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God's Politics

Tulia and Jena: America in Miniature

by Alan Bean 02-17-2009

I moved to Tulia, Texas, in the summer of 1998, a year before a massive drug bust decimated the black side of town.  My wife Nancy’s parents, Charles and Patricia Kiker, had just retired to Tulia when the local newspaper rejoiced to see the “city streets cleared of garbage.”

Friends of Justice, a faith-based organization shaped by Micah’s injunction to do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly came to life on New Year’s Eve, a few days after Joe Moore was sentenced to 90 years by a Tulia jury.

If you happened to see the PBS documentary “Tulia, Texas”, you will remember an old guy in the black baseball cap—that’s Charles Kiker, a retired Baptist minister who grew up on a farm outside of Tulia.

An unwieldy assemblage of preachers, teachers, farmers, prison guards, and meat packers, we held weekly worship services featuring prayers for justice, the singing of old spirituals and gospel hymns, the reading of letters from prison, and extemporary sermons rooted in the biblical call to justice.

This story is deeply personal for Nancy and me.  Friends of Justice worshipped in our living room, and before the fight was over three “drug war orphans” had slept under our roof.

In Jena, Louisiana, shortly before we moved our headquarters from Tulia to Arlington, Texas, we helped organize biweekly meetings in a modest black Baptist church with prayers, preaching, and music.

It is commonly assumed that reporters and pro bono attorneys flock to places like Tulia and Jena because the injustice is too grave to be ignored.  Friends of Justice rose to the defense of the defendants in Tulia because no one else would.

There was a vague awareness in progressive circles that something bad was going down in Jena, Louisiana, but the media didn’t know what to do with Jena until Friends of Justice connected the narrative dots.  High profile legal firms weren’t willing to invest their precious resources until the Chicago Tribune and CNN transformed Jena into a cause celebre.

We didn’t want Jena to succeed Tulia as America’s most racist community, but it happened anyway.  Is it possible to draw attention to small town injustice without polarizing a community along racial lines?

Probably not.

Tulia’s famous drug sting was entirely legal.  Lawyers didn’t stand a chance unless they were able to paint undercover agent Tom Coleman as a flaming racist.  This sparked a logical chain reaction.  If Tom Coleman was an obvious racist, the sheriff, the prosecutor, eight juries, and supportive white residents must be racists too.

Fortunately for the Tulia defendants, Tom Coleman gave lawyers plenty of ammunition.

Everything changed in Jena when the Reverend Al Sharpton got involved.  An experienced controversialist, Sharpton knew how to frame a story.  The local district attorney, the New York preacher-activist argued, had one kind of justice for white kids and another kind for black kids; ergo, the prosecution of the Jena Six was inherently racist.

When black and white resentments collide, productive dialogue becomes impossible.

White residents see their beloved community smeared by the big city media and start insisting that race has no relevance to the story.  Shocked by these denials, black residents assure reporters that racism is a huge problem in their community.  Before long, “town divided” stories are sprouting like the flowers of May in the nation’s flagship newspapers.

Little towns like Tulia and Jena are America in miniature.  The election of Barack Obama shows how far we have come; Tulia and Jena tell us how far we still have to go.

By 1970, the old Jim Crow regime was history and the school systems of both Tulia and Jena were fully integrated.  But how much had really changed?

While black and white children attended the same schools in the early 1970s, the Klu Klux Klan was still showing up at Jena political rallies in full regalia.  How much had really changed?

In 1991, the vast majority of Jena’s white residents cast their ballots for a white supremacist named David Duke.  How much had really changed?

In 2007, two nooses swung from a tree in the courtyard of Jena High School.  The school superintendent dismissed the incident as a childish prank, and when black students protested, the local district attorney threatened to end their lives with a stroke of his pen.  How much had really changed?

Much has changed; how much is hard to say.  For at least two generations it had been considered impolite to discuss America’s racial history in polite company.  White teachers moved from segregated to integrated schools without interpreting the momentous shift for their students.  Few preachers were foolish enough to address the thorny issue of race from the pulpit.  There was no safe place where black and white Jena residents could unpack their overstuffed historical baggage.  The subject has been virtually taboo.    We talk about race when we’re too angry to keep quiet — but that just makes things worse.  In this regard, Tulia and Jena are egregious cases of normal.     How and where can racial injustice and the need for racial reconciliation be broached in public without creating the social fractures we witnessed in Tulia and Jena?  Where can America’s long-deferred discussion begin?   The election of Barack Obama has opened an exciting and unpredictable window of opportunity, but what’s the next step?

