Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 12, 2020 / 06:00 am (CNA).- As thousands of protesters prepared to march against racism in Washington, D.C. last Saturday, Louis Brown helped organize a rosary procession on Capitol Hill.
Lay Catholics joined Dominican friars, nuns, and priests of the Washington archdiocese in prayer for justice and healing. As tens of thousands of Americans have been actively protesting racism and police brutality, Brown, who is an African-American and Catholic, told CNA he chose to focus on prayer.
The present moment demands both prayer and action against injustice, he told CNA. “It’s a both-and.”
“Ultimately this is a problem of the heart,” Brown said. “Our country desperately needs God and the love of God to heal these wounds.”
“We are not the ultimate protagonists of the story,” he added. “Jesus Christ is the ultimate protagonist.”
Brown spoke of acute pain within the African-American community, caused by the recent deaths of young African-Americans at the hands of police or fellow citizens—most notably George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, and Breonna Taylor— which, he said, are just the latest in a centuries-long history.
“As an African-American, the pain of going back into that history is so painful, and is so gut-wrenching, and it’s so hard to deal with,” he said.
“Part of it is just the fear,” he said, of being pulled over in a “routine traffic stop” that could end in a tragedy—“or something could get pinned on me.”
“It’s an anger, it’s an anxiety, and it’s also a fear of it happening again, and a pain of seeing what others have gone through,” he said.
Video of George Floyd’s May 25 arrest in Minneapolis showed him calling out “I can’t breathe” and “mama” as police officer Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck. Floyd later died at a hospital, and Chauvin has since been fired and charged with second-degree murder in Floyd’s death.
“Whether you’re black or white, you can’t help but see that person as our brother and as a child of God,” Brown said of Floyd crying out.
Yet protests against injustice, he emphasized, must be rooted in “the right to life” for all and not be “hijacked” by the culture of death.
“The rioting, the looting, is only making it more likely that a black man like me will be a victim of police misconduct, or a victim of bias and stereotypes,” Brown said.
Other Catholics around the country told CNA that they attended recent protests against racism and police brutality in cities, suburbs, and towns—in California, New York City, Chicago, Cleveland, Washington, D.C., Nebraska, West Virginia, and Tennessee.
Most who talked to CNA of their experiences were lay men and women, although both a priest and a religious sister—Fr. Brent Shelton of the diocese of Knoxville, and Sister Mumbi Kigutha CPPS, of the Sisters of the Precious Blood—said they too attended local protests against racism.
Some Catholics said it was their first protest; others said they had attended a pro-life march before, but now felt the need to march against racism. Some marched with fellow Catholics and Christians, others attended larger marches by themselves.
All involved all had one thing in common—they felt that they had to do something to stand against injustice.
“To me it's simple. People need help and we help them. That's all,” said Jenne O’Neill of Wahoo, Nebraska.
And many of those who talked to CNA said they prayed at the rallies and protests.
Peter Nixon, a parishioner at Saint Bonaventure Church in the Diocese of Oakland, said his pastor led a Eucharistic procession at the tail end of a march in Clayton, California.
“The presence of the Blessed Sacrament had a powerful impact on many at the demonstration,” Nixon said. “Some police and firefighters crossed themselves as we passed. Others genuflected when passing in front of the monstrance.”
On June 1, the evening before President Donald Trump visited Washington, D.C.’s St. John Paul II Shrine, the president stood outside St. John’s Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C. holding a Bible in front of cameras. The Washington Post reported that federal police shot gas canisters and grenades with rubber pellets to dispel protesters in the area shortly before the president arrived outside the church.
Protesting in Lafayette Square that night was Anna Fitzmaurice, a 2019 graduate of the Catholic University of America. Fitzmaurice prayed the Divine Mercy Chaplet in the square, but left shortly before police dispersed the protesters. She attended a protest of the president’s visit to the shrine on the morning of June 2.
“As he [Trump] was going to visit my church, I felt a moral responsibility to tell him what we believe in terms of the dignity of the suffering and the oppressed. Instructing the ignorant and admonishing the sinner are both spiritual works of mercy,” she said.
Jenn Morson, a writer and parishioner at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton church in Crofton, Maryland, said she prayed the rosary to herself “in between chants initiated by the organizer” at a local march with around 350 people.
Not all Catholics who talked to CNA marched in protests. Some have been conducting outreach in their communities, or trying to foster constructive conversations about race.
Kathy Redmond, of St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Castle Rock, Colorado, told CNA that she has organized around 450 people in her local “very white, affluent community” involved in community outreach.
Redmond said she saw injustice first-hand when a black family moved in four houses down from her and their cars were tagged immediately. “It was very unnerving for me,” she said. “It was in my face at that point.”
“As people of faith—as people of a Christian faith—we should be front and center on this,” Redmond said.
Catherine Perry, of Atlanta, Georgia, founder of the InwardBound Center for Non-Profit Leadership, has organized workshops of cross-race conversations on “Racism in America: What is Mine to Do?”
Her workshops are not shaming sessions, she said, but rather help participants to reflect, dialogue, and reconcile with each other, ending with them making a “uniquely personal to-do list” such as prayer, listening to voices they may not agree with, or talking to a boss about subtle discrimination in the workplace. A new workshop will be offered online beginning on June 25.
As Catholics, she said, “one of the great things about our institution is we talk about difficult things” such as abortion and the death penalty. “We understand this is mysterious stuff, and it’s emotional work, and it’s not easy sometimes,” she said.
“Well let’s take on race. Why not?” she asked. “We’ve been silent on race too long.”
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The 2020 uproar on main street U.S.A. for societal justice might even recall the 1984 “Silent Scream” video of a side-street abortion—-the other cultural bookend (as narrated by Bernard Nathanson, a convert from the cutting-edge Abortion Industrial Complex).
Our renewed energy toward a changed “culture,” not simply politics, demonstrates (literally!) that the “culture wars” are not over after all…
Seeing more deeply into things than any policy revisions (also needed) and budgetary musical chairs of the Administrative State, racial-minority voice Francis Fukuyama already and long ago authored The Great Disruption: Human Nature and the Reconstruction of the Social Order (1999), etc. And in a syndicate column at the same time he also had this to say:
“. . . the pill was supposed to give women more control over their reproductive lives; instead in the United States and other Western countries, its introduction was followed by an explosion of illegitimacy, divorce and single parent families…The fatherless household that subsequently emerged [a pandemic?] contributed to a host of other social ills, such as poverty, crime, poor educational achievement and drug use” (Fukuyama, “Pill may bring unexpected changes to Japan”, June 13, 1999).
In the 1960s the Black illegitimacy rate was 40 percent; now it’s 70 percent. And the White and also fatherless illegitimacy rate strives for equality, up from 10 percent to now 40 percent.
So, on the really big screen, yesterday’s culture wars refuse to “evolve” out of existence. Meanwhile, today, even some Church voices strangle on something so simple as whether sodomy is, or is not part of a real, restored and flourishing human culture—-instead, kitchen-blender moral theology and “anthropological cultural change”!
Thus wrote Mahatma Gandhi:”Nonviolence is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. It is mightier than the mightiest weapon of destruction devised by the ingenuity of man”.