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We Are Called to Work for Racial Justice

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Sisters and Brothers:
We are ambassadors for Christ, as if God were appealing through us.
We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God.

For our sake God made Christ to be sin who did not know sin,
so that we might become the righteousness of God in Christ.
Working together, then, we appeal to you not to receive the grace of God in vain.

For God says: In an acceptable time I heard you, and on the day of salvation I helped you.

Behold, now is a very acceptable time; behold, now is the day of salvation.”

2 Corinthians 5:20-6:2

Dear NETWORK Community,

Welcome to our Lenten Journey. This year, we invite you to join us as we dive into the challenging truth of racism in our society and the continuing saga of white privilege. We at NETWORK have been grappling with this reality over the last few years. In the process, we have examined the structural racism in our laws. These often unseen structures keep us bound in social sin through the racial wealth and income gap, health disparities, and more. 

Our study has led me to see that our societal structures are woven together with the vestiges of slavery and prejudice and continued modern structures of racism today. But even more challenging are the many ways that I benefit as a white person in our racist society.

As a staff, we have been reading the book White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo. She points out one aspect of white privilege is that we white folks can avoid talking about race. We find it painful and sometimes embarrassing. White folks have the luxury to avoid the conversation. I realized I do this. I worry that I might say something insensitive; I’m personally embarrassed. And I can change the subject. In addition to avoidance, individualism, DiAngelo posits, is at the heart of society’s inability to move beyond anecdotal experience and make real systemic change. We white people do not see the structures that secure our privilege and cement the racial divides.

So, we thought that the best topic for our political Lenten reflection is the issue of structural racism and privilege in these very challenging times. Doing this work requires us to embrace our role as ambassadors of the divine, and work together to rid ourselves of the social sin of racism. This is a communal need. If we build awareness of the societal dimension of this sin, then we can work together to dismantle the structural sin of racism. It won’t be easy; it will require many of us to awaken to the ways that we white people unwittingly benefit from racism—and still be willing to change.

So let us spend this Lent together in an exploration of structural racism in our time. St. Paul is correct as he writes in the Second Letter to the Corinthians:

“Behold, now is a very acceptable time; behold, now is the day of salvation.”

—Sister Simone Campbell, SSS
Executive Director of NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

What Does it Mean to Recommit to Racial Justice?

Thank you for joining us in this difficult but essential work for racial justice. In this time of hyper-polarization and racial strife in our country, it seems important for people of faith to recommit to our shared connection as members of the human family. Consequently, over the course of this Lenten season, we will engage in an extended examination of the systemic use of power and privilege to oppress and disadvantage people in this country based on a racial hierarchy.

We are blessed to be in a community of justice seekers at NETWORK that is racially diverse, geographically diverse, and spans many age groups and life experiences. Racism is a powerful force that touches every aspect of our lives. Therefore, we need everyone to bring their full selves, with all of their gifts and talents, to this effort.

Examining and reflecting on racism in our history, policies, and society and taking action are drastically different experiences for white people and people of color. People of color have been speaking, organizing, and acting against racism for centuries. It is impossible to deny the truth that, while there have been exceptions to the norm, the majority of white people and institutional power in our nation have always (up to and including today) been on the side of white supremacy. It is time for white people to do the work of racial justice, educating themselves and finding ways to act in solidarity with people of color against racist policies and practices.

We created this guide particularly attuned to the work that white members of our Spirit-Filled Network must do to examine their white privilege and the effects of systemic racism. We hope, however, that the faithful content and spiritual nourishment are valuable to the entire NETWORK community.

A note for white participants about processing this information: Please be intentional about how you process your learnings about race and racism, and with whom.  We cannot assume that people of color are freely available to provide the emotional labor of explaining racism to white people. Unless a person of color has explicitly invited you to reflect on race and racism with them, or is working in a professional capacity and receiving just compensation for their time and effort, refrain from launching an extended discussion about this content with people of color.

Why NETWORK capitalizes the “B” in Black and keeps the “w” in white lowercase: We believe that the way we use language has power. While there are many discussions over the proper capitalization (or not) of Black and white, NETWORK has decided to capitalize the B and keep the w lowercase. In doing so, we are making an intentional decision to place power and importance on a community that is often undervalued in our society. Read more about this decision from the Columbia Journalism Review at https://www.cjr.org/analysis/language_corner_1.php.

Shared Agreements for Engaging in Racial Justice Work with NETWORK

In our continuing work of becoming an anti-racist and multicultural organization, we have established these shared agreements as a baseline for conversation and reflection about race and racial justice. A lot of times things can be misunderstood or miscommunicated, especially with topics as sensitive as race and racial justice, and it is important to create a space for our reflections and our discussions to be productive and healthy. Please read the shared agreements below and consider them carefully before proceeding.

Are you willing to agree to these shared agreements as you encounter and reflect upon this content? These principles apply to your experiences with this “Recommit to Racial Justice” guide and may also be helpful in other conversations you have around race and racial justice, so feel free to use them.

Preparing Ourselves and Our Hearts to Recommit to Racial Justice

Lent is a time for repentance. It is a time for setting aside our familiar habits and comforts and for wandering in the desert. For many of us, a desert is unfamiliar terrain and may seem treacherous with its parched sand and rocks and relentless sun and heat.