A new kind of conversation calls for a new kind of institution.  Since our problem is fundamentally spiritual, we need a new kind of church.  I have a vision of a multiracial congregation organized around a mission of racial reconciliation and racial justice, a place where black and white Christians can talk things through in safety.

Planted with great care and devotion, this seed just might take root even in the harsh native soil of America.  Such a church might one day be able to survive on its own, standing as a model and a rock of hope for conventional congregations.  The remedies available in the current religious market place don’t appear to be working.  The gospel of Jesus Christ can heal the wounds ripped open by America’s tragic racial history, but only if we are prepared to make a fresh beginning.

Alan Bean is the Executive Director of Friends of Justice.

Categories: Diversity, Race
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  • That assumes one thing: That welfare caused the problem. However, that's a false assumption, because in many cases families fell apart a couple of generations ago because Dad couldn't find good work that kept the family out of poverty. Keep in mind also that these things actually predated welfare.

    See, my church, which is located in an "inner-city" neighborhood, deals with this on a regular basis. Before I came there our deacons had put themselves through an exercise to see how it felt to try to raise a family on less than $16,000 a year (and also consider that costs are higher in cities than in rural or suburban communities). It turns out that most people who want to blame "welfare" for the problems of the ghetto have no clue as to what they're talking about.
  • ando
    Quoting Disqus <>:
    And welfare didn't have anything to do with taking away the dignity of
    one's ability to work? At one time, welfare meant a stepping stone
    for those in a bad way, or incapable of work. In the 1960s, along
    with public housing, welfare began a slide where it paid more to not
    work.

    No doubt that it's not the children's fault. Neither is it 100
    percent the fault of racism. Some believe that it's part of a culture
    of victimhood, regardless of race or class.
  • One reason many black families were fractured to begin with is that, often due in part to racism, fathers didn't have the authority to lead the household in a proper manner and their wives thus threw them out. And this began a couple of generations ago, leading to the situation you see today, with boys and men often being considered useless. A couple of generations of that and it's no wonder why things are like that.
  • ando
    That's very comforting to know. Especially since we live in a
    so-called progressive city. Can't always blame the conservatives, can
    you?



    Quoting Disqus <>:
  • I would imagine that had those children been white you would have had the same problems. I've seen that myself. My fuess is that most of those children are too busy trying to survive that such things matter so little because they're justr trying to survivie emotionally -- and I don't just mean the kids, either. One thing I can tell you: Fractured families are so because of some unhealthy dynamics. That won't just change with a "father" in the home.
  • ando
    I simply want to know why all nine of the African Americans I've had
    in the classroom this year come from single parent families. And why
    the Ethiopians I met in the Chicago-area would walk on the other side
    of the street from African Americans for fear of harrassment, or
    possibly worse. Or why a bus driver has to pull over and read the
    riot act to kids on the back of the bus for being obnoxious and
    swearing up a storm.

    I don't want my Ethiopian daughter to be brought up in that type of
    environment. I want her to have the positive role models. And,
    fortunately, there are plenty of Ethiopians in the area and country to
    do so. Why is it that they seem to thrive so in this country...

    So, you can call it shutting down. I don't care. I've got my job,
    you've got yours. I will rejoice with my successes in the classroom,
    and with Jesus mourn for those who are broken. I am glad for African
    American churches who are doing their best to redeem what has been
    lost in our culture.

    Perhaps we can agree on at least one thing: that our permissive and
    materialistic culture has led to the destruction of large numbers of
    people and families.



    withQuoting Disqus <>:
  • ando
    Glad to hear that. Still am wondering why all nine of the African
    American children that I've had in class this year live in
    single-parent homes. It shows in the classroom, too. Funny, when we
    showed the Ruby Bridges video and the Obama inaugration, they were the
    least likely of the students in the classroom to be engaged with what
    was going on. My colleague and I wonder if it's because both events
    portrayed intact families, something that liberals hate to hear about.
    And I don't give a whiff about conservatives and Palin. BTW: I was
    also "kicked off" a conservative blog about 1 1/2 years ago. Maybe it
    was the same one....


