[Oe List ...] Being Black in the Order Ecumenical

mhampton at att.net mhampton at att.net
Thu Jun 7 15:50:46 PDT 2012


Thank you, Joyce.  We have been needing this piece.

Grace, Peace, LIGHT,

mary




________________________________
From: Joyce Sloan <jsloan45 at gmail.com>
To: Order Ecumenical Community <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net>
Sent: Wed, June 6, 2012 1:21:50 AM
Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] Being Black in the Order Ecumenical

Right you are Marshall to note the absence of reflections from black Order 
members in the conversation that has been going on. In recalling the 
conversations Shrop, Carlos and I had about the struggle with being black in 
America and in the Order, Randy requested that I share the gist of those 
conversations with colleagues as a kind of tribute to black Order members who 
had died.  Then my life went in a tailspin and I just got a breather long enough 
to respond. Anyway, here goes.

We often conversed about how the experience of being black in America was 
undeniably shaped by the enslavement of black people by white people and the 
subsequent relationships and identities that were born of that situation. We 
talked about how those relationships and identities gave rise to stereotypes 
that played themselves out on the stage of American History as if they were in 
fact reality. For us they were contained in the stark contrasts between us such 
as slavery vs. freedom, restrictions vs. privilege, intuition vs.logic, dark 
skin and eyes vs. light skin and eyes, kinked hair vs. straight hair, full 
facial features vs. thin facial features, and on and on. For me this was 
compounded by the struggles of being a black woman in America breaking and 
breaking through the stereotypes of  the nurturing mammy, the permissive Jezebel 
or the stiff necked unyielding matriarch.   It is no wonder that it took 
hundreds of years and a another civil war (AKA the civil rights movement) to 
reveal the illusions out of which both races were living in terms of what was 
good, and human and beautiful.

I believe the strength of those stereotypes is evident even today in 
mufti-faceted behaviors and attitudes that  many call the legacy of slavery. I 
am convinced that legacy affects both black and white Americans regardless of 
how either one may have personally evolved.  That really struck home when Barack 
Obama described how his white grandmother, who he knew loved him dearly, would 
clutch her purse a little closer when walking down the street in the presence of 
young black men.  


As a young black female born and raised in segregated East Texas, black and 
white race relations defined my existence. It was not until l went to North 
Texas State University did it consciously register with me that there really 
were other kinds of people in the world. It was not until Carlos and I worked 
with the Philbrooks in Dallas that I began to believe that in spite of our 
history, blacks and whites could work together in a trusting collegiality. But 
there was (and is) no doubt that that would mean working through the residual 
effect of the legacy of slavery.  And that is what I, and I dare say other 
blacks brought with them to the O:E. That included bringing such feelings as 
fear, insecurity, suspicion and anger. 


I don't know anything about the conversations that led to the decision, but I 
think it was divinely prophetic that the West side of Chicago was chosen to 
forge the 5th City Model. And likewise it was prophetic that the residents of 
that community linked arms with the EI and the O:E to make 5th City happen.  
Many other ethnic neighborhoods could have been chosen.  But in light of the 
history between blacks and whites in this country, known across the world, I 
don't believe any other would signal the glorious possibility of redemption for 
America and the world in a more powerful way.

Joyce Sloan






On Tue, Jun 5, 2012 at 9:49 AM, Charles Hahn <cfhahn30 at gmail.com> wrote:

Marshall, your words are profound and moving.  Thanks for the reflective 
dimension you bring to our conversation.
>Charles Hahn 
>
>
>
>On Tue, Jun 5, 2012 at 7:00 AM, Ken Fisher <hkf232 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>>
>>Well said.
>>
>>
>>Thank you, Marshall.
>>
>>Ken
>>
>>
>>
>>On 2012-06-05, at 3:05 AM, W. J. wrote:
>>I was surprised that the question about what it was like to be black in the O:E 
>>really was not addressed by black colleagues. Instead it became a conversation 
>>in which white people TALKED about black people, remembering their names and 
>>unique contributions.
>>We didn't really articulate how critical black order members were/are to bailing 
>>us all out of our unconscious cultural reductionisms. I write, of course, as one 
>>of the "pinkies" who showed up in 5th City after the 1968 riots. It was 
>>absolutely essential that black colleagues in the community and in the Order 
>>gave their permission for us crazy white people to stay in 5th City. They 
>>claimed us as colleagues, they put up with us, they protected us, and they 
>>confronted us with our unconscious embodiment of white male privilege and 
>>racism. They grounded us in the experience of suffering in the community and 
>>joined with us in working to transcend the internalized racist stereotypes we 
>>were all struggling with. I suspect people of color in the Order had an often 
>>unacknowledged burden to bear in dealing with white male dominance. 
>>It wasn't just that people of color were just as totally on top of everything as 
>>the white male leadership was (in other words, comfortable operating with the 
>>rational gifts of the white Ur). More importantly, coming from another profound 
>>experience of humanness, these colleagues often surprised us in their freedom 
>>from being stuck in "white man's consciousness", so to speak.
>>I'm trying to get beyond being yet another white person talking about black 
>>people. Several years ago I had the privilege of working with Lela Mosley, Ruth 
>>Carter, and Verdell Trice in getting the 5th City film released on DVD. Lela was 
>>at the end of her days, in and out of the hospital, and on oxygen, but she could 
>>sometimes talk with me on the phone. We were going over a list of deceased 5th 
>>Citizens whose contributions would be honored on the DVD. I would say, "What 
>>about So-and-so? Is she dead yet?" And Lela would say, "No, she's still 
>>kicking!" We would laugh. And it was kind of funny, you know, just to be 
>>standing in the Awe of all those people who had decided to give their lives in 
>>that geography. Not that they were black or white, economically advantaged or 
>>not. OR: In the Order. Or not. You get that? No difference (despite the 
>>difference). I tell you we will be highly privileged to join that company of 5th 
>>City Pioneers some day. 
>>Joe Mathews said that what he was most proud of was being a 5th Citizen. Not of 
>>being the Dean of this crummy outfit called the Order. But (I would say) of 
>>standing his ground and being his "be" with the profound humanness we discovered 
>>and celebrated in 5th City. And if I can have just a tiny taste of that in my 
>>privileged white man's life, and if I was able to add just the smallest bit to 
>>the 'miracles' that we all participated in creating together, I think that would 
>>be enough for me.
>>Marshall Jones
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>>
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