Lent is also a time for renewal. Though we may stumble and at times question our path through this desert, our 40-day journey is not aimless or without beauty. At the beginning of Lent, God says to us, “Return to Me with all your heart,” (Joel 2:12), and each day we step deeper into the wilderness. Hiking through a desert, you will probably experience deep thirst, perhaps exhaustion from heat, but you will also see towering saguro cactus, water flowing through an arroyo, a stunning sunrise. As we journey through Lent, we know that we are always walking in God’s love; we know that we are always walking towards the Resurrection.

Without community there is no liberation, only the most vulnerable and temporary armistice between an individual and her oppression. But community must not mean a shedding of our differences, nor the pathetic pretense that these differences do not exist.

- Audre Lorde, The Master's Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House (1979)

Preparing Ourselves and Our Hearts to Recommit to Racial Justice

Father Bryan Massingale is a leader in the field of theological ethics and liberation theology and a noted authority on issues of social and racial justice. His teachings and writings make up critical contributions to the contemporary Catholic conversation around race and racial justice.

In 2017, Father Massingale addressed the Ignatian Family Teach-In for Justice, an annual gathering of Jesuit high school and college students. In his speech, he asked “what ought to be our contribution to racial justice?” and examined race in the United States through the lens of events witnessed by high school seniors over the previous four years, including: Michael Brown’s death, the Charleston Church Massacre, the Trump campaign, and the Charlottesville Unite the Right rally.

While Father Massingale directs his remarks at the high school and college students attending the Ignatian Family Teach-In, his message is profoundly relevant for justice-seekers of all ages. Set aside some time to watch Father Massingale’s 50-minute speech, “The Magis and Justice,” on YouTube, then consider what you learned using the reflection questions below.

We Pray

Loving God,

You are with us in oppression; you are with us in liberation.

You are not bound by systems, nor by time or place. You have seen the effects of racism tear apart whole lives, families, communities, and societies. You have been with us in the harm and the confusion, the injustice, and the struggle.

As we sit at this crux of learning, resistance, and healing, may your spirit guide our thoughts and actions. As we reflect on our own humanity in the face of systemic injustice, may your wisdom transform us. Let us come to know our lived experience in the context of institutionalized racism.

We must first understand oppression to move forward on the path to liberation. Allow us grace, humility, and perseverance to process what we are learning. Be with us on the holy path of justice.

Amen.

Written by Lindsay Hueston, NETWORK Communications Associate

Reflection Questions
  • Does with the learning Sister Simone mentioned in her introduction, that white people have the privilege of individuality, resonate with you?
  • How did you react to the grounding meditation addressed to you as a white participant or person of color? If feelings of defensiveness or indignation arose, take some extra time to think about or journal about why that feeling emerged.
  • One of our shared agreements states that “resolution will not happen today.” Father Massingale, in his address to the Ignatian Family Teach-In, likens the work of racial justice to a relay race (46 minutes into the video). How do you feel about the idea of this work, no matter how hard you try, being incomplete?
  • Father Massingale says: “When we are physically ill, we enter into rehabilitation; when we are soul sick, we need to be re-created” (44 minutes into the video). Imagine what that re-creation might look like for yourself, your community, our nation, and our world.
Additional Resources

Read

Father Bryan Massingale’s 2010 book studies racism in the United States from our early history to the present day, and evaluates the Catholic Church’s historical responses to racism and its institutional support for the work of racial justice.

In this article, the author Tamara C. Johnson, a Black woman, writes to her “white friends, associates, and churchgoers” to say how draining and damaging to her own health it is to continuously explain racism to them. She calls on white people to educate themselves on systemic racism, and gives examples of how to do this, if they are serious about ending racism.

Author Joe Pettit lists “11 easy but serious mistakes well-intentioned people may make when thinking and talking about racial justice.”

Jarune Uwujaren writes about her personal experiences of racism and how society’s emphasis on privileging white people can lead people of color to hurting one another to get ahead in our racist system.

Watch

Portland Community College published this 2 minute video about the difference between the terms “white” which describes skin color and “whiteness” which is a system that divides people based on race and and perpetuates racism today.

In this 17-minute TED talk, Dr. Andrea Boyles explores the roots of macroaggressions, how they can come from people with “good intentions,” and their effects on people of color.

Jay Smooth discusses why it is so difficult to accept critique that you may have said something racist, how perfectionism makes it harder for us to become better at being anti-racist, and how we can keep this perfectionism from preventing us having conversations about race. This is a 12 minute TED talk.

Listen

Hosts Gene Demby and Shereen Marisol Meraji lead an interesting discussion on the concept of whiteness, speaking to guests who teach college or talk about whiteness professionally. This podcast episode is 37 minutes long.

Krista Tippett interviews john a. powell, the Director of the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society, a UC Berkeley. They talk about race, whiteness, building equity, and relationships with other humans and the earth for 52 minutes.

Krista Tippett conducts a 52-minute interview with Eula Biss, who wrote an essay titled “White Debt” which was published in the New York Times. They discuss noticing disparate treatment in their communities and finding ways to work against racial discrimination.

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