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More Catholic bishops, laity join in ‘Black Lives Matter’ protests

Rhina Guidos | Catholic News Service

Washington Auxiliary Bishop Roy E. Campbell and a woman religious walk with others toward the National Museum of African American History and Culture during a peaceful protest June 8, 2020, following the death of George Floyd, an unarmed African American man whose neck was pinned to the ground by police for more than eight minutes before he was taken to the hospital. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)

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People march from the White House in Washington to the National Museum of African American History and Culture during a peaceful protest June 8, 2020, following the death of George Floyd, an unarmed African American man whose neck was pinned to the ground by police for more than eight minutes before he was taken to the hospital. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)

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A woman religious holds a placard as she takes part in a prayerful protest outside the White House in Washington June 8, 2020, following the death of George Floyd, an unarmed African American man whose neck was pinned to the ground by police for more than eight minutes before he was taken to the hospital. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)

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WASHINGTON (CNS) — The streets in front of the White House
of late have been filled with thousands of youthful faces carrying signs or
wearing T-shirts calling for racial justice, with fists raised in the air, or
posing for selfies with a large “Black Lives Matters” sign.

That
sign now hangs on a tall piece of fencing meant to keep the protesters out of
Lafayette Park, the place tourists would usually flock to and have their
pictures taken with the iconic building in the background.

But on
June 8, the space was filled with women and men religious donning their habits
and priests with Roman collars; some carried rosaries and signs with Our Lady
of Guadalupe and the image of St. Oscar Romero. And hundreds of laity and at
least two bishops from the Archdiocese of Washington joined in the
Catholic-centered protest.

“The
Catholic voice as a group, as a family needs to be heard,” said Father
Cornelius Ejiogu, a member of the Society of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart,
best known as the Josephites. He, along with others, helped organize the event.
“I know a lot of priests and sisters have come out here individually to
pray for peace and justice, but we feel that our church, as one, can come
together.”

Washington
Auxiliary Bishops Roy E. Campbell and Mario E. Dorsonville attended the event
that featured prayer, songs and Bible readings and a reading of names of black
Americans who died in violent acts of racial injustice, most recently George
Floyd,

His May
25 death, while pinned to the ground by a white Minneapolis police officer seen
in a video pressuring his neck with his knee for almost nine minutes, sparked
protests, not just in the U.S., but in other parts of the world.

Father
Ejiogu said retired Bishop John H. Ricard of Pensacola-Tallahasse, Florida, who
lives in Washington and is superior of Josephites, also was set to attend the
event.

The
crowd prayed for those whose names were called out but also for “those who
have died and whose names we don’t know,” said Father Ejiogu. The event
was to pray for justice and peace “and ask God for reconciliation,”
he said.

“What
we’re seeing these past couple of weeks … it’s not the nation that we want,
the America we believe in,” he said in an interview with Catholic News
Service. “America is torn up by pride and racism and injustice. So, we
want to use this opportunity to ask God to reconcile us.”

Catholics
have joined the throngs of protesters who have taken to the streets of
Washington since the killing of Floyd, but the event was a hope to unify
Catholics to recognize the injustice behind the killings, he said.

“I
believe all lives matter, Jesus specifically would say all lives matter, but is
everybody in this country having the same justice? Do we all have the same
privileges? No. There are some folks who don’t have the same privileges,”
 Father Ejiogu said.

“So,
we are saying that those folks who are disenfranchised, those folks who are
experiencing racism more, their lives matter along with all lives,” he
added. “So, it’s not a question of separation, no. We’re asking God to
heal us so we can recognize that we’re all brothers and sisters.”

He said
he recognized that not all Catholics agreed with what the group was setting out
to do.

One of
them was Maryanne Pennell, from Front Royal Virginia, who was carrying a
“Trump Pro-Life” sign near the group. “I’m here so say pro-life
is what matters,” she said. “All people, not based on your skin or
your nationality or your history, based on being an American or being in
America.”

What is
needed is more dialogue, and she was doing her share of it,
peacefully speaking with others who, curious about her sign and defense of
President Donald Trump, stopped to talk to her.  

“That’s
part of what today should be,” she said. “Others say, ‘What do you
think?” and I say, ‘What do you think?’ That’s how America works, not in
judgment. It works in dialogue and we can disagree respectfully.”

Of
course black lives matter, “but all lives matter, beginning with the
unborn,” she said, adding that she believed no other president had done as
much as Trump for the pro-life cause.

 “I’m
here to say Mr. Trump has given us a voice for life,” she said. “He
has stood for life and for the Constitution of the United States.”

But to
those like her, Father Ejiogu said, he just wanted to say that “we’re
simply here to pray and to call on our Blessed Mother of the church, the
saints, to help us to heal so that we can recognize that black lives matter,
white lives matter, Spanish lives matters, Asian lives matter, all lives, yes,
but there are a few of those lives that seem to feel that they do not matter.
That’s all we’re calling for.”

Darwin
Kemp, a member of the Knights of Columbus in Washington, said he attended
because, like, others, “people are sick and tired of the injustice.”

“We
all have gone through some injustice for quite some time, including myself.
I’ve been fighting for a long time, but I’ve been fighting individually,”
he said.

Now
it’s time to do so as group, he said, because racism needs to end.  

“I
hope that we all come together as one and be able to sit down, have a
conversation, even if we agree to disagree, at least we’re having a
conversation and actually getting some things done,” he said. “Get
rid of racism. It’s been around too long.”  

Sister
Nancy Conboy, of the Franciscan Sisters of the Atonement, said she attended in
solidarity with others, but also to affirm church teachings that say that
“as Catholics, we really believe in equality for all people and we thought
it was important to come down and take part in this service.”

“We
really believe in the dignity of every person,” she said. “We just
thought it was important to come down and show support and solidarity with our
brothers and sisters. It’s true that all lives matter but I think in our
country, we have a history of racism so that’s important that we recognize
that.”

Though
not everyone would agree with the event, said Father Ejiogu, he would continue
to pray for unity on the issue within the church as well as outside of the church.

“I
can’t tell God what to do but I can ask,” he said. “What I’m asking
God with my friends, families and parishioners who are helping organize this,
I’m praying to God to heal us. That’s all we can do is pray for healing and
hopefully God will heed our petitions and answer, and our country may be much
better than it is because simply sitting at home doing nothing just doesn’t cut
it for me.”

Along
with the hundreds of who joined the peaceful protest, which took a route from
the White House fencing and ended at the National Museum of African American
History and Culture, he chanted and prayed into the distance.

He said
the images that most have given him hope, even in the midst of the tense
protests, were of the young white, black, Asians, Latinos, “people of all
colors coming out and peacefully protesting.”

“That’s
the image that stood out for me,” he said.

And
despite what others may say of the protesters, he wanted to portray the
Catholic angle of it, “speaking truth to power and doing it in a more
prayerful way,” he said.

 

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