Cardinal Seán O’Malley, OFM. Cap., Archbishop of Boston, has issued a a reflection on the evils of racism that calls on people to work and pray for justice, peace, and reconciliation. He requested that this letter be shared in all the parishes of the Archdiocese this weekend. The letter, dated 5 June 2020, is as follows:
"Dearly Beloved in Christ,
"For four hundred and one years this land, which would become the
United States of America, has had to deal with the evil and moral cancer
that is racism.
"When the word racism is invoked it is often identified in personal
terms: someone whose attitudes, convictions and actions target a group
of other individuals because of color. This is a valid but only partial
meaning of the term. From such people as Fredrick Douglas and Harriet
Tubman, to contemporary leaders, thinkers and activists, African
Americans have tried consistently to expand the general understanding of
racism. In word and deed, they have pointed to the reality of systemic
and structural racism.
"Racism and slavery find a common nexus in this country, the denial of
the humanity and dignity of other persons. As a nation we abolished
slavery legally, but we have not dealt with its enduring legacy. If we
reject slavery then we must reject and denounce the dehumanizing
attitudes that foster discrimination, inequality and violence. Racism
can be explicit, but it also can be unrecognized and unacknowledged.Yet, all of its manifestations are deadly and corrosive to civil
society. Like COVID-19, racism can infect any person, without regard to
region, religion, race or ethnicity. It is highly contagious, easily
transmitted to others, and too often unseen and disguised in those
seemingly healthy. Racism is a social and spiritual disease that kills
people.
"The murder of George Floyd, an African American citizen, at the hands of
four rogue police officers was tragically all too familiar to the
African American community. During our lifetimes there has been the
reality of the Negro Travelers Green Book, identifying locations where
African Americans stop and stay in our country with less likelihood of
being attacked. We have seen the Ku Klux Klan's brutal lynchings of
innocent black people. And we have now again witnessed heinous violence
perpetrated by some who were entrusted with the duty to protect.
George Floyd's death makes clear that racist premises and attitudes,
often implicit, are woven through basic structures - political, legal,
economic, cultural and religious - in the United States.
"The earliest days of my priesthood were lived in Washington, D.C. on
16th St. in the heart of the city. I was there the night Dr. Martin
Luther King., Jr. was assassinated. The city was set ablaze with 700
fires, tanks lined the streets around the White House and soldiers with
bayonets stood on every corner. The killing of Dr. King sparked despair
and rage throughout the African American community in the United
States. Since then there have been important and meaningful advances of
civil rights and the election of an African American President. But to
know that fifty years later four police officers would see themselves
entitled to murder a black man with impunity makes clear how far we must
yet go to achieve racial equality.
"In the weeks following Dr. King's assassination in 1968, during the time
of the Poor People's March on Washington, I joined the individuals and
families at Resurrection City at the Lincoln Memorial. Off duty police
officers hurled tear gas at our encampment and shouted vile profanities
at us. I did not then, and we do not now judge all police officers on
the basis of the reprehensible, criminal acts of those few who betray
their brothers and sisters in uniform. The vast majority of police
officers, very notably in Boston through the leadership of Commissioner
Gross, serve as heroic, selfless first responders who take seriously
their mission and face danger to protect others.
"The antidote to the poison of racism is community and solidarity. The
protests in response to George Floyd's murder, in my view, have been
predominantly peaceful and focused on the urgent need to address racism
as a systemic, cultural, and legal reality. Some violent protesters and
out of town infiltrators, few in number but by intention
disproportionately visible, had interest in neither justice nor its
achievement. As Governor Baker stated, they should be legally punished
and should not be able to tarnish the greater significance of the
peaceful marches and demonstrations we have witnessed.
"We recognize that the Catholic Church in the United States must contend
with our historical complicity in slavery and our need for racial
healing. However, an important part of the legacy of the Catholic faith
is our social teaching. The Catholic Church is a community of people
of all colors, nationalities and ethnicities. Catholic moral teaching is
based on the fact that all people - without regard to race, religion,
ethnicity or nationality - are created in the image of God. This
teaching rejects any form of racism, personal or systemic. Our faith
calls us to leadership in breaking down barriers and standing against
injustice. To violate human dignity is to dishonor the presence of
Christ in each person.
"Going forward, the reality of racism in our society and the moral
imperative of racial equality and justice must be incorporated in our
schools, our teaching and our preaching. We must uphold the commitments
to equal dignity and human rights in all institutions of our society,
in politics, law, economy, education. Catholic teaching on social
justice measures the way a society acts fairly or not. Our work will
not be done until African American men, women and children are treated
equally in every aspect of life in the United States.
"The killing of George Floyd is painful evidence of what is and has been
at stake for African Americans - the failure of society in too many ways
to protect their lives and the lives of their children. As Catholics
we are taught to nurture and protect life from its inception to its
natural end and at every moment in-between. The demonstrations and
protests of these days have been calls for justice and heart wrenching
expressions of deep emotional pain from which we cannot turn away. They
call us to affirm the inestimable value of every person's life. They
call us to redouble our commitment to foster respect and justice for all
people. They call us to uphold and defend the truth that Black Lives
Matter.
"With the assurance of my continued prayers,
"Devotedly yours in Christ,
Cardinal Seán O’Malley, OFM, Cap.
Archbishop of Boston"
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