A few weeks ago Rev. Dr. William Barber spoke at an annual AFSC gathering about the “Third Reconstruction”–people working together across lines of race, class and religion, for a deep moral change. Here are a few short video highlights from his talk.
Bayard Rustin and a few other Quaker prophets: Rev. Barber recounts moments of courage in action among Friends.
The Third Reconstruction: In this excerpt Rev. Barber talks about his sense that we are in the midst of the Third Reconstruction where people of many faiths and none, across race and ethnicity, across gender identity, across sexual orientation, across class lines are working together for a deep moral change and how the resistance has worked in the past and is working currently to stop this movement of the Spirit.
Getting above the snake line: Rev. Barber talks about taking the moral high ground in order to transcend and work against the huge forces opposed to socio-political transformation. This excerpt of this talk is followed by a song sung by Rev. Gladwyn Uzzell.
On Feb. 26, 17-year-old Palestinian-American Mahmoud Shaalan was shot and killed by Israeli soldiers at a checkpoint near the Beit El settlement in the West Bank. The Israeli soldiers at the checkpoint shot Mahmoud several times, and later reported that he had tried to stab them.
The week after the incident, the Palestinian Ministry of Health released a statement saying that the teenager’s body was “riddled with bullets.” Witnesses said that the soldiers continued to shoot Mahmoud as he lay on the ground, left him bleeding on the road for two-and-a-half hours, and prevented a Palestinian ambulance from taking him to the hospital.
This is one of dozens of horrific stories of Palestinians killed by the Israeli military in recent months—stories that should have the attention of the U.S. government, since the U.S. sends billions of dollars in military aid to Israel each year.
Numerous U.S. laws and regulations, including the Leahy Law, prohibit the U.S. from providing security assistance or training to foreign military units that violate human rights. Although organizations like Human Rights Watch have documented dozens of extrajudicial killings and other human rights violations in the occupied Palestinian territory, none of the units behind these attacks have been held responsible.
The killing of Mahmoud Shaalan—a high school student with hopes of studying medicine, who had returned from the United States three days before his death—is just one example of the unlawful killings that continue to occur. Even if Mahmoud had a knife, as the Israeli soldiers claim he did, the soldiers resorted to excessive and unnecessary force instead of attempting to disarm or apprehend him.
The media often only report Israeli accounts of violent incidents–which is usually that a Palestinian killed was about to commit a crime. This typical obfuscation of the entire story justifies ongoing human rights violations and discourages further investigation from taking place.
Since October 2015, Israeli security forces have killed at least 169 Palestinians, 112 of whom were alleged assailants like Mahmoud. According to Amnesty International, a significant number of those Palestinians were killed unlawfully through “extrajudicial executions.”
The United States cannot ignore these mounting numbers.
Although the U.S. Department of State confirmed that Mahmoud is indeed a U.S. citizen, the U.S. has not issued any official condemnation. The White House and Department of State have not even publicly called for an investigation into this incident to date.
AFSC is working with a coalition of organizations urging the U.S. to call for investigations into human rights violations committed by Israel. Together, we’re calling on the U.S. to stop funding Israeli military units that commit human rights abuses against Palestinians.
Mahmoud should still be alive today. The U.S. has a responsibility to find out the truth about what happened and to hold his killers accountable. Failure by the U.S. to call for an investigation into Mahmoud’s death—as well as dozens of cases like his—will continue to justify violent killings of Palestinians for years to come.
About the authors: Lawrence Fleming, Olga Banaszkiewicz, and Carly Campbell are AFSC interns working with Raed Jarrar, AFSC’s government relations manager in the Office of Public Policy and Advocacy in Washington, D.C. Lawrence, Olga, and Carly are enrolled in Arcadia University’s International Peace and Conflict Resolution master’s program and are working on an advocacy project that looks at influencing public policy related to accountability for U.S. security assistance.
Over the past year our Governing Under the Influence project asked presidential hopefuls in Iowa and New Hampshire questions that helped steer the conversations toward exposing corporate influence on politics.
Many powerful, inspiring organizations across the country are supporting this work, and one such organization, Showing Up for Racial Justice, or SURJ, has made its priority to mobilize and organize white people for racial justice. SURJ formed in response to a call made by Black activists after the racist backlash against the election of President Barack Obama in 2009, and although membership was small at first, SURJ chapters have grown dramatically after the “not guilty” grand jury verdict of George Zimmerman in 2013.
