The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Series spurs readers to weigh in on racism debate

Staples

- Find Gracie on Facebook (facebook.com/ graciestap­lesajc/) and Twitter (@GStaples_AJC) or email her at gstaples@ajc. com. And read the full “Race and Religion”series at www.ajc.com/staff/gracie-bondsstapl­es.

Race and Religion series that launched recently, that has never been more clear to me. Some of us view slavery as simply a thing of the past and the resulting racism as “a figment in someone’s mind,” “the go-to excuse” when blacks don’t like the outcome.

Perhaps it’s just easier to believe in the fallacy of a “postracial America.”

To be sure, we have a mess on our hands or, should I say, in our hearts.

I remember clearly white pundits like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck denouncing President Obama when he linked the 2009 arrest of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates by Cambridge police to racial profiling. Beck said it revealed Obama’s “deep-seated hatred for white people.” And Limbaugh said Obama was “trying to destroy a white policeman.”

And yet they explain away every indication of racism in President Donald Trump, ignoring his equivocati­on after the march in Charlottes­ville, his immigratio­n policies that cage little children and his ongoing attacks on black activists, athletes and, more recently, congressme­n and -women.

I know how that happens.

One reader, in response to the second-day column on systemic racism, offered this: “Quite simply blacks commit crime at a higher rate than whites. While blacks are sometimes accosted for being black there are far fewer places a black person can go with a risk of violent assault for their color than there are for whites. While you may argue that point you cannot argue the rate of black on black murder.”

He isn’t alone in that line of thinking. Racism is OK because black people commit more crimes than whites.

Then there were those who appreciate­d the effort, just not some of the facts, including when the slave trade began and how many first landed here.

One of my fellow church members, Joe Beasley, for instance, wrote to say I didn’t tell the whole story.

Instead of beginning with slavery, he said, “Bishop Claude Alexander should have at least (gone) back to 1493 when Pope Alexander VI, in collusion with the monarchs of Europe, promulgate­d the ‘Doctrine of Discovery,’” which has played a role in U.S. law and “is ... responsibl­e for the annihilati­on of the native Americans throughout the Americas. It is very ironic that these people were slaughtere­d in the name of Jesus Christ!”

Beasley went on to say that, although the denial of benefits to African Americans who served in the Second World War is significan­t, even more significan­t is Field Order 15, signed by Gen. William T. Sherman and approved by President Abraham Lincoln but vetoed by President Andrew Johnson.

“This Field Order granted our people a separate nation consisting of 400 thousand acres running from South Carolina to Florida, and 30 miles inland! This was at the request of 20 African American Ministers in Savannah, Georgia after meeting” with Sherman. This land — which was to be divided into parcels of not more than 40 acres for black families and likely led to the expression “40 acres and a mule” — was eventually returned to the Southern planters who owned it.

Some of my harshest critics didn’t write to me at all. They sent emails instead to AJC Editor Kevin Riley; some he shared with me. Some he didn’t, but I can assure you, as disappoint­ing as I find some of them, I appreciate them all.

I’ve known for a long time, not everyone sees the world as I do.

As much as I wish Race and Religion were the definitive answer to what is surely ailing this nation, I’m neither wise nor powerful enough to make that happen. I’m sure of that.

But as I’ve always tried to do in this space, what I’ve tried to do even in this series is to leave you with hope.

From Day One I heard from readers like Anjetta McQueen Thackeray, a friend and former colleague from my days at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, and Jeffrey Henning of Marietta, who welcomed the discussion.

“This could not have come at a better time,” Thackeray told me. “I am part of a racial reconcilia­tion study group at my church. I struggle with conflictin­g feelings about my anger at what is going on in the world and the love I am supposed to show as a Christian.”

Many like Henning, in a post to the “This Life with Gracie” Facebook page, thanked me for the series.

“As I read part one, I thought about the novel, ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ I read for the first time last week for one of my theology classes,” he said. “Stowe lays the reason for the continued institutio­n of slavery at the feet of the unconcerne­d Christians. I didn’t think a book 160 years old would move me so. Your article is doing the same.”

Dozens more sent emails.

I heard from Max Lipscomb of Atlanta, who said: “I’m quite sure some of your older white readers will not be too happy with you for exposing an old wound, but as we see every day in America, this conversati­on is badly needed and you are right it needs to start with the church! When people say I didn’t own slaves or I’m not a racist, all these things are true but what’s missing is they profited off the mistreatme­nt of Africans through slavery all in the name of the bible!”

When I asked if I could quote him and use his name, he obliged, adding: “Because of your series, I’m going to continue my AJC subscripti­on they are about to cancel.”

Perhaps now Kevin Riley won’t have my head on a platter.

Lamar Harold wrote too, saying, “Your series was so enlighteni­ng, inspiring and well written ... my applause to you for a masterpiec­e of journalist­ic excellence.”

And finally, one reader summed up all of my hope for Race and Religion: “As a God fearing white male, you have highlighte­d scripture that forces me to re-evaluate my whole thinking on race relations. I’ve never considered myself a racist as I have often hid behind ‘I don’t care (about) the color of the man as long as he takes care of his family’ and I have lived that way. However, this thinking is flawed in the eyes of Jesus. I still am prejudiced toward men who don’t support their family. Nor do I speak Jesus into their life. I’m guilty. Upon self-evaluation, while my (opinions) have kept me from being actively racist, I have not been actively anti-racist and in not doing so I have dishonored God and I have sinned.”

There’s no way of knowing how many of you were impacted by Race and Religion in this way, but this I know: God’s word is “sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit ... is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.”

Unsure of his amazing grace, start there and see.

‘This could not have come at a better time. I am part of a racial reconcilia­tion study group at my church. I struggle with conflictin­g feelings about my anger at what is going on in the world and the love I am supposed to show as a Christian.’ Anjetta McQueen Thackeray

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE / GETTY IMAGES ?? President Barack Obama sings “Amazing Grace” amid his eulogy for the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, a South Carolina state senator, at her funeral service in 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina. She was killed during a prayer meeting in the church.
WIN MCNAMEE / GETTY IMAGES President Barack Obama sings “Amazing Grace” amid his eulogy for the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, a South Carolina state senator, at her funeral service in 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina. She was killed during a prayer meeting in the church.
 ?? SEAN RAYFORD/GETTY IMAGES ?? People walk past Emanuel AME Church on July 31, 2015, in Charleston, South Carolina, where Dylann Roof killed nine members in a Bible study class.
SEAN RAYFORD/GETTY IMAGES People walk past Emanuel AME Church on July 31, 2015, in Charleston, South Carolina, where Dylann Roof killed nine members in a Bible study class.

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