Brian Woodson, pastor of Bay Area Christian Connection,
introduced the event. “We are African-American clergy who, in order to
form a more perfect union in which all may pursue life, liberty and
happiness, come together to speak, organize, march and move on behalf
of comprehensive, just immigration reform,” he said.
Clergy
leaders joining the event included Rev. J. Alfred Smith Jr. of Allen
Temple Baptist Church, Fr. Jay Matthews of St. Benedict Catholic
Church, Rev. Phil Lawson of the East Bay Housing Organizations, Fr.
Greg Chisolm of St. Patrick Catholic Church and Rev. Clarence Johnson
of Mills Grove Christian Church.
Smith,
Allen Temple Baptist Church’s senior pastor, took inspiration from both
the Bible and the Declaration of Independence. “We stand here to send
forth a message that we are all God’s children,” he said. “Our sacred
scriptures let us know that we have a very serious obligation to the
most vulnerable in our society. We can’t sit idly on the sidelines
while there are forces that try to move into our own communities and
tell our people that we are not part of the same human family … All of
us are interconnected in this great web of mutuality.”
Chisolm
shared a story from his congregation that dramatically illustrated
Smith’s point that “when one hurts, we all hurt in this society.” In
2008, Chisolm baptized the son of a Latina woman and her
African-American boyfriend. The joyous occasion was punctuated by
mourning; the baby’s grandparents were being deported the next week.
Among
his parishioners, “there was instant identification with what it was to
be targeted for who you are … with a family that did not have the
skills to fight against the law and power of the state. Every single
family in my congregation, both black and Latino, could tell the story
of how precariously the safety of a family depends on who you are,” he
said.
“We understand that immigration is an
issue that some will use to divide one worker against another worker,
but we are here to stand together as working people,” Woodson remarked.
“We understand there are forces which seek to reduce human beings to
commodities, but we will not be bought and sold.”
Lawson
added, “We must insist that immigrants have a pathway to citizenship —
full citizenship, not second-class or third-class — because we know
from our own journey that our ancestors were less than citizens when
they were violently brought here as immigrants.”
The
Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice, the Black Alliance for a Just
Immigration and the East Bay Housing Organizations co-sponsored the
event.
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