I was introduced to SURJ by a friend who works at Jews for Racial and Economic Justice, or JFREJ, in New York City. JFREJ has been doing powerful racial and economic justice work for decades and has been closely involved with SURJ. SURJ happened to be organizing a one-day “Moral Imagination Retreat” in November to “re-vision” racial justice in predominantly white faith communities, and I was lucky to attend.
This retreat was a first step towards forming a SURJ faith working group that will work in a relationship of accountability with Black and Brown faith leaders to co-create the relationships, networks, resources, and theologies necessary to support this movement. Twenty leaders from various faiths and denominations, including Unitarian Universalists, Jews, Protestants, and several others, gathered to build relationships, share stories of failures and successes, and make plans for next steps.
We were asked several times to assess the current status of racial justice work within our denominations, and experiences were varied. But across the board, we were all aware that we have a lot of work to do. As I reflected on the racial justice work of liberal, unprogrammed Friends, I felt largely disappointed. There are pockets of people doing great work and amazing individuals who carry on despite years of frustration, but as a community, we are far from where we ought to be.
I asked myself, why have white Friends failed to respond adequately to Friends of Color who have continuously asked us take racial justice work seriously, as a matter of necessity, both inside and outside of our meetinghouses?
It was a question that I’ve explored many times before, and I thought that I was comfortable with my answer: liberal, unprogrammed Quakerism has been swallowed up by white, middle/upper class, highly educated, political liberals who maintain white, liberal values at the center of Quakerism and force all those at the margins to either stick it out and fight for change or leave and seek out a more welcoming community elsewhere (both decisions I respect immensely).
One subject that kept coming up during the retreat was theology and the need for theology that can challenge white supremacy and invite people in. This got me thinking about a testimony that liberal, unprogrammed Friends hold sacred, namely our Peace Testimony and our understanding of pacifism as a political and spiritual mandate. “Violence begets violence,” (attributed to Dr. King) is often-cited, but rarely heeded. I would be willing to wager that most, if not all, liberal, unprogrammed Quakers would agree with this statement.
When white Friends allow faith and practice to be corrupted by the values of white dominant culture, our beloved Peace Tesimony is betrayed. White supremacy is a war, a war waged on Black and Brown people around the world to maintain white privilege and dominance with police, military, and weapons. All too often white Friends cast their lot with this system through implicit consent and support – “White silence is violence,” the now famous protest sign reminds us. Even our money funds this war through our tax dollars and our spending habits which fund occupations of Black and Brown communities.
When I listen to Friends of Color, I do not hear anyone who is the least bit confused about this. The “Spirit of the Meeting” of Black and Brown Friends was reached a long time ago on this issue. How can white Friends shake loose this violent white God and reclaim a spiritual mandate to end the bloody system of white supremacy? Will changing our theology help change hearts and minds?
I think so, and I think white Friends must do so to save our souls. Maybe this is what racial justice organizing in predominantly white faith communities looks like – following leadership of communities most impacted, exploring new ways to bring more people into the fold, supporting and lifting up courageous action, building relationships of trust and accountability, and using everything from theology to trainings to toolkits to yard signs to become evangelists for the revolution.
During my short time at the retreat, it became clear that many other denominations are wrestling with these same questions. Before we left, we each made commitments to follow-up, to stay involved, to help organize. This process of discerning and learning together, following the lead of People of Color, will continue on indefinitely.
Reverend Jennifer Bailey, the founder of the Faith Matters Network, a member of SURJ’s accountability council, and one of the main organizers of the retreat, began our time together by asking us this question which has stayed with me ever since: “What are you going to do about this white God that demands Black and Brown blood?” In a way, I see this process as one, long communal exorcism, casting out that false, white God and discovering together what lies beneath, what survived the wreckage, and what we can build from the remains.
Our criminal justice system isn’t broken. This glaring racial inequity is actually a result of how the justice system was designed to work—a system with an undeniable historic connection to slavery that was outlawed a century and a half ago. Any meaningful conversation about ending mass incarceration in the U.S. must include discussing racism in our prisons, our legislation, our courts, our police departments, our schools, our neighborhoods, and in our everyday lives.
How did we get to this place? Although slavery ended in 1865, America came up with plenty of reasons to lock up large numbers of Black people in the years that followed. The legal justification was established in the Black Codes—loitering and vagrancy laws passed after the Civil War to restrict freedom. The moral justification developed as white society promoted racialized stereotypes that related Black bodies to animalistic brutes to be feared, especially by white women.
The not-so-hidden financial justification was the desire to bring Black people back to tobacco and cotton fields. After the end of slavery, prisons became a new path to provide free or cheap labor for plantations. Within a century, that labor was used also for governmental contracts and private industry. Along with the new sharecropping system after the Civil War, the Southern plantation system kept churning out product—all at the expense of Black humanity.
