In this country, too many times, and yes, even in our Church, black people, especially African Americans, are forgotten and overlooked. It is usually not until November (Black Catholic History Month), February (Black History Month), or a racial PR Crisis that attention is given to black communities/issues within a particular Diocese. Those of us who have been working in Black Catholic Youth/Young Adult Ministry has had to “fight,” and still have to, to get the wider Church to understand the unique needs of our communities.
Too often, especially in recent months, the term black has been associated with a negative connotation. Let us take, for instance, the controversy surrounding the phrase “Black Lives Matter.” For many of us, this phrase is used to remind folks of the unequal treatment of black people throughout this country’s history and the present realities that institutional racism creates within our communities. Many in Church leadership have connected the meaning of the phrase to the organization with the same name. Still, most of us are using the phrase not to promote the organization, but for the Church to pay attention to the needs of one of its original communities that are continually pushed to the peripheries. This “distraction ploy” used by many in the Church to not address the meaning behind the phrase is also similar to other tactics used not to address America’s “original sin” of racism; thus, the problem continues.
Through hard dialogue (even though many of us are exhausted from talking about this issue) and sharing of power and resources, this issue will be tackled, not through more letters and statements. Through the building of authentic, mutual relationships, this issue will be addressed, not through savior mentalities where certain groups come in to “fix” a community.
This Black History Month, I would ask those reading this to take a long look at where they can address America’s “original sin” (within yourself, your family, your community, your church, your school, etc.) and see how you can learn to create a more just world so that we can see Blackness as a “gift” as Sr. Thea Bowman told the USCCB in 1989 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOV0nQkjuoA&t=613s&ab_channel=UnitedStatesConferenceofCatholicBishops ). Let us move forward as people of faith to create a world where BLACK LIVES ARE seen as BEAUTIFUL!
https://adw.org/living-the-faith/our-cultures/anti-racism-initiative/