    Quoting Disqus <>:
  • You should know that almost all African-Americans agree with Bill Cosby and Juan Williams when it comes to "personal responsibility" for their own lives. The trouble is that the political right in this country doesn't itself believe in responsibilty where it's own interests are concerned -- witness the whining over the "media savagery" of Sarah Palin, which I heard as recently as last month at a fellowship dinner. So perhaps conservatives aren't the folks best qualified to make those kind of remarks about people they simply don't like. "Personal responsibility" thus depends on the context.
  • chask
    I rejoice to hear that there are two such churches. And I am sure there are more. I just returned from the funeral of Adolphus Barrow, a young Tulia man who died in prison a few days ago. Dolphus, as he was known, was part of a large (17 children) Black Tulia family. He had some psychological difficulties that made it next to impossible for him to function in society at large, so off to prison he went. I don't know the cause of his death, but I do know that disease is rampant in the prison system. His older brother, Sammy, who knew something about life behind bars, said, "Dolphus just can't make it in prison." My face was one of a half dozen or so white faces in the large congregation. I was wishing that this particular church could be a place where Black and White and Gay and Straight Christians could talk things through in safety. But alas, it is not so in Tulia, Texas.
  • letjusticerolldown
    Ando--I am not trying to win an argument. I simply request there may be something more important on your plate. And I cannot make that judgement either. I am just sharing a bit of my journey and asking your consideration. If there is nothing there for you. That is fine.

    It feels like you've shut down emotionally in regards to matters around race. Sometimes shutting down is a very reasonable response.

    In my early 20's I felt like I was being yelled at from all sides. Black people were mad I was white. Women were angry I was a man. Liberals were mad I was conservative. And Minnesotans rejected by Iowa roots.

    I had never known that it was little old white boy me who had made the world into such an awful place. I thought maybe I should be inducted into the Hall of Fame for Evildoers.

    I guess time mellows. I realize most individuals, and society in general, have a great amount of deep wounds/scars and rough edeges. My goal in such an environment is not to win arguments--or fix everybody--but ask God's grace to change me as He desires--and to allow me to be a transforming presenece.
  • ando
    I'm starting to get it now. We will blame all problems on racism.
    You never did answer my question, so I guess it's impertinent to you.
    But not for me. I think Bill Cosby and Juan Williams have every bit
    the right to say what they are, whether or not the rest of the
    community wants to hear it.

    Perhaps you need to live in my city for awhile, PC-Capital of the
    Midwest. All points of view are allowed, except if you're a certain
    brand of Christian. It's the kind of city where only whites can be
    racists.

    Quoting Disqus <>:
  • WaveTossed
    "'I have a vision of a multiracial congregation organized around a mission of racial reconciliation and racial justice, a place where black and white Christians can talk things through in safety.'

    "Alan -- I attend such a church."

    So do I. Not only is my church a place where Black and White Christians can talk things through in safety: it's also a safe place for Gay Christians to worship without being attacked or condemned.
  • letjusticerolldown
    It sounds like a multiple choice question, but I'm not sure what the other choices are. We are all responsible for that which has been entrusted to us -- particularly our own lives. The status of race relations and racial justice in this nation belongs to..........the nation.

    If those who held responsibility for government and the structures of society had exercised just authority, then there would not have been need to wage a 400 year campaign for justice. The Black community, by in large, carried the load of working towards a just nation. This has not been a denial of self-responsibility but a call to account.

    I figure if I am fully responsible for the success of my relationships and of stewarding my own life then other things will fall into place. In my thinking, too many white persons act confused, lost and indignant when we face our responsibility to exercise justice.
  • ando
    "I want my compassion and love to always far exceed my judgements. I want my life to bear witness to a Gospel able to break all barriers and heal all wounds."

    I would like to say that I do it too, although way too imperfectly. I'll revisit a question: Do you agree with Bill Cosby and Juan Williams -- author of Enough! - who say that African Americans need to take more responsibility over their own lives. Barack Obama and MIchelle Obama, and a host of others seemed to have done that. Is there a place outside of the US where that could have happened?
  • letjusticerolldown
    What is your 'alloted time?'

    I think I like that idea. It sounds like a good internet discipline.

    I am very tolerant of persons who are all over the map on issues around race relations and race-related issues in our nation. In some ways it is parallel to my attitude about persons relationship with the Lord Jesus. I cannot conceive of an unfathomably holy God being so ridiculously patient and gracious with me. It seems He really enjoys us being on the journey and is fully confident of the good work He is doing in us and through us. I guess it mirrors my enjoyment of my girls' growth.

    My eight year old is reading through the New Testament for the first time. She has started on the Epistles. Yesterday morning she shared, "Daddy, all of these books start with, 'Hi. I'm Paul. I'm writing this book.'"

    It just brought a big smile to my face. It's not because she came up with profound Biblical insight. But just the simple, honest, innocent, seeking heart -- open to God. What a precious gift.

