Well, good luck. The day that happens, we will have entered nirvana.
But I do think we have settled on a common, pragmatic methodology that's not a matter of merely working on prejudiced individuals and not a full-blown political, ideological stance, either, or a creed. We're being honest about history.
The history of this movement around race is not as noble as people like to portray it. There have been moments of real commitment of predominantly white Unitarians and Universalists to undoing racially based oppression. But even during the abolitionist era, the bulk of Unitarians were profoundly conservative and resisted abolitionism, even to the point of boycotting William Ellery Channing's preaching to the degree that he became depressed and ill and retired early from the ministry. His own really quite modest abolitionist notions wouldn't penetrate the heads of his parishioners, who were all tied up with their economic interests in the cotton trade, etc.
World: What do you view as the UU accomplishments?
JB: Well over 500 leaders of the movement have now experienced the antiracism analysis training. The whole model here has been one of transforming the awareness of the gatekeepers, those who hold the power.
We have now gotten to the point where we have 45 persons of color in ministerial fellowship. Most of our ministers don't even know that. We don't regard this as adequate, so we're now trying to add some active recruitment efforts. I think more ministers of color have been willing to take a risk on us because of the Journey toward Wholeness initiative, because they see, "Oh, the predominantly white leadership of this movement actually does grasp that racism is a problem, and they're willing to talk with me as a human being and not a racial abstraction."
World: Many critics of the Journey toward Wholeness initiative have been ministers. Why?
JB: They know it will be hard. And they know that right at the core of this methodology what is at stake is giving away power.
World: Their power?
JB: Oh, absolutely. And let me say, in the defense of people in our ministry, laypeople have no idea how scary and insecure the life of most ministers is, at a very deep spiritual level and at an economic level. Job security in our movement is lousy, as it is in most congregationally based denominations. So I'm not surprised when they put up resistance. They're very good at intellectual defense systems.
World: What tend to be their objections?
JB: Three things. Congregational polity--"Don't tell me what to do; I'll decide when and what." Fine. We're never going to be able to tell congregations when and just how to work on this stuff. But let's admit it: Is this initiative coming from the congregations? No. If we waited for it to come from the congregations, it would never happen. The association has a moral obligation to lead in order to help the whole of Unitarian Universalism adapt to a future that is necessarily going to be more multiracial and multicultural. We are going to persistently suggest that unless you learn to adapt to the exigencies of a more multiracial and multicultural world, your relevance is in danger.
Another area of resistance is, "Gee, this might make me feel guilty or my people feel guilty." That is not the intent, and that is not what happens, but it's guaranteed that when you start working on this, people will experience some conflict, differences of perspectives. You start talking across racial lines, people don't see things the same way. It becomes a real spiritual risk.
The third area of resistance is an attempt to substitute an educational model: "Let's read books and discuss them and debate the world out there and whether racism isn't less of a problem now than it used to be."
World: I think I'm hearing you suggest that this journey is going to take generations. Are we doing process here or are we doing real change?
JB: We're doing spiritual and social transformation. We're trying to do a social transformation of our own religious community, so that it begins to look more like the beloved community. The UUA is a service organization created by and for the congregations. Our job, on behalf of the whole family of congregations, is to make sure that not only does this religious movement not vanish from the face of the earth but that it adapts successfully to the new moral, cultural, and social demands of the age. That means we're always in the uncomfortable position of putting challenges in front of congregations, as well as services.
Yesterday, we remembered Marjorie's life in a memorial service at Community Church of New York. Marjorie would be pleased, she planned the music and designated certain people to speak and hinted at what they might want to speak about. Below was her draft.
When Community Church was chosen we made it more concrete. Thanks to so many who made it possible.
Order of Service
Prelude
Come Sunday, Edward "Duke" Ellington
Sylvia Wells, piano; Lloyd Goldstein ~ double bass
Chalice Lighting
Invocation
The 23rd Psalm, Jubilee Singers
arranged by Cissy Houston, degenderized by Bobby McFerrin
Opening Words
[why we are here €¦ include reading of Maya Angelou's "Spirit"]
Responsive Reading €" "We Need One Another"
We need one another when we mourn and would be comforted.
