I was in a Catholic seminary near Green Bay, Wisconsin as
the news began to spread through the building. We gathered around the TV in the
commons area where only five days earlier, we had watched President Lyndon
Johnson announce that he would not seek a second term as president. That was
stunning news. This was horrific news.
I knew about the Civil Rights Movement, of course, and I
knew of the work of King. But it was something far away from my everyday life.
From that night on, however, King’s words and actions became more and more
central to my search for my place in a world far more colorful – and far more
turbulent – than what I had experienced up to that time.
King’s life, his message, his courage, his faith in God and
his faith in the still-unfulfilled promises of America have been touchstones in
my life in the 50 years since then. This anniversary of his assassination
offers me a chance to look back in a very personal way about my own journey
from a small, very white city in northeastern Wisconsin to this day in what is
a majority white city that is part of a very multi-colored world.
Marinette when I was growing up was a city of about 14,000
nestled on the shore of the Menominee River that formed the border with
Michigan. The diversity there at the time involved religion – Catholic and
Protestant with a smattering of Jews – and ethnic heritage – German, French,
Irish and Polish were the identifiers for the four Catholic churches in
town. If there was anyone in either
Marinette or it sister city across the river – Menominee, Mich. – who was not
white, I never saw them.
But here’s an interesting story I learned much later in
life. These lands were once the part of the Menominee tribal lands. The tribal origin
story is set right here, where the Menominee River empties into Green Bay.
It was there, according to the story, that a great bear emerged from
underground and began traveling up the river where it was transformed into the
first Menominee man.
We did not hear that
story when I was growing up, but there was another fascinating connection to
the Menominee tribe, which had lived in the area along the Menominee River in
the 1600 and 1700s. In 1823, a Menominee woman who became known as Queen Marinette
arrived with her white husband, a fur trader. Over the decades she was a
go-between for the tribe in its dealing with the white settlers. The city was
named after her.
Then there is the personal connection. Her trading post was
essentially on the land where my parents’ house stood during the first three
years of my life. There
is a monument to her there. But I don’t think I ever met any of the
tribal members who were so much a part of this land.
That began to change a bit when I was in high school. For my
sophomore, junior and senior years, I attended Sacred Heart Seminary in Oneida,
Wisconsin. The seminary was located on the land of the Oneida tribe (the building is now the
Oneida tribal headquarters) and when we ventured off campus, we would encounter
tribal members at the convenience store they ran. But the students and faculty
at the seminary – all white.
During the summer of
1966 – between my junior and senior high school years – I volunteered to work
with what was called the Migrant Ministry in Oconto, where migrant workers
mostly from the Brownsville area of Texas came every summer to pick cucumbers
for the Bond Pickle Company. My job was to work with the kids during their
day-time schooling and recreation. As I got to know some of the kids, I thought
it would be fun to bring a few of them the 23 miles north to my home city of
Marinette, to play in a park there, to see a little bit more of the world.
There are a variety of reasons why that might have been a
bad idea, but the objection that sticks with me is the one that came from my
mother, one of the most gracious persons in the world. She did not want me to
bring these Latino kids to our home, asking, “What would the neighbors think?”
I was puzzled, appalled, angry. But it was her house, so we went to the park.
During the four summers I worked with migrants in Oconto, I
moved from the guy who took the kids out to play to someone who helped
communicate the issues around migrant labor, housing, education and such to the
wider Oconto community through newspaper columns and a radio broadcast. As I
grew to understand the societal issues around migrant labor, it became part of
my academic study later at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and in a variety
of other venues.
Meanwhile, at the seminary there was a growing awareness of
the movement for civil rights occurring around the nation, especially in those
places where priests and nuns were involved. And because King had built
alliances across religious traditions, we were aware of his role in all of
this.
We were especially aware
of the work of Fr. James
Groppi, a white Catholic priest in
Milwaukee who was an assistant pastor at St. Boniface Parish, lived in slum
housing and served as an advisor to the NAACP Youth Council. Later, he would
lead a series of open housing marches in Milwaukee and lead welfare mothers to
Madison to protest cuts in welfare benefits. Before all that, in October of
1966, he came to the seminary with seven members of the Youth Council so all of
them could talk to us about civil rights, education and the role of the church.
