Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Mission Yearbook: Webinar explores the story of a martyred Presbyterian pastor

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Michele Minter
Michele Minter

Michele Minter, who’s the vice provost for institutional equity and diversity at Princeton University, grew up in Cleveland. Minter recently offered up a webinar for the Synod of the Covenant called “The Choice Goes on Forever: Cleveland and the Martyrdom of the Rev. Bruce Klunder.” Watch the webinar here.

Klunder, a Presbyterian pastor who’s honored at the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama, died at age 26 on April 7, 1964, protesting the construction of a segregated school in Cleveland. Klunder was crushed by a bulldozer. He left behind his wife, Joanne, and their two children. Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, the Stated Clerk of the United Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, eulogized Klunder three days later at a memorial service at the Church of the Covenant attended by 1,500 people.

Minter opened her talk by signing the first verse of “Once to Every Man and Nation,” a hymn her mother taught her decades ago after being introduced to the hymn “at the funeral of a minister killed in Cleveland.”

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Rev. Bruce Klunder
The Rev. Bruce Klunder (Wikipedia photo)

According to Minter, the first Black families moved into Cleveland’s Glenville neighborhood in the 1940s. White flight meant Glenville became a Black neighborhood during the 1950s. A white Presbyterian pastor wanted to invite Black neighbors to worship at the church he served, but members of the then all-white congregation turned visitors away at the door. The presbytery tried to intervene, and the pastor left, Minter said. Minter was later baptized at the Glenville United Presbyterian Church.

In Cleveland, the struggle for civil rights during the 1960s focused on desegregating the public schools, Minter noted. As the city became majority Black, its Black schools were overcrowded and its white schools were far from filled. Rev. Klunder was among the founders of the local chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality, which was best known for the Freedom Rides. The executive secretary was Ruth Turner, “a strong-willed and completely fearless former teacher,” Minter said.

Protests and violence rocked Cleveland’s Murray Hill neighborhood in January 1964. Two Black people were beaten by members of the crowd, who also roughed up priests from their own parish who were trying to intervene. Police responded by arresting two teenagers and releasing them an hour later.

In early April, the Cleveland City School District announced plans to build a segregated school in Glenville. Minter turned to “A Death and Life Matter,” a sermon Klunder had preached to an all-white congregation, to explain why overcoming inequity was so important to the young pastor.

“Why is it,” Klunder asked in his sermon, that Black people “crowd themselves into overcrowded, run-down flats and apartments in areas where trees and grass are all but unknown? … It is primarily because of certain structures which have grown up for which few people take any personal responsibility. … It is because integrated neighborhoods have appeared to be poor financial risks, and therefore, the policy of all the major banks in Cleveland probits the making of loans to Negroes, regardless of collateral, if they wish to buy or build in a predominantly white neighborhood.”

“The fact that we have Negro ghettos in our inner-city neighborhoods has meant necessarily that we have had segregated schools — schools where close to 100% of the pupils were Negro,” Klunder preached. “What kind of schools are they? They are in areas cut off from the tax revenue of the prosperous suburbs.”

“It is a life and death matter for all who exist as oppressed people,” he said. “It is a life and death matter for all of us, for our times are explosive. None can claim the luxury of not having to decide. The structures are being radically attacked, and each of us must respond even if it is only a personal response to the reading of a newspaper account of some action somewhere. It is an American dilemma.”

“To understand suffering and to make it your own will not dictate a particular strategy of action,” Klunder said, “but it will throw you into the battle to make your own decisions as a follower of him who suffered all that we might be one. Our Lord is risen! In him we have peace and life. Amen.”

Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service 

Let us join in prayer for:

Christina Cosby,  Representative, Office of Public Witness and Presbyterian Ministry at the UN, Presbyterian Life & Wiitness
Donna Costa, Food Service Manager, Stony Point Center, Presbyterian Life & Witness

Let us pray:

God, thank you for being faithful in difficult moments. Help us to see you in the gathered community and to seek to support those trying to follow you. In Christ’s name we pray. Amen.

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Mission Yearbook: Webinar explores the story of a martyred Presbyterian pastor

Image Michele Minter Michele Minter , who’s the vice provost for institutional equity and diversity at Princeton University, grew up in Clev...