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A person holds an anti-racism poster Aug. 12 in Washington. Msgr. Raymond G. East, pastor at St. Teresa of Avila Catholic Church in Washington, says racism is a worldwide phenomena and problem, and a peculiar institution in the United States.
A person holds an anti-racism poster Aug. 12 in Washington. Msgr. Raymond G. East, pastor at St. Teresa of Avila Catholic Church in Washington, says racism is a worldwide phenomena and problem, and a peculiar institution in the United States.
Photo Credit: Tyler Orsburn

Bishops in proposed pastoral letter: ‘Ugly cancer of racism’ infects U.S.

WASHINGTON — “Despite many promising strides made in our country, the ugly cancer of racism still infects our nation,” the U.S. bishops state in a proposed pastoral letter on racism.

The proposed statement, “Open Wide Our Hearts: The Enduring Call to Love — A Pastoral Letter Against Racism,” is expected to be considered for approval during the bishops’ Nov. 12-14 fall general assembly in Baltimore. However, the agenda for the meeting has not been finalized.

“Racist acts are sinful because they violate justice. They reveal a failure to acknowledge the human dignity of the persons offended, to recognize them as the neighbors Christ calls us to love,” the proposed pastoral letter states.

“Every racist act — every such comment, every joke, every disparaging look as a reaction to the color of skin, ethnicity or place of origin — is a failure to acknowledge another person as a brother or sister, created in the image of God,” it adds.

The proposed pastoral talks about institutional racism as well as individual acts, “when practices or traditions are upheld that treat certain groups of people unjustly. … We tolerate prisons where the number inmates of color, notably those who are brown and black, is grossly disproportionate.”

It also calls the water crisis in Flint, Mich., an example of systemic racism, due to “policy decisions that negatively impacted the inhabitants, the majority of whom were African-Americans.”

It added, “Racism still profoundly affects our culture, and it has no place in the Christian heart. This evil causes great harm to its victims, and it corrupts the souls of those who harbor racist or prejudicial thoughts.”

The document examines the history of racism in the United States. While acknowledging many other groups in the United States in having endured racism and discrimination in the past, it focuses on three groups and the long history of racism against them: African-Americans, Hispanics and Native Americans.

“For a nation to be just, it must be a society that recognizes and respects the legitimate rights of individuals and peoples,” the proposed pastoral says.

“God demands more from us. We can’t, therefore, look upon the progress against racism in recent decades and conclude that our current situation meets the standard of justice.”

The proposed pastoral did not spare the U.S. Church, either. “Acts of racism have been committed by leaders and members of the Catholic Church — by bishops, clergy, religious and laity — and her institutions,” it states.

It also offers approaches to combat racism.

“To work at ending racism, we need to engage the world and encounter others — to see, maybe for the first time, those who are on the peripheries of our own limited view. Knowing that the Lord has taken the initiative by loving us first, we can fully go forward, reaching out to others,” it states.

Within the Church, “we call on our religious education programs, Catholic schools and Catholic publishing companies to develop curricula relating to racism and reconciliation,” the proposed pastoral states.

It adds, “We also charge our seminaries, deacon formation programs, houses of formation and all our educational institutions to break any silence around the issue of racism, to find new and creative ways to raise awareness, analyze curricula and to teach the virtues of fraternal charity.”

“As bishops, we unequivocally state that racism is a life issue. Accordingly, we will not cease to forcefully speak against and work toward ending racism,” states the proposed pastoral.

Bishop Sheldon J. Fabre of Houma-Thibodaux, La., chairman of the bishop’s Ad Hoc Committee Against Racism, had shepherded final stages of work on the document since May when he stepped in for Bishop George V. Murry of Youngstown, Ohio, who resigned as chair to undergo treatment for acute leukemia.

“Open Wide Our Hearts: The Enduring Call to Love,” if approved, will mark the third time the nation’s bishops have spoken as a group on race issues in the United States, but the first time in nearly 40 years, when they approved “Brothers and Sisters to Us: U.S. Bishops’ Pastoral Letter on Racism in Our Day.” In 1968, the bishops approved a statement, “The National Race Crisis.”

In 1984, the nation’s African-American bishops dealt with racism in their own pastoral letter, “What We Have Seen and Heard, A Pastoral Letter on Evangelization.”


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