I was a reporter for the school newspaper at the time and it’s possible I wrote
the story, although there is no byline on it.
“When Christ walked the earth some 2,000 years ago,” Groppi
told us, “he was concerned with the people who were hungry, with the people who
were oppressed. Christ was a civil rights worker.”
In addition to beginning to weave Groppi’s message into my
own understanding of Jesus, this was probably the first time I had any kind of
meaningful engagement with people who were black.
By
the time I entered my college years at the seminary in the fall of 1967 (I was
there for my freshman and sophomore years), one of the faculty members was
connecting us to the wider world in many ways, including a trip to Chicago in
1968 before King’s assassination. We went to take in one of the Saturday
morning Operation
Breadbasket gatherings with Rev. Jesse Jackson (and, on the day we were
there, Cesar Chavez, the organizer of Latino farmworkers, was also there). This
was essentially a combination worship service and political rally with stunning
music from the band and choir led by Ben Branch (the musician King was speaking
to moments before he was shot, asking him to play “Precious Lord” – here’s
a link to Ben Branch’s version).
Needless to say, the little group of seminarians in the
crowd was a distinct minority of white faces. It was a foretaste of an experience
I would have a few months later.
A month after King was killed, the school newspaper devoted a
half page to his words of wisdom, including this quote from his speech when he
accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964: “I refuse to accept the view that
mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that
the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality.”
My desire to learn
more about the work of King, the urgency of finding a path to racial justice, my
understanding of what followers of Jesus were being called to – these all
intensified. I heard about a program at a place called Friendship House in
Chicago and signed up for the week-long interracial experience that they
offered. At the heart of the program was the white attendees living with black
families in Chicago, giving us a chance to have a glimpse of the black
experience. It was an experience that had an incredible impact on me.
I was sleeping in the basement at the home of this middle-aged black couple, eating grits for breakfast and then walking through a virtually all-black neighborhood to catch the bus that would take me to Friendship House on the south side. I was very aware of how different I was from everyone else. But as the week went on, I was less and less conscious of that on my walk to the bus. That feeling of being different had become at least a little bit familiar.
I was sleeping in the basement at the home of this middle-aged black couple, eating grits for breakfast and then walking through a virtually all-black neighborhood to catch the bus that would take me to Friendship House on the south side. I was very aware of how different I was from everyone else. But as the week went on, I was less and less conscious of that on my walk to the bus. That feeling of being different had become at least a little bit familiar.
The family I lived with was friendly, but not too talkative.
I felt ill at ease as a stranger in their house. I had
arrived on a Sunday. On Wednesday, the family I was staying with took me next
door to meet the neighbors. We sat around the living room having a beer. They
asked me what I had been doing. I told
them about the various speakers we had heard over the past few days – a black
Chicago police sergeant who talked about the racism he saw and experienced on
the force; Saul Alinksy, the community organizer who was a huge figure in Chicago; a priest who worked in black
neighborhoods.
Then the woman we were visiting began to tell me about being
black in a white society. The intensity of her feelings was overwhelming,
softened only by occasional assurances that I shouldn’t take this personally. I
don’t remember any of the words she said, only the heat of her anger. It my
first experience facing black rage in a very personal way. It shook me, for
sure, but also opened my eyes to one slice of the reality of being black in
America.
We ended the week at Operation Breadbasket, my second visit within a few months. After the morning program, those of us in the Friendship House group met with Rev. Jackson. This was just two months after he had stood on the hotel balcony in Memphis as King was dying from the bullet wound. This was a more subdued Jackson than the one speaking from the stage or often seen in public. He tried to convey to us the need for the work for racial justice to continue.
By the time I turned 20, despite coming from such a white
city and attending such a white seminary, I had been in some contact with
African Americans, Latinos and Oneida tribal members. More than contact,
actually. I had felt welcomed across the lines that seemed to divide so much of
our country. That at least gave me some confidence to begin engaging people
from a variety of racial and ethnic backgrounds. Next stop – UW-Madison.
