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By Aisha S. Taylor
Many Catholic Church reform organizations struggle with the fact that
our membership and leadership have been predominantly white for most of
our histories. As a member of Call to Action’s (CTA) Anti-Racism Team
and a staff member of the Women's Ordination Conference (WOC), I have
participated in many dialogues about racism at team trainings and Board
meetings. I am proud to play a role in the initiatives of both CTA and
WOC to develop and implement strategies to dismantle racism in each
organization and the entire church reform movement.
As I prepared for the CTA anti-racism trainings in September 2005, I
began to think about how I could apply these insights and skills to my
work for women’s ordination. From experiences and trainings in college
and work settings, I have learned that dismantling racism requires a
difficult process of self-examination. As one member of the Anti-Racism
Team said of CTA’s organizational leadership, “We put ourselves on a
pedestal, thinking we were ‘enlightened.’ As we examined ourselves, we
saw how we are caught in the web of racism, and instead of changing it,
we are unintentionally replicating it.” Another stated, “We cannot
change anything until we discover and rid ourselves of the racism
within us. If we don’t, we will continue to perpetuate (racism) in our
structures and institutions.”
As we work to
dismantle systems of oppression in the Church, we must simultaneously
address the sexism, racism, heterosexism, ageism, colonialism, and
imperialism within ourselves and our organizations in order to create a
community that is inclusive, welcoming, and spiritually fulfilling to
all people. Our liberation, equality, and freedom are inextricably
linked with that of all God’s creation.
Through
trainings and conversations with WOC leaders, especially Carmen Lane, it became clear that anti-racism work is
work for women’s ordination. Dismantling racism is directly connected
to dismantling sexism, and it must not be relegated to one aspect of
our efforts. It needs to permeate every program, every ministry and
every part of our vision. Until we examine and eliminate the racism in
us—individually, collectively, and institutionally—we cannot achieve
our vision of creating a renewed priesthood. In other words, we cannot
simply “add women and stir.”
We need to “lean
into the discomfort” of doing anti-racism work. To be effective in this
process, we need each other, sisters and brothers of all races and
ethnicities, to gain a more comprehensive understanding of the
challenges that lie before us. Each of us presents a different face of
God that, when joined together, creates a healthy, united body of
Christ. We need to create a Church that fully employs all our gifts,
including those of women of color, married women, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender women and all women who are marginalized.
My
hope for the Church renewal movement is that we confront the issue of
racism in the Church and in our organizations. It is never easy to
scrutinize ourselves and see how we perpetuate racism. My hope for the
Women’s Ordination Conference is that we implement the valuable and
practical tools acquired through the anti-racism trainings, so we
reflect all of the faces of God as we move toward a continually
renewing priesthood, one that is free of sexism, racism and all
oppression and domination.
Aisha S. Taylor,
a NETWORK Board member, is the Executive Director of Women's Ordination
Conference (WOC) based in Washington, D.C. WOC is the world’s oldest
and largest national organization working solely for women to be
priests, deacons and bishops in a renewed Catholic Church. An adapted
version of this article was printed in the July/August 2006 issue of NETWORK Connection.
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