This month’s celebration of Rev. Martin L. King (1929-1968) is of course
about more than King. The civil rights era is about more than the Montgomery
boycott that began in December 1955. It certainly includes Rosa Parks (1913-2005),
who courageously refused to give up her seat on a bus. And, Parks’ disobedience
was not a momentary reaction, but was the outcome of much preparation.
In recent times several scholars have drawn attention to
“the longer civil rights movement.” Karen Johnson of Wheaton College is one of
those scholars. Her book, One in Christ:
Chicago Catholics and the Quest for Interracial Justice (Oxford University
Press, 2018), details significant civil rights activity as early as 1930—not in
the South but in Chicago. Her examples, perhaps surprisingly, are Catholic
organizations.
Johnson’s thorough account in eight more-or-less
chronological chapters plus 49 pages of valuable footnotes is “primarily a
story about laypeople” who in addition to highlighting aspects of Catholic doctrine
also challenged the notion that priests are above laypeople, that urban
Catholicism is synonymous with intra-parish ministries and that Catholics
acting as Catholics should keep their efforts separate from Protestants and
Jews.
Arthur Falls (1901-2000), a pioneering black physician
involved with Federated Colored Catholics and then with Catholic Worker
movement, is prominent in the first four chapters and appears throughout the
book. The fifth and sixth chapters feature Friendship House with Catherine de
Hueck Doherty (1896-1985), Ellen Tarry (1906-2008) and Ann Harrigan Makletzoff
(1910-1984); the seventh and eighth feature the Catholic Interracial Council
with John McDermott (1926-1996) among others. Msgr. Dan Cantwell (1915-1996)
and Ed Marciniak (1917-2004) appear in nearly all the chapters.
These Chicago Catholics were successful to a degree.
They “helped enlarge America’s moral imagination,” Johnson explains. They
showed that racial justice is more than a political matter. Due to these
Chicago activists and also to many religious leaders in the South and around
the nation, civil rights became a significant aspect of faith, both for blacks
and for whites. Further, the Chicago Catholics—years before Vatican II
(1962-1965)—taught others that individual salvation and personal transformation
are not enough. They communicated, in words and more so by way of example, that
full-time Christians must seek “the common good by reforming the institutions
shaping the public sphere.”
A contagious esprit surrounded these dedicated
Catholics. They nourished one another in several institutional spaces, Johnson
emphasizes. They all knew that liturgical grace was essential to their efforts.
They believed that the liturgy of the word continued out the church door as
each of them did their part in the Mystical Body of Christ to live a liturgy of
the world.
Johnson includes enough detail to dispel any suggestion
of hyper-romanticism about these civil rights pioneers. These people were
street savvy. They knew how to agitate and at the right moment what to
compromise. They avoided getting personally bent out of shape as they
necessarily engaged in sharp disagreements with one another over strategy: How
to include Chicago’s bishop—if at all. Whether or not to include anti-poverty
measures in efforts against racism. Whether or not to maneuver inside the
Democratic Party, which in Chicago was the Daley Machine. Are discussion groups
a waste of time? Can Catholics be militant?
Remarkably, most of these Catholic civil rights leaders
remained Catholic their entire lives. It is remarkable because, as Johnson
details in parts of two chapters, more than one bishop, some influential
pastors and the Catholic system itself reinforced racial distinctions. For
example, Falls once told me that the segregation that hurt him the most was on
Saturday afternoons when he went to confession. Blacks had to stand in one line
and wait until each person in the white line had received absolution.
Johnson writes a comprehensible story. This is an
achievement because all her subjects died before she began. She thus scoured
multiple libraries for newspapers, magazine articles, minutes of meetings and
more. Johnson, by the way, is not Catholic. Yet the book flawlessly covers
Chancery politics and points of theology.
A powerful 2% of young Catholics are once again interested
in the social question--in race relations, in living wage campaigns, in the
dignity of all life, in socially responsible business, in green technology, in
mental health delivery, in criminal justice reform and immigration topics. One In Christ is an inspiring account of
visionary Catholics who navigated the push-and-pull of public life, and had
some fun along the way. As we rightly celebrate King Day, we can continue to
learn from all the efforts in our country toward "liberty and justice for
all.”
Droel of Chicago is a board member of National Center for the Laity (PO
Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629).
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