History turns on small hinges. We may look back at the question posed by a 76-year-old African American woman as a key factor that made Joe Biden’s presidency possible. At a time when his primary campaign was floundering, Jannie Jones, a church usher beckoned to Congressman James Clyburn of South Carolina and whispered, “I need to know who you’re going […]
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Stand still and listen
“America is at a crossroads. One road leads to community, the other to the chaos of competing identities and interests.” These words, inspired by the writings of Martin Luther King, Jr., are the opening sentences of A Call to Community, a manifesto for honest conversation about race that Hope in the Cities and its national partners launched in May, 1996 […]
Are you a radiator or a thermometer?
My father-in-law, Alan Thornhill was an Anglican priest and playwright. My wife has been editing a book of reflections drawn from some of his sermons at the small country church in England which he served in retirement. In one of them he highlights three vital ingredients for a growing faith: air, food and exercise. We breath in and out as we […]
An unlikely advocate for racial healing
Gerald Henderson was not the most obvious person to lead a movement for truth-telling and racial healing. An Englishman, he was the product, as he put it, of a “white, privileged, middle class, private school background.” Yet he was to become the trusted confidante of people of all races and classes in his adopted hometown of Liverpool, and he played […]
If you are not safe, nothing else matters
(I first posted this in August 2014 but current events in the US and international protests against police and government violence make it even more relevant.) In May of this year I was called for jury duty. Every Wednesday for a month I joined more than 100 other Richmonders of all backgrounds at the John Marshall courthouse. For hours we […]
Put children first
We now have four granddaughters. The older two are eight and seven. The younger two were born during the Covid crisis, just five and three months ago. For the older two, much of the conversation centers on questions about the opening of the school year. But all of them are fortunate to have comfortable homes and parents with secure jobs […]
Establishing a U.S. Commission on Truth, Healing and Transformation
I am happy to share this guest column by my longtime friend and colleague Michael R. Wenger: In the wake of the televised murder of George Floyd by four police officers in Minneapolis, protesters in communities throughout the country have demanded the “defunding” and “reforming” of police departments. Hopefully, this will lead to major structural reforms in policing. But if […]
In plain sight
It was always in plain sight. We just chose not to see it. But the video in all its excruciating length showed us the casual brutality experienced every day by African Americans and other minorities. It was always in plain sight. The entrenched de facto segregation in our schools and neighborhoods, but many of us were too settled in our […]
A spiritual pandemic
On the day that the US launched two astronauts on SpaceX Dragon, protests, riots and violence erupted in more than 70 cities following the killing of an unarmed black man by a white police officer in Minneapolis. Perhaps nothing illustrates more starkly the gap between our extraordinary technical prowess and our moral failure as a nation to value the humanity […]
The three-legged stool of reconciliation
My colleague Rev Sylvester “Tee” Turner from Richmond, Va, offers a thought-provoking presentation of his approach to reconciliation (link to video) which he describes as a process of acknowledgment and apology; forgiveness; and accountability and working together. He was speaking to a diverse group in Montreal as part of a Trustbuilding workshop.