Wisconsin’s major university was not all that much more
diverse than the rest of the state, but it was at the center of social justice
movements in the late 1960s. The winter before I came to campus in August of
1969 as a junior, black students at UW led a strike that pushed the
administration to create a Department of African American studies.
One of the first demonstrations that I encountered in
Madison was the welfare rights march from Milwaukee to Madison, led by Fr.
Groppi. The marchers took over the State Assembly chambers during the first day
and then demonstrators, including me, ringed the Capitol for the next several days.
One evening, I wound up helping Sylvester, a 46-year old
black man who was part of the leadership, collect bail money from the crowd. We
came across another man Sylvester was pretty sure was collecting money for his
own purposes. He tried to persuade him to bring the money to the office. The
man responded by pulling a .38 pistol out of his lightweight yellow jacket.
“You accusin’ me of being a thief,” he said to Sylvester. “Get out of here
before I shoot you.” My inclination was to get out of there, but Sylvester had
other ideas. “Go ahead and shoot,” he replied as I’m sure my eyes were as wide
as saucers. “I know I’m right and you know I’m right and I don’t mind dyin’.”
After a few tense moments of silence, the man put the gun back in his jacket and
they both walked into the office to deposit the bail money. I started to
breathe again.
It was a powerful moment on several levels, including the
power of an active non-violent response to a threat. For me, it was also a
lesson that this black man from Milwaukee would be my protector.
Campus life went on – classes, protests, girlfriends. I was
more involved in the peace movement than the racial justice movement over the
next few years, but I was still encountering people from many different
backgrounds. I started writing for The
Daily Cardinal, a student newspaper, and wrote a series about U.S. and
Wisconsin companies investing in apartheid South Africa and the efforts to push
for divestment. Then it was on to The
Capital Times, first as a reporter covering politics in the state and city,
then in 1975, covering education in the city. That’s when I was again
encountering issues of race.
In 1976, I wrote a
four-part series on racial issues in the Madison public schools. The first
story was headlined: “Minorities Isolated Within Schools.” At that point, 95
percent of the students in the Madison public schools were white. (Today – in
2018 – 44 percent are white.) Some of
the quotes from that series have an awfully familiar ring 40 years later.
Richard Buchanan, the school district’s human relations director, he saw
“minority students in Madison miseducated in a system with the best educational
opportunities in the country.”
One of the ways the school district responded was to require
that all teachers take a 10-hour human relations course in an effort to help
the mostly white teachers learn about the racial, ethnic and cultural
differences among their students. I attended one of the courses along with 39
teachers, which not only sharpened some aspects of my own racial awareness but
also allowed me to encounter the sparks that can fly when a mostly white crowd
tries to talk about race and ethnicity. In one exercise, small clusters tried
to list stereotypes attached to various racial and ethnic groups. Then resource
people from those groups entered into the discussion and as the session wore
on, the conversations got hotter. Participants said they thought the resource
people were acting as though the teachers themselves held the stereotypes they
had brainstormed. By the end of the 10 hours, teachers gave the whole
experience a lackluster review.
(One point of personal
pride about this series: it received a Special Citation from the Education
Writers Association in 1976 for investigative reporting.)
But another story in that series planted the seed of what
would become a joint project between The Capital Times and the school district
more than a decade later. Marlene Cummings, a curriculum specialist for the
Madison schools Human Relations Department, went from classroom to classroom in
Madison’s elementary school to help children learn how to respect one another’s
differences.
The project that Marlene Cummings’ classes inspired became
known as “Celebrate Difference.” It was not limited to the schools and it actually
began at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1987. I became the point
person at The Capital Times to extend
its reach to the wider community and then, a year later, to engage 92 teachers
and 1,300 students in 32 Madison schools in exploring the values of diversity.
Clearly, three decades later, this project did not solve all the issues either
in the community or society. But it did provide a framework for education and
experiences around the issues of a multi-cultural society.
