- Originally published in the San Gabriel Valley Tribune (San Gabriel Valley, CA) February 27, 2005
Copyright 2005 San Gabriel Valley Tribune (San Gabriel Valley, CA)
By Jasmyne Cannick
RECENTLY,
a group of black pastors under the name of the Hi Impact Coalition held
a press conference and summit in Los Angeles to announce the kickoff
for their "Black Contract with America on Moral Values.'
Led
by Bishop Harry Jackson of Washington, D.C. and white Christian
evangelical Reverend Lou Sheldon and his Traditional Values Coalition,
the press conference and summit gave new meaning to the phrase
"sleeping with the enemy.'
According to
the newly formed coalition, topping the list of issues that black
Americans need to focus on is the protection of marriage. Never mind
the war, access to health care, HIV/AIDS, education, housing and social
security, the No. 1 problem facing Black America is same-sex marriage.
Standing
before the press in their Sunday best and eager to get their 15 minutes
of fame and achievable share of President Bush's Faith-Based
Initiative, these Black pastors seemingly allowed their pulpits to be
purchased by the GOP and Lou Sheldon, who is to gay people what Strom
Thurmond was to blacks.
Sheldon at one
time even went so far as to support the quarantining of people with
AIDS and accused the federal government of "running a network of
whorehouses,' when the U.S. responded to the AIDS crisis with resources.
Later
that afternoon more than 100 black pastors gathered at Reverend Fred
Price's Crenshaw Christian Center, another prominent mega-church in
Southern California, where Sheldon showed his infamous "Gay rights,
special rights' video and urged the pastors to have their congregations
lobby African-American legislators who hadn't taken a position on the issue of same-sex marriage.
From
the outside, one might have thought they were listening in on a Klan
meeting, but after one look around the room, I remember thinking of
Dave Chappelle's portrayal of a blind, black, white supremacist who had
never been told he was black.
Black
pulpits are for sale to the highest bidder and black Christians are
quite possibly being sold to the GOP under the guise of protecting
America's moral values. With claims that gays are "hijacking' the civil
rights movement and Martin Luther King Jr.'s message, Sheldon is
bribing black pastor after pastor and church after church with check
after check to take another look at the GOP and partnering with their
white Christian counterparts, all while using the Bible as a
justification for their commonality. Yes, the same book that was used
to justify racism, sexism and anti-Semitism has both black and white Christian evangelicals reading from the same page.
Few
remember that there were significant members of the black church,
including the National Baptist Convention led by Dr. J.H. Jackson in
the 50s, that vehemently opposed the civil-rights movement and didn't
want progressive ministers like King to have any confrontations with
the government. So much so, that was one of the major factors in King's
decision to create the Southern Christian Leadership Conference along
with Los Angeles ministers the Reverend James Lawson and the late Dr.
Thomas Kilgore.
These black pastors who
have aligned themselves with white Christian evangelicals and
conservatives are the ideological descendents of the same people who
opposed King in 50s and what he stood for but today want to claim his
message as their own in the name of protecting the institution of
marriage, thereby giving new meaning to the name "Uncle Tom.'
However,
don't think that these new partnerships come without strings attached.
The black vote is expected to be hand delivered on legislation that
supports discrimination against gays and lesbians and their right to
protect their families, denying a woman's right to choose and pushing
the president's abstinence only campaign.
In
addition, our religious leaders are also expected to remain silent and
not be the prophetic voices they should be on issues of critical
importance to blacks. In exchange for money, they've essentially sold
their congregations to people who continue to oppose universal access
to health care, education and housing, the very issues at the core of
the black struggle.
There's a coordinated
religious campaign to get ministers across the state to speak out
against gays, and the debate is not about religion but more about
politics, power and keeping that political power in the hands of people
who stood in the schoolhouse door, fighting for segregation and against
the full inclusion of blacks in society.
Zora Neal Hurston once said, "Not all black skin is kin.'
Can
I get a witness? Los Angeles resident Jasmyne Cannick is a frequent
presence on television and radio and has appeared on Black
Entertainment Television News, the Tavis Smiley Show, Fox News and the
Bev Smith Show. She is director of public relations for the Black AIDS
Institute. can be reached at
www.jasmynecannick.com.
- GOP drive to woo blacks via church alarms Brazile [more]
- GOP wooing blacks on Social Security [more]
- "It's
time-out for Jesse Jackson, Louis Farrakhan and Al Sharpton," Peterson
said in a press release. "Most blacks," he said -- not all, he stressed
-- "are suffering, not because of racism but because of a lack of moral
values." [more]
- Was DNC Chair Howard Dean’s “Hotel Staff” Barb Racist or Racial? [more]
- The Return of the Angry White Male [more]
- Black churches ending AIDS silence [more]