June 7, 2006 A UMNS Feature By Linda Green
When Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, it caused considerable damage to many
homes and neighborhoods, especially areas where people of color are the majority.
Work teams have been heading to the hardest-hit areas
on a weekly basis since the August storm, and although grateful for the assistance,
many relief workers and victims say they are not seeing all-black teams doing
recovery work. African Americans are sprinkled among teams providing relief work.
In response, African-American executive and professional
staff from the United Methodist Church are heading to Louisiana and Mississippi
July 20-25 for "Project Relief." Their goal will be "to
model good leadership and to challenge and encourage African- American congregations
to have a more visible presence among the countless congregations who have volunteered
in the gulf region and continue to do so," said Diane Johnson, executive secretary
for the Office of Urban Ministries at the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries
and president of the National Black Staff Forum. National
Black Staff Forum comprises 208 black and Africana people who serve in executive
and professional positions on the denomination's boards, agencies, commissions,
annual conferences and districts, as well as 25 bishops and four top agency executives.
Its mission is to serve professional staff members at all stages of their careers
through networking, education and career development. During
the forum's annual meeting last March, members heard an appeal from the Rev. Connie
Thomas, Louisiana Conference disaster relief volunteer coordinator, to encourage
the leadership of Black Methodists for Church Renewal – the denomination's African-American
caucus – to mobilize African Americans to serve on relief teams on the coast.
"Thomas wanted a commitment from us to come," Johnson
said. Opportunity for mission Last
February, two United Methodist pastors also called for African Americans to become
more involved in recovery work along the Gulf. The Rev. Kelvin Sauls, then pastor
of Downs Memorial United Methodist Church, Oakland, Calif., and the Rev. Lance
Eden, pastor of First Street United Methodist in New Orleans – the oldest black
United Methodist church in the city and one of the few that emerged relatively
unscathed after Katrina – lamented the lack of a large African-American presence
in the recovery. "I am aware that African Americans have
not been part of the recovery effort in the way our non-black brothers and sisters
have been," Sauls said at that time. "It troubles me." A team of United Methodist
volunteers from Downs Memorial went to First Street United Methodist last winter
to assist in relief work. Eden said that of the more
than 60 volunteers to come through his church as part of recovery teams, fewer
than five had been black. African-American United Methodist
churches have stepped up to the plate to provide dollar support for relief, but
Sauls believes they are missing an opportunity to be in mission if they are absent
from the front lines. ‘Going is important' "Going
is important because, first of all, we should have been there as far as I'm concerned,
but we weren't," Johnson said. "Sometimes you don't know what to do so you don't
do anything, but after we heard the plea from Rev. Thomas, we decided that was
something that we could do, we ought to do, and we embraced it." The
staff members will gut, clean, haul and paint. They also will perform administrative
tasks, such as interviewing, telephone response, filing, data entry and case management.
Black Methodists for Church Renewal approved a petition
from the National Black Staff Forum last March in which the group resolved to
call upon the caucus "to actively mobilize its constituencies to become volunteers
within the next 12 months in the Gulf Coast region, both Louisiana and Mississippi,
and that we, the National Black Staff Forum, would commit to this volunteer relief
work as model leadership," Johnson said. "In other words,
we're not going to tell you what you should do, we're going to model it," she
said. "And we thought that if we stepped out as general agency staff to do this
work, then others would follow, so we're modeling good leadership." Cheryl
Walker, president of Black Methodists for Church Renewal and director of the Office
of African American Ministries at the United Methodist Board of Discipleship,
said it is important that African Americans be involved in the work because most
of the people affected are "our people. It is the call on all of our lives to
be in mission with people who are need." "It is important
when people are suffering to see people of like kind providing support and care,"
said Amelia Tucker-Shaw, vice president of the Black Staff Forum and communications
resource consultant at United Methodist Communications. Black
Methodists for Church Renewal has agreed to be the coordinating body for African-American
churches and individuals who want to do disaster response work. After
arriving in Louisiana, Project Relief participants will fan out to New Orleans,
other parts of the state and to Gulfport, Miss., and will work from various church
sites. "We need to go where there are needs for recovery,"
Johnson said. It is not known whether the staff will be spending time at the wiped-out
Gulfside Assembly, the historically African-American United Methodist center in
Waveland, Miss. Other efforts In
a related matter, the National Council of Churches has partnered with six denominations,
the Baptist Peace Fellowship of North American and the Every Church a Peace Church
movement to sponsor to sponsor "Churches Supporting Churches." The
program will help rebuild 36 destroyed or damaged churches in 12 predominantly
African-American neighborhoods of New Orleans, the NCC said. Churches
Supporting Churches' goal is to "restart, reopen, repair or rebuild the churches
in order for them to be agents for community development and to recreate their
community," said C.T. Vivian, chairperson of the program and longtime activist
in the civil rights movement. Congregations across the
country will be offered the opportunity to help. A yearlong training program in
community development will equip pastors and lay leaders for their expanded work
as community developers, the NCC said. As the Aug. 29
anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approaches, the Congressional Black Caucus is
also responding. "Insufficient and flawed action by the federal government has
resulted in minimal progress in the Katrina-hit region," the caucus said. It
is hosting a series of briefings every Tuesday in June, "The Katrina Housing Series:
How Congress Can Raise the Roof for Katrina Survivors." "The purpose of the housing
series is to expose the challenges and complexities involved in assuring that
a safe and affordable housing stock is created in the Gulf region," the lawmakers
said. For more information on the National Black Staff
Forum's Project Relief, contact Johnson at (877) 870-3832 or dhjohnson@gbgm-umc.org.
United Methodist News Service Linda Green is a United
Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville, Tenn. |