It is chilling —
though sadly not surprising —
that Black churches are once again a target.
For generations,
White supremacists have attacked these institutions — これ
were often created because segregationist laws prevented Black parishioners from attending White churches —
specifically because they are centers of Black community and political power.
ザ・ 1963 Birmingham church bombing that killed four young Black girls resonated so deeply with Americans, in part, because it echoed these earlier attacks on Black churches. ザ・ 2015 murders of nine parishioners at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, by Dylann Roof drew from that same well of hateful history.
Attacks on Black churches are sadly not rare. ちょうど先月,
a White Louisiana man,
Holden Matthews,
was sentenced to 25 刑務所での年
for burning down three Black churches.
Matthews was found guilty of violating the Church Arson Prevention Act, A 1996
federal law that added harsh penalties for attacks on religious sites and property.
The law was passed a year after the Oklahoma City bombing,
during our nation’s last major spasm of White supremacist violence.
に 1995 そして 1996, いつ
a wave of church arsons struck across the Southeast United States,
President Bill Clinton and a bipartisan group in Congress feared this surge in church attacks presaged even broader racist violence to come.
そう,
in addition to signing the Church Arson Prevention Act,
Clinton created the National Church Arson Task Force,
which looked into arson attacks at more than 800
churches nationwide.
By the time the high-powered Task Force —
chaired by the late Attorney General Janet Reno and Treasury Secretary Larry Summers —
released its final report 1月に 2000,
nearly 300
people had been convicted in connection with 206
church attacks between 1995 に 1999.
The lesson of the mid-90’s is that we must address these attacks early and fiercely.
We cannot allow them to go unanswered or gather momentum.
That is why I have called for extremists involved in desecration of the DC churches to be held criminally accountable under the Church Arson Prevention Act, インクルード
Ku Klux Klan Act and other federal laws that prohibit these bigoted acts.
We must be clear-eyed that we may continue to spiral down a dark path of racism in the coming months,
fueled by conspiracy theories and lies about the election.
These election attacks and attempts to undermine voters have focused on largely Black cities like Detroit,
Milwaukee,
Atlanta and Philadelphia.
We know what can happen if we don’t address this racially motivated voter suppression and violence early.
In the same 1894 speech from the pulpit of Metropolitan AME Church, Frederick Douglass warned about the “poison of anarchy” that rises from White supremacist mob violence. The resonance for today is stark.
“The contagion is spreading, extending, and over-leaping geographical lines,” 彼は言った. “When the poison of anarchy is once in the air, like the pestilence that walketh in the darkness, the winds of heaven will take it up and favor its diffusion.”
When the winds of heaven are aided in their diffusion by the outgoing president, we are in a uniquely dangerous and unprecedented moment. We must confront it head-on.