My part of it began
with an editorial I wrote for The Capital Times on Feb. 3, 1988, inviting our
readers to join the Celebrate Difference project begun by UW-Madison Dean of
Students Mary Rouse and campus religious leaders to create a more positive
atmosphere on campus in the midst of racial tensions there. Nearly 3,000 people
on campus signed the pledge to celebrate differences and confront racism and
prejudice.
The editorial said that the newspaper was adopting this “to
accentuate the value in moving out of the protective cocoons of sameness and to
highlight the excitement in discovering the new horizons of diversity.” It
acknowledged that “this effort focuses more on attitudes than actions” and that
it itself, it would not create jobs, end poverty or stop housing discrimination.
Over the next several months, some 750 people responded to
the Cap Times’ invitation. The project
also sparked an internal examination at the newspaper about the lack of
diversity on our staff and the way we cover stories in the community. We hired
trainers to come in to work with our staff and then invited community leaders
to come to a staff meeting to share their perceptions with us.
When the whole project came to a conclusion, I wrote a column
about it that appeared in the Sunday Wisconsin State Journal. I wrote about how
I tried to use the Celebrate Difference project to expand my own cultural
horizons. Indeed, over the course of that year, I formed relationships with a
wide variety of community leaders that continued through the years.
In that column, I referred back to my all-white upbringing
and concluded: “Celebrate Difference means that I can celebrate my own heritage
– my German ancestry, my white skin, my Catholic beliefs, my masculinity, my
marriage – without diminishing the heritage of others. It means that I can
reach out beyond that personal heritage and celebrate with others at a black
gospel festival or a Hispanic fiesta. It means I can learn from the stories of
a Menominee Indian or a Hmong refugee.”
I had also been keeping a journal during that year delving into my
thoughts and experiences with race in a way I never had before.
All of this was happening as race was playing out in many
different ways in the Madison area.
One was the
presidential campaign of Rev. Jesse Jackson. He was a credible candidate in the
Wisconsin primary, even though this was a predominantly white state. (He ultimately
came in second with 28 percent of the vote.)
I was the editorial page editor at
the Cap Times and was involved in interviewing several of the candidates,
including Jackson. I then wrote our endorsement of Jackson, saying that he
“more than any other presidential candidate on the ballot this year, embodies
the pain of those struggling to make it in the America of the 1980s and the
hope of those anticipating the America of the 1990s.” We made the case for him
based on his movement, his message and the man, saying he represented “the kind
of vision, the kind of leader who could point this nation in the direction we
believe it needs to go.” It was not to be, of course, but I am proud to have
been able to articulate that vision.
In the city of Madison, meanwhile, more and more
African-Americans were finding this city a refuge from the streets of Chicago
and Milwaukee and other troubled communities. Most of them simply sought a
better life for themselves and their children. Others came to continue the
exploitation of those seeking a better life. Madison began to react more and
more strongly – and negatively – to its growing diversity.
I had a chance at the end of 1989 to be the responder to a
talk UW-Madison Chancellor Donna Shalala gave to the Madison Literary Club
about the problems facing America’s cities. I talked about the tendency for Madison
to engage in “drawbridge politics” – let’s protect our nice little enclave by
not letting others in. I suggested we might look as the people moving to our
city as “urban refugees,” not all that different from the other groups of
refugees who have settled here. I expanded on that in a column in the Sunday
Wisconsin State Journal: “All of these groups rely on the generosity of folks
in this area to help them make a transition in their lives.” I argued that over
time, these refugees could “bring new strength and new vitality to this
community.”
I was writing quite a bit about issues of race during this
stretch, both in editorials and in columns. There were headlines on my columns
like “Racial politics make divisive problems worse” and “Race, poverty create
stark images.” I tried in many ways to
focus my writing on these issues.
I had a chance in October of 1989 to spend an extraordinary
weekend at what was then called St. Benedict Center (now Holy Wisdom Monastery)
with Rosemarie and Vincent
Harding, veterans of the Civil Rights Movement, friends and counselors to
Dr. King, theologians and spiritual guides. There were about 40 of us there
from all over the country. Among the many insights they offered that weekend:
“The biggest challenge facing our country is learning to be a multiracial
society.” Clearly, that challenge remains.