We need one another when we are in trouble and afraid.
We need one another when we are in despair, in temptation, and need to be recalled to our best selves again.
We need one another when we would accomplish some great purpose, and cannot do it alone.
We need one another in the hour of success, when we look for someone to share our triumphs.
We need one another in the hour of defeat, when with encouragement we might endure, and stand again.
We need one another when we come to die, and would have gentle hands prepare us for the journey.
All our lives we are in need, and others are in need of us.
George E. Odell
Hymn 123, Spirit of Life
Obituary (read in silence)
Everything Must Change, Quincy Jones
Reading
Let Me Die Laughing, Mark Morrison-Reed
Solo
Eternal Life, Olive Dungan, arr.
Eulogy
Rev. Rob Hardies / Rev. Rosemary Bray McNatt
Tributes
Family - Talibah (aka Tonya Edmonds) and Marcus Alan Wells
and Clyde Elliot Grubbs
Solo
Precious Lord, Thomas A. Dorsey
Tributes
A Time of Silence
Musical Meditation
Don't Cry for Me, CeCe Winans
Benediction
Postlude - Claire de Lune, Claude Debussy
An adult UU shares with me his impressions of GA and asks me what I think about the GA.
I tell him that it is apparent to me that we still have much work to do about racism, that again this year there was insensitivity and arrogance on the part of white Unitarian Universalists toward people of color. I share that adult people of color tend to be more accustomed to this kind of behavior on the part of well meaning, but clueless white folk, but that the youth of color are outraged that Unitarian Universalist adults could come across as arrogant, imperious, culturally incompetent, and/or oblivious jerks.
He opines that the problem with racism at General Assembly has been overblown.
I assure him that the problem is real and experienced, and results in pain among people of color and youth of color that undermines their confidence in Unitarian Universalism. In that we are a faith that proclaims "deeds not creeds" that proclamation creates an expectation that we might try to walk our talk. (I know it did for me as a Unitarian youth, but I soon came to realize that the vast majority of pew sitters were not faithful Unitarians, they came for intellectual stimulation not transformation.)
He offers the observation that the youth of color at General Assembly dress like they were in a street gang. I am taken aback by his characterization of our youth's dress. I know many of the youth by name, I have know several of them since they were children. I know their parents. The parents include UU ministers, Trustees, Congregational leaders, and the youth appear to me to be dressed like middle class youth dress when they are being hip, which is not at all like street gangsters. I reply that I know the youth and I disagree with his judgment of their attire, but perhaps making the distinction between youthful attire and street gangs requires some discernment and recognition of distinctions. (I am trying to be persuasive and not come across as dismissive.) He concedes that I might be right, and shares that Black youth make him nervous.
I am reminded that five centuries ago when the Europeans first encountered the Africans and the Native Americans they concluded that these "strange" people were promiscuous because they didn't wear clothing ("save for their privies") in the summer time.
Youth and the culturally marginalized must learn to dress "right" or they won't get any respect!
Some youth and young adults of color from the DRUUM YAYA website. (If you see the gang colors please email me and help me out.)
My experience in St. Louis was a little different from most who attended. I was in meetings from Sunday to Saturday. I made it to the Service of the Living Tradition and saw many of colleagues I know walk across the stage. I enjoyed the sermon. I made to the Sunday morning service and heard Gail Geisenhainer, my friend and colleague preach a wonderful sermon. I made it to the closing ceremony, and found the reflections valuable and the music interesting. I did the Berry Street Conference last Wednesday. I made it into the plenary for about two hours and did not regret missing the rest. I do regret not having had any time to go to a single workshop. There were a number I would have loved to take in. I do regret that the UUCF communion has been moved from Sunday afternoon. I do regret not being able to go the Bloggers dinner, or the UUCF hymn sing, but I appreciated leading that focus group and going to the DRUUM meeting. Can't be in two places at once, and might as well love the place I went.
I liked being in meetings, the questions I and the other people were engaged with was vital and interesting. The decisions I and the other people made will make a difference for the Minister's Association or for the People of Color in our Association. Being active at GA, means that my time isn't my own.