    My responses to my journey, to my relationships, to the issues that confront me, to the issues of my life, to the trials of the journey, become so very jaded. My heart wearies. My emotions attract grudges. My cynicism flourishes like mold.

    I wake up in the morning and catch the next incoming round of racial mortar fire. Innocence is hard. God, where is the grace for the journey??

    That's likely a question most Black persons have been asking for a few centuries.

    The journey of bumping up against all kind of race issues has been enormously enriching to my journey. My prayer is often, "God, if no one else is changed--please start with me." I just want to stay on the journey--wise as a serpent and innocent as a dove. I want my compassion and love to always far exceed my judgements. I want my life to bear witness to a Gospel able to break all barriers and heal all wounds.

    blessings
  • ando
    No, I'm not that big. Try 10 1/2.

    Congratulations on your children. And the fact that you've worked/lived/worshipped in the African American Community for so long. Do you subscribe to Bill Cosby and Juan Williams' point of view: that racism is here and that all groups need to take more responsibility over their own lives?

    My class of 5th graders is overwhelmingly minority, about 1/2 Latino and 1/4 African American. I rejoice with those who overcome obstacles to go on and get good educations. I mourn for those who don't. Key ingredient? Parental involvement. Whether or not it's a single mother, grandparents, or an intact family (which is politically incorrect to say in this age). I can only go so far in my teaching. I've got kids with ADHD, no stability at home, and just downright rudeness. So am I racist to say that?

    BTW: I stay at my church because there are several African Americans- one is a grandmother raising her two grandsons, a single mother of two, and a wonderful, 50-something gentleman who leads the adult Sunday school which keeps me going to said church.

    So, ljrd, I don't have your wealth of experience with African American community, but I have lived in Central America and travelled to Ethiopia. I'm old enough to know that nothing is handed to most of us on a silver platter. My ancestors were immigrant farmers from Norway and Germany. Dirt poor, they were

    I've used up my "alloted" time
  • letjusticerolldown
    my words were intended as a 'call' and not to convey I know your shoes

    i don't even know what size you wear :)

    is there something I called you to you find inappropriate????

    i'm a white guy who has been through a two collleges of education, have three black children, and lived/worked/worshiped in African American community for 33 years--which i don't intend to convey any particular meaning other than to say I might have an idea of your shoe size. I'd say size 12
  • ando
    letjusticerolldown,
    With all due respect in return, you have not walked a mile in my shoes, so please don't assume that you have. thank you.
  • chask
    Charles Kiker from Tulia speaking up.
    I was a recently retired American Baptist minister when the drug bust in Tulia came down. I retired from an inner city type of church where I had sought to have the church minister to the community as it was rather than to the community as it had been. That effort involved us extensively in racial relations.

    My wife and I had moved back to our home town expecting a quiet retirement. I did not think then, nor do I think now, that Tulia was an exceptionally racist town. Tulia was caught up in a confluence of events and personalities that led to the Tulia sting. Tulians were convinced that the drug situation was much worse than it actually was. They believed in their local sheriff. The sheriff and the DA believed in the undercover agent. When, in the middle of the operation, it became clear (or should have been clear) that the agent was unreliable, the sting should have been called off. But the sheriff chose to "stand by his man." The local citizenry chose to ignore facts as the basic probelms with the sting became evident. Local citizenry by and large did not attend the trials, nor did they attend the evidentiary hearings, nor the perjury trial for the undercover agent. They remained willfully ignorant. And still remain that way to this day.

    The racism in Tulia (with some exceptions) is not an overt racism, but a systemic one. That is true, I am convinced, across the country. I have no first hand experience with Jena. But I do have a great deal of confidence in the assessments of my son-in-law Alan Bean. And I would concur with him that Tulia and Jena are exceptional only in the sense that events in those two places have converged in such a way as to bring to light the underlying racism (apparently somewhat more overt in Jena than in Tulia).

    Confronting racism does not exacerbate it. Ignoring it does. I would like to expand on Alan's vision to make that "multiracial congregation" plural. Nurmerous congragations as places where black Christians and white Christians can talk things through in safety.
  • letjusticerolldown
    ando,

    with due respect

    if dialogue involves listening

    if there has been egregious injustice in the nation

    there is a gift to be given in one's listening

    there is no perfect answer not immediate solution

    the wounds are horrific

    and actions and words sometimes rough

    it is a privilege to have light skin and to bring that to bear in a way which ministers the shalom of God

    you may be tired of listening--tired of being defined

    others have had that experience

    but look at the gift of your life

    at what you have to offer

    and seek to always give it in peace


    let justice roll down like a river
    and righteiousness like a quiet stream.
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