The “war on drugs” and era of mass incarceration
The disproportionality of Blacks in prison grew over the following decades, becoming further entrenched in the 1970s and ’80s. As a backlash to communities struggling for civil and human rights—for themselves and for others—new laws took hold that made it easier to keep Black people in shackles and chains.
In 1971, President Richard Nixon declared a “war on drugs” to quell social unrest across the country—feeding a new racially tinged narrative about “inner city” crime for the constituency he called his “silent majority.” The war on drugs fueled a surge in prison populations, which continued to soar with the passage of state-level legislation like the Rockefeller drug laws in New York, and, in the 1980s, tough-on-crime measures, such as “three-strikes” laws and other draconian punishments for drug offenders.
For people of color, arrests often turn into imprisonment, whereas whites may face probation or shorter sentences for committing similar acts. To make matters more tragically comedic, the recent shift to legalize marijuana in several states has created a new class of mostly white entrepreneurs while thousands of young Black men and women remain imprisoned or with criminal records for using or selling the same substance.
This is business as usual in our criminal justice system—an accepted paradigm that encourages mass incarceration of people of color to continue. Though less crude than during and after Reconstruction, American politicians, media, and law enforcement continue to draw on the well-practiced art of stereotyping the “other” to justify discriminatory treatment.
Today, the United States has both the largest number of human beings behind bars (more than 2.4 million in federal, state, county, and other facilities) and also the highest percentage of its population (nearly one out of 100) locked away. Although Black men make up six percent of the population, they now account for nearly half of all prisoners.
After people are released from prison, their punishment continues. They face discrimination in applying for jobs, housing, and public assistance. Many are barred from voting for the rest of their lives.
Opportunity for change
Racial inequity pervades the U.S. criminal justice system, the political arena that governs that system, and the society that allows this injustice to continue. Interrupting that cycle to end mass incarceration requires change in every one of those spaces. And there are a few, but important, opportunities to push for that needed transformation.
Over the past eight years, we’ve seen an ebb in the total number of people incarcerated in the United States. The slight but significant declining trend began not because enlightened political leaders finally understood the devastation that these policies have caused, but because of the great recession of 2007. Economic woes meant that many states could no longer afford the cost of building and maintaining prisons.
This opening has allowed advocates and organizers to seize the part of the public narrative that has now forced and encouraged some mainstream political leaders to publicly wrestle with this issue. On the 2016 presidential campaign trail, we’ve seen politicians on both sides of the aisle calling for an end to the era of mass incarceration—not simply for economic reasons but because of the destruction it has caused, disproportionately for the poor and people of color.
In local communities, organizations like the American Friends Services Committee are providing support to formerly incarcerated people and their families. In the South, AFSC is blessed to work with other organizations, faith-based groups, and individuals committed to improving opportunities for people in and out of prison.
In Baltimore, our Friend of a Friend program works in several prisons in Maryland, providing training to inmates on nonviolent conflict resolution while supporting an environment where they can study the causes and effects of mass incarceration and how they can participate to dismantle this system. After they’re released from prison, Friend of a Friend accompanies them as they transition back into the larger community, connecting them to ongoing community organizing work.
In Atlanta, we have started a restorative justice program that helps young people who’ve been charged with crimes get involved with real community work, such as designing programs to prevent their peers from walking down the same path, as an alternative to having a criminal offense on their record.
Programs like these help, one person at a time. But working toward policy changes that affect thousands remains critical. Advocates across the country continue to chip away at the problem of mass incarceration from different angles, whether calling for decreasing sentences, decriminalizing certain drugs offenses, and alternatives to incarceration programs, to name just a few.
As individuals, communities, and organizations come together to challenge the imprisonment of our brothers, sisters, and neighbors, we can’t ignore the central role that racism plays in our justice system.
In this effort, we must continue to respect the humanity of every person caught up in this modern-day outgrowth of slavery. And we must ensure that the narrative is not one that treats the incarcerated as simply perpetrators, but as survivors of a system designed to control people based on the color of their skin and the need of those with power to withhold it from those without. In this way, we can do more to ensure that we move toward a conclusion in this painful chapter in our nation’s history.
—KAMAU FRANKLIN
Kamau Franklin is AFSC’s regional director in the U.S. South and an activist attorney who has been involved in community organizing for over 20 years. Read Kamau’s bio.
Quaker organization that includes people of various faiths committed to social justice. #BlackLivesMatter #Not1More #WhoProfits #BDS #SharedSecurity #NewJimCrow