On Sunday I went to Cahokia Mounds with several friends from DRUUM. We called it the first DRUUM field trip. May there be many. Hafidha articulated it well in her post GA reflections. It was good to get away from the Convention Center, to look at the sky and to just to take in this ancient city. To let the museum show us its reconstruction of the Mississippian culture, to climb up the highest mound and rejoice both for our connections to the people who lived on that spot so long ago, and to our own humanity silent before interconnections we can not enumerate.
I wasn't tired Sunday evening, but I did get to sleep relatively early, and I joined a thousand coreligionists exiting the city the next morning. I was very tired when I got home. Too busy to blog late last week. To tired to blog early this week.
It takes a lot of energy to do theological reflection, which is what I hope to do in July. I have a number of topics I hope to get around to "putting on paper" or whatever it is that we do in this medium. I pray everyday that individual Unitarian Universalists will have what Emerson called "an original revelation of the divine", and if they wish to call it God, I say more power to them. We are overcoming the practice of using "lowest common denominator" religious language that was once our way to being welcoming to theological diversity. It didn't work because it meant we weren't welcoming to those who were exploring non humanist religious commitments. But does that mean that we can use theological language from our own historical tradition without alienating many Unitarian Universalists? I will have to think about this, it isn't simple. It occurs to me that there is a difference between a language of reverence (the words we use in worship) and theological language (for example, the words we use to describe our common aspirations as expressed in the Association's covenant between congregations.
I think this is the first anniversary of A People So Bold! I will reflect on what I have learned in the past year soon.
DRUUM is approaching its tenth year of existence as a Unitarian Universalist gathering. It was founded by a meeting of the African American Unitarian Universalist Ministers and the Latino/Latino Unitarian Universalist Network who agreed that a common organization of racially and culturally oppressed peoples was necessary. DRUUM stands for Diverse Revolutionary Unitarian Universalist Ministries (see link on side bar.)
Over the years I have been to many DRUUM meetings. Marjorie and I hosted DRUUM families in Massachusetts when we were there. I have been to a few meetings at GA, especially before I was on the UUMA exec and became super busy. Saturday, there was a breakfast meeting of the San Diego DRUUM at the First UU Church.
It was a good meeting, I think this chapter has much potential. Many DRUUM members came latter in the day or on Sunday. Saturday morning is not the best time to meet.
I grew up attending Unitarian Churches. I was the child of what some people called a mixed marriage, now days I am told that we were a bi-racial family. The word my father used to describe us is not considered a nice word to use in public. Something about being partially breed.
My Cherokee background father experienced two kinds of responses from white liberals, insulting responses, and the responses of folks who tried to be "color blind." Some Unitarians called him chief. I noticed that they didn't treat him like a chief. Some said weird "ha ha" comments like "where is your squaw."
But others tried hard to ignore what being of Cherokee descent may have meant to him, they tried to treat him like a "white" man. In the process they made him invisible.
The assumption in our society is being colorblind is a good thing. Why? Is being unaware of the other person's identity good? Isn't the assumption in the term "color blind" that seeing color is being prejudiced against that color?
Why can't we see people in all their various colors, see them in the depth of their identity and respond with positive human feelings toward them because the content of their character is embodied in one of the many colors of humanity?
Color blindness is pretending that conquest, slavery, genocide and oppression isn't part of our common history. It is pretending that we have healed our nation's brokenness when the consequences of that history is borne by communities of color today. Color blindness is pretending that racism doesn't happen among us now.
But the problem with color blindness is deeper still, it contains the presumption that subordinate and oppressed cultures are not different from the dominant culture and have no merit, and it further presumes that subordinate and oppressed cultures do not continue to sustain and empower the people in resistance to the dominant culture. If these cultures had merit and power, why recommend that we be blind to them?
Most people of color don't seek to be just like white folk, they seek to honor their own communities of origin, their diverse cultures and their identity. They seek to be solidarity with each other and they seek a transformed relationship with white America. Unitarian Universalists of color invite people of the dominant culture to see their "color" and affirm that "color" as a wonderful way of being human.
Beginning to think about controversy at Monday night closing ceremony, General Assembly in Fort Worth, Texas.