One aspect of such a challenge is how folks in the media
deal with issues of race. During the Celebrate Difference project, the Cap
Times did some staff training around these issues, but we were hardly the only
media outlet in this new-rich city. So in the late 1990s and into the 2000s, I
was part of a group that convened periodic race and media forums, bringing
together news people from a variety of outlets with representatives of the
black community. These were often uncomfortable as we heard the many ways we
were failing an important segment of our community. A lack of diversity on our
staffs, an over-emphasis on negative stories involving people of color, a lack
of positive news, disconnection from the daily lives of black residents, a
historic distrust of white media by black folks. Once again, we opened some new
channels of communication, but the problems linger.
While I was working on issues in Madison, I was also part of
the leadership of an organization then known as the National Conference of
Editorial Writers. One of our
initiatives shared with the National Association of Black Journalists was to
give an annual Ida B. Wells
award for someone in the field of journalism who was making our profession more
open to the nation’s diversity. (The original curator of the award was Sam
Adams, a veteran black journalist who taught one of the first courses – Hunger
in America – that I took when I began at UW In 1969.) We also ran an annual
Minority Writers Seminar in Nashville to help open the doors to opinion writing
for journalists of color around the nation.
During that stretch, I wrote my own reflections in 2005 on
race and media, focusing specifically on the Cap Times, where I was now the
managing editor, the second highest spot in the newsroom. I knew that over 40
years, the Cap Times had hired perhaps eight black journalists. We had worked
with the Simpson Street Free Press to nurture young writers, we had provided
internship opportunities for high school students, we had a partnership with
our neighbors at Wright Middle School, the Evjue Foundation (which donated the
paper’s profits to the community) funded an annual minority journalism
scholarship at the UW-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communications. I
had brought in my friend Dori
Maynard to do another newsroom training on race.
But still, as I looked through three months worth of papers
in 2005, trying to see them as if I were a person of color, I wrote that “I did
not find much that I could identify with…The overall impression I got was that
this was a publication written by and for white folks.” I’ll leave aside the
complications around recruiting, around the demographics of news consumers in
Madison, the pressures of time and staff and breaking news and simply
acknowledge that by the mid-2000s, when I had risen far up in the leadership at
the paper, there were still huge gaps in our efforts to reach beyond our
traditional white readership.
This was a time when I was also in the midst of changing
careers, going from journalism to ministry. One of the opportunities that
created for me is to engage around issues of race and religion and in the
process, establish new relationships with people connected with growing black
church world in Madison.
A place where I
began to experience that was as part of the Martin Luther King Community Choir,
directed by Leotha and Tamera Stanley of Mt. Zion Baptist Church. The choir
sings each year for the Madison/Dane County King celebration in January, but as
part of that weekend, it also sings at an ecumenical church service honoring
King’s life. That event tends to get a smaller number of choir members, so one
year, there were only two of us basses there and we had one very exposed line –
which we blew. And the crowd cheered us on and encouraged us and I got a
wonderful taste of how a black church in a way that is both joyful and caring
can carry those who stumble, even if only on a line of music.
One of the places where my work in journalism and ministry
overlapped involved the Cap Times and Rev.
Alex Gee, pastor of Fountain of Life. I got to know Alex in the mid-2000s
when I wrote a story about books that he and his sister Lilada had published
delving into some of the hard parts of their lives. We stayed in touch after
that. Occasionally I would go to worship at Fountain of Life and one Sunday he
preached at Memorial United Church of Christ where I was the pastor.
In the fall of 2013 when Alex was feeling very frustrated
with the way he had been treated as a black man in Madison – a black man who
was also a professional and a non-profit leader and a pastor – he asked me to
brainstorm with him how he might tell his story. I connected him with Paul
Fanlund, the executive editor of the Cap Times out of that came an essay called
“Justified
Anger: Madison is failing its African-American Community” that launched a
movement for racial justice in Madison.
