Black is...
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Link to YouTube video
For over a century, the central goals of Canada’s Aboriginal policy were to eliminate Aboriginal governments; ignore Aboriginal rights; terminate the Treaties; and, through a process of assimilation, cause Aboriginal peoples to cease to exist as distinct legal, social, cultural, religious, and racial entities in Canada. The establishment and operation of residential schools were a central element of this policy, which can best be described as “cultural genocide.”
Physical genocide is the mass killing of the members of a targeted group, and biological genocide is the destruction of the group’s reproductive capacity. Cultural genocide is the destruction of those structures and practices that allow the group to continue as a group. States that engage in cultural genocide set out to destroy the political and social institutions of the targeted group. Land is seized, and populations are forcibly transferred and their movement is restricted. Languages are banned. Spiritual leaders are persecuted, spiritual practices are forbidden, and objects of spiritual value are confiscated and destroyed. And, most significantly to the issue at hand, families are disrupted to prevent the transmission of cultural values and identity from one generation to the next.
In its dealing with Aboriginal people, Canada did all these things.
(emphasis added)
i just want to say
You welcomed me in
to your prayer time
let me sit
were very kind
an hour of that
was all I could take
I shot nine of you
in little time
Forgive me
I shouldn't have pretended
that prayer
mattered to me
All these news reports on racial injustice (and the absurd reactions) are not just disheartening, they can be traumatizing. This is a lot.
— Austin Channing (@austinchanning) March 11, 2015
— Zakiya Naema Jackson (@ZakiyaNaemaJack) April 30, 2015
I'm just at point where I don't want to further traumatize myself by watching them, so I don't. https://t.co/6lBa72ALAJ
— Question Everything (@SankofaBrown) May 14, 2015
Cone’s statement that “God is black” has always been grounded in Jesus’ Jewishness and the biblical narrative which presents God as being in solidarity with the oppressed. As he has clarified on numerous occasions, it is a symbolic statement and not a statement of biology or literal skin color. At the same time Christianity has said “God is white”—in deeds if not in exact words—for the past 500 years. That some hear God’s blackness as a zero-sum statement is a mistake.
In an interview this past January, Cone told HuffPo’s Paul Rauschenbush:
“God is red. God is brown. God is yellow. God is gay…I don’t use blackness as a way to exclude anyone.”
"Why James H. Cone's Liberation Theology Matters More Than Ever"by Daniel José Camacho, including a quote by James Cone.
This is why we must present a Queer, Female, Christ of color.
— Theology of Ferguson (@FaithInFerguson) May 11, 2015