It’s possible lightening may have caused one of the fires. Another may be the result of faulty electricity. Still,
in the past couple of weeks, there were fires at churches in North
Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Ohio and Tennessee. At least two have been ruled arson by local fire departments. Several are still being investigated. Is
it a coincidence that churches are burning in the days since the
massacre at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina?
President Obama spoke to the historical importance of black churches when he eulogized Rev. Clementa Pinckney. The church, he said, “is and always has been the center of African American life.” He
went on to describe black churches as “hush harbors” for enslaved
people, “praise houses where their free descendants could gather and
shout hallelujah, rest stops for the weary along the Underground
Railroad, bunkers for the foot soldiers of the Civil Rights movement”. To set fire to a black church, to kill people in a black church, to bomb a church strikes at the very heart of our community. These acts of terrorism are meant to intimidate, to send a message. That
these recent fires have happened in the wake of protests against the
vile Confederate flag, suggests that these fires may be pushback from
the protests, a continuation of work of the man who murdered nine
people in Emanuel AME church. Whoever is burning churches, though, forgets that it is not 1815, but 2015. The intimidation tactics that worked during slavery won’t work now.
These church burnings fire me up. They ought to fire us all up. The burnings ought to spark a resistance to racism unlike any we have seen in the past. These
church fires ought to infuse us with the passion of Bree Newsome, the
African American woman who climbed up a pole and snatched the
Confederate flag from a pole outside the South Carolina statehouse. She didn’t wait for Governor Nikki Haley to take the Confederate flag down; she was too fired up to wait. After
all, Haley’s post-massacre announcement that the flag will no longer
fly on statehouse grounds is symbolic until the South Carolina
legislature votes to take the flag down. Meanwhile,
Alabama Governor Robert Bentley, not needing legislative approval,
ordered four Confederate flags to be taken down from the state's
capitol grounds.
A
South Carolina woman, Edith S. Childs, came up with a slogan when
candidate Obama visited Greenwood, South Carolina (population about
23,000) for an event that drew a scant 20 people. To energize the small crowd, Childs walked through the crowd attempting to fire them up. The
call and response phrase, “fired up, ready to go” not only galvanized
the small gathering, but became a central chant of Obama’s 2008
campaign. Used everywhere from civil rights gatherings to country clubs, “fired up” captured the energy of the first Obama campaign. Indeed,
organizations used the “fired up” slogan to get people out to vote, to
work on issues other than the Obama campaign, to symbolize the energy
needed for change.
In
the wake of these church burnings, the righteous need to be fired up
and ready to go in dismantling the racism that has plagued our nation
since its founding. We
need to collectively debunk the myth that the Confederate flag is about
history and heritage – it is simply about white supremacy. We
need to go to school boards, especially in the South, to demand
curriculum revisions when young people are force-fed inaccurate history
about the Civil War. We need to put those employers “on blast” when they can’t “find” any African Americans to hire. We
ought to encourage the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
(OFCCP) to ensure that those who get federal contracts comply with the
law— that those who get federal contracts do affirmative action hiring.
The Mother Emanuel massacre demonstrates that racism is alive and well in these United States. We
experience it everywhere we turn, from our national statues (fewer than
ten black women are commemorated in public statues) to persistent
housing segregation. Too many of us have accepted this racism, or feel powerless to fight it. Thus, it persists.
It was gratifying to see the multiracial crowds that mobilized in solidarity with the Mother Emanuel Nine. It would be interesting to see how many of those mobilized are willing to be involved in antiracist work. All
of us need to be “fired up, ready to go” to persistently and
consistently dismantle the racism that is woven into the very fabric of
our national consciousness. President Obama, are you in?
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