Since then, I have
been part of the Black History for a New Day class put on by Justified Anger
and continue to work with Pastor Alex on writing projects.
While at Memorial, I formed a partnership with Pastor Colier McNair of Zion City Church, seeking ways to connect our two congregations which in many ways were mirror images – mostly black Pentecostal and mostly white mainstream Protestant. My relationship with Colier
and his wife, Myra, and members of the congregation grew stronger than did the
connections between the two congregations, but it was a worthwhile effort.
Now my wife, Ellen, and I have joined in a Bible study led by Pastor (and Judge)
Everett Mitchell at Christ the Solid Rock church, which is offering us new
connections. One of the important pieces of that for me is I am meeting people
outside the normal civic and religious circles that I travel in.
I have had a chance
over the years to visit some of the places that tied together my experiences –
the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, including the Lorraine Motel where
Dr. King was shot; Ebeneezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where King grew up and
often preached, as well as his home down the street and the gravesite where he
and his wife, Coretta Scott King, are buried; the King Memorial in Washington,
D.C, ; the new National Museum of African American Culture and History in
Washington, D.C.
I have had the chance to hear some of the great black
preachers at the Festival of Homiletics over the years – Otis Moss III, Luke
Powery, Yvette Flunder among them.
Not that I have got this whole race relations thing figured
out. When I start to feel like I have somehow gotten past my own biases, I
remember the day a black man drove up to Memorial and I saw him walking from
his car toward church. I figured he was just another person stopping by to seek
some financial assistance. Turns out, he was a business guy who needed
directions to his next appointment.
But that was just a personal preconception – call it an
implicit bias – coming through. But there was a second instance where my own
privileged status allowed me and most of the folks I hang out with to totally
miss one of the great racial divides in Madison.
Kaleem Caire, then the director of the Greater Madison Area
Urban League, had proposed a public school that would serve black boys and
girls called Madison Prep. There was heated debate involving the school board,
the teachers’ union, members of the black community and some in the white
community, culminating in an emotion-laden six hour meeting when many black
folks explained in painful detail the way the Madison schools had failed them
and their children. After it was over, I got this Facebook message from a
friend on the school board, Lucy Mathiak: “Hi Phil, I'm curious about the
relative silence of the clergy (other than some of the African American clergy)
on the debate over Madison Prep, race, and public education.”
Here's part of my reply: “At least in the circles of clergy
I run with, it never even came up as a point of discussion. I suspect that's in
part because our congregations tend to be predominantly white and there is less
of a personal sense of urgency about the outcomes for African American students
in the schools. While there is a generalized sense of the need for
'something' to be done, people don't feel the same stake in it as
families with African American students do. At the congregation I serve in
Fitchburg, I have not heard any talk about Madison Prep at all.”
Of course, that became the basis for a
column in the Cap Times in February of 2013, but still, much of my work
around racial issues in recent years has been as an individual rather than
working with church communities. (I am, however, becoming one of the point
people for the regional United Church of Christ congregations as they explore
race over the coming year.)
So clearly there is more work for me to do to, in Vincent
Harding’s words, learning how to live in a multi-racial society. I have been
fortunate – indeed privileged in many senses of that word – to have amazing
opportunities and good friends to accompany me on this journey. Because of the
role I had at the newspaper and then as a minister who had wide exposure to
people in the community, I had chances other white folks don’t easily have to
cross some of the boundaries that exist in our society. Those opportunities
have so greatly enhanced my life. But I
worry that they have only made a small difference in the divisions that still
exist in so many aspects of our community, of our nation. So the struggle goes
on.
As I remembered Dr. King’s death 50 years ago, I came across
words from his youngest child, Bernice, who told The Guardian news site in
words she learned from her mother: “Struggle is a never-ending process, freedom
is never really won – you earn it and win it in every generation.”
My struggle – and the struggle of the nation – continues
with the hope embodied by Dr. King that one day America will live up to its
promise and that followers of Jesus will help lead the way. The march towards
the Beloved Community goes on.