A Union Presbyterian Seminary webinar explains Charlotte’s Reimagining America Project
May 7, 2024
The Reimagining America Project (RAP), a grassroots effort of clergy, activists and local leaders in and around Charlotte, North Carolina, who are working to reduce the unjust impacts race has on the systems of our society, was the subject of an illuminating webinar recently offered by Union Presbyterian Seminary and two of its institutions, the Center for Social Justice and Reconciliation (CSJR) and the Katie Geneva Cannon Center for Womanist Leadership.
RAP co-founders Jennifer Roberts, a former mayor of Charlotte, and the Rev. Dr. Rodney S. Sadler Jr., associate professor of Bible at the seminary and the director of the CSJR, were participants in the “Demonstrating Intersectional Justice” webinar, which can be seen here. Joining them were fellow RAP members Joanne Stevenson Jenkins, Kevin Woodson, and Dr. Jim Beard, a retired chemistry professor who’s now a lay pastor.
“I smiled when you called me one of the co-founders, because you are the other co-founder,” Roberts told Sadler. “We have been in marches and protests for the last 20 years, recognizing injustices we see all the time.” During a protest and march on the day George Floyd was murdered, “you and I walked together and looked at the crowd,” she recalled. “What was interesting was the diversity of the crowd.” She and Sadler asked each other, “Why does this keep happening over and over? We have got to end this cycle of oppression, violence and injustice,” the former mayor said. “We know violence disproportionately impacts communities of color. … Storytelling is so powerful. How can we bring these voices forward? That’s how we started RAP.”
“We want people to see that racism is real,” said Sadler, calling RAP “a head-and-heart approach.”
Beard said he came to RAP “in a circuitous route,” having heard the Poor People’s Campaign co-founder, the Rev. Dr. William Barber II, speak at the Festival of Homiletics. “He’s one of those people who will get you to do something,” Beard said. “I went to the [PPC’s] march on Washington, and after that, I was much more impassioned about doing something around racial injustice.”
One evening, Sadler “was making the pitch for RAP. It was a calling, and I felt I had to do this,” Beard said. Having taught environmental chemistry to college students, “environmental justice is an obvious thing for me. I have spent years fighting the battle to say climate change is real, but it had never occurred to me that environmental justice had anything to do with race.”
“For me, education has always been a lynchpin,” Woodson said. “Education frees you. It allows you to understand your surroundings and your own head.”
“With RAP, we are brave enough to get at the root of the matter,” Jenkins said. “We are trying to help people dismantle the silos they live in,” which she called an “either/or way of thinking, rather than both/and.”
“I believe people don’t want people to be as proximate to a solution,” Jenkins said, “as RAP encourages them to be.”
“We need to do a better job connecting people to governance,” Roberts said. Because governance in the United States is divided into local, state and national levels, “you’ve got to advocate in front of the right legislative body.” In many states and counties, “we have seen an attack on voting rights, and we know Jim Crow institutionalized obstacles. … That’s why voting rights and the way elections are run are very important.” The challenge in North Carolina and other states is that “we don’t have a citizen’s initiative process. That’s just one example of the things we need to continue to work on.”
Asked by Sadler what’s surprised them the most in their work, Beard said in environmental justice, “it’s how subtle and insidious” racism remains.
“It’s almost a secret virus that creeps through our society. Well-meaning people just aren’t aware of it,” Beard said. “They may not choose to look, but it becomes obvious in environmental justice. You have to look, and you have to think.”
Woodson said changes are needed in the entire education system. “Solving your child’s problem may not solve the problems for all children,” he said.
RAP meets via Zoom on Wednesday evenings. Learn more about RAP here.
Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service
Today’s Focus: Union Presbyterian Seminary webinar
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We know that the secret to bearing fruit is abiding in Christ and he in us. Through communion, servanthood and fellowship, we benefit from Christ’s strength so that we may be able to bear fruit and be a blessing to others. Help us to serve with humility and grace. Amen.
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