“If emancipation is only
a byproduct of saving the Union, the hate of the colored race will still
continue, and the poison of that wickedness will destroy us as a nation.”
-Quaker abolitionist
Abby Kelly Foster, 1862
“It becomes increasingly
clear that the existing social-economic-political-legal-military system—the
framework within which the white establishment operates—simply cannot be
patched up in such a way as to end exploitation and degradation. We must be prepared to discover how much we
ourselves, sharing in and profiting from the operating of the system, are
contributing to the power which maintains the very practices we are fighting
against.”
-Friends National Conference on Race Relations,
Black Mountain, North Carolina, 1967
-Friends National Conference on Race Relations,
Black Mountain, North Carolina, 1967
I saw how the static,
frozen image of guilty white oppressor versus angry victim of color tends to
keep everyone stuck playing the same old tune….
We do not have to stay stuck and hopeless….”
-Quaker Melanie Sax, 2002
We do not have to stay stuck and hopeless….”
-Quaker Melanie Sax, 2002
Let’s
resume our virtual Diversity Book Club.
In previous and upcoming posts, I summarize books and provide classroom
applications and resources for teachers interested in building welcoming and
inclusive environments in their classrooms and schools. We continue with Fit for Freedom, Not for Friendship: Quakers, African Americans, and
the Myth of Racial Justice, by Donna McDaniel and Vanessa Julye (Quaker
Press of Friends General Conference, Philadelphia, 2009).
In this meticulously researched book, the authors provide a balanced analysis to counter the myth that Quakers consistently championed abolition and rights for African Americans throughout American history. While many Quakers did effectively and committedly undertake this work—especially after 1760, there are also many instances of Quakers participating actively in the slave trade and ownership of enslaved people.
The
book begins with the Colonial era and the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Subsequent chapters concern post-Civil-War
eras, formation of Quaker schools, integration of Quaker meetings, and the lack
of real interaction between European and African Americans in the Quaker communities
in which they worship presently.
The
authors help us see that even when there is authentic work for racial equality (and
there is much evidence of such work in Quaker history), there also must be
authentic work for closeness and sincere relationships among people of diverse
backgrounds to overcome an “us and them” mentality depicted in the title.
Epilogue First
For
history teachers, students of history, and members of the Society of Friends (Quakers),
the book (and this detailed blog post) will be particularly interesting. However, I want to offer casual readers the
payoff at the outset. In her epilogue,
African American co-author Vanessa Julye gives these recommendations to
European American Quakers.
Readers,
let’s start with these key points and work our way together to better relations
among all people:
a.
“Stop
taking whiteness for granted. Make
whiteness visible…. Acknowledge that whiteness does not symbolize normality and
that it is associated with unearned privilege….
b.
“Acknowledge
and dispel stereotypes about African Americans…. Let go of those fears and
negative feelings, and replace stereotypes with realistic information.
c.
“Participate
in workshops, discussions, conferences and other activities that promote racial
justice.
d.
“Widen
your circle of friends. Get to know people of African descent….
e.
“Talk
about racism, but know that addressing the issue is highly emotional and
difficult. Listen to each other….
f.
“Promote
racially inclusive collaboration within your community… Take action in
addressing racial reconciliation at all levels of society and government….”
(Read her full set of recommendations on pages 396-397.)
Book Summary
Many readers will enjoy diving into the extensive detail of the book, as I did. Quaker meetings and history teachers will find much to discuss and research here, as well. Below, I offer a guided tour through the chapters.
Quakers and Slavery:
1600s through 1800s
· Initially, Quakers—and
other groups—employed indentured servants, poor immigrants from Europe, as
laborers. Eventually, Quakers and others
began enslaving Africans.
· Scholars agree on these
numbers: between 1600 and 1899, 10 or 11 million Africans were transported to
the Americas alive. This number does not
count those who died along the way.
· About 6% (600,000 to
650,000) were brought to what is now the United States.
· By 1810, the population
of people of African descent in the U.S. was about 120,000.
· At the same time William
Penn was establishing the colony of Pennsylvania, in 1680, it is believed a
Quaker named William Frampton was first to bring Africans to Philadelphia for
the purpose of enslavement.
· Most slave-trading
Quakers lived in Rhode Island, especially Newport, Providence, and Bristol.
· Newport traders
transported about 70% of enslaved Africans, and also had a large population of
wealthy Quaker families. Estimates state
that 50% of wealthy Newport residents were connected with the slave trade.
· Quaker families owned
West Indian plantations.
· Abraham Redwood, a
Quaker, enslaved more Africans or people of African decent (around 238) than
any other European American slave holder in New England in 1766.
· Estimates indicate that
half of all Pennsylvania enslaved people were “owned” by Quakers, and about
1000 enslaved persons resided in Philadelphia from 1767-1775.
· William Penn, champion
of religious freedom, enslaved Africans.
· 1755: in Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, and Connecticut, one enslaved person-to-four European American
persons resided and engaged in building the seacoast-city economies.
· In 1700s, in New York
City, 40% of households owned enslaved people.
· In the South, from 1790
to 1830, about 25% of European Americans enslaved Africans.
· Many poor European
American Southerners feared freedom for enslaved Africans, because they
believed the formerly enslaved would take their jobs and/or work for lower
wages.
· 1700, 12% of enslavers
were tobacco planters (Virginia, North Carolina, and Maryland), and rice and
indigo planters (South Carolina), with 30-60 enslaved people per
plantation.
Quakers’ Inaction,
Action, and Conflict about Slavery
· 1700s American Friends
took one of four positions: accepting
slavery, doing nothing, thinking enslaved people should be treated kindly and
educated in Christianity, and against enslavement as a non-Christian thing to
do.
· Geography played a part:
Western Shore, MD tobacco-planting Quakers actively purchased new enslaved
persons, while Eastern Shore, MD Quakers began freeing enslaved people, in
1685.
· “Even by the early
1700s, northern trading and commercial interests, including those of Quakers,
were more and more intertwined with the enslavement economy of the South” (p.
9). Think about rum and the Triangular Trade.
· Thus, the quandary
between Quaker principles of “loving thy neighbor” became complicated by the
economic concerns of many Quakers. Also,
meetings that were to run on consensus processes could not take action if it
divided the meeting.
· 1676 William Edmunson
writes that enslaving Africans is “unchristian.” He had seen slave plantations’ barbarity in
Barbados. He questioned why Native American enslavement had been banned, but
African enslavement continued.
· 1688 Germantown Friends
Meeting (Philadelphia) members wrote a formal letter to their meeting: “There
is a saying that we shall doe to all men like as we will be done
ourselves…. To bring men hither, or to
rob and sell them against their will, we stand against” (p. 16).
· Numerous other appeals
were put before meetings, but fear of disunity, fear of making judgments on the
livelihood of others, and seeming lack of authority of individual meetings led
to inaction or censure of petitioners.
· Friends such as Elihu
Coleman used the following arguments;
o
Enslavement
was violence, and Quakers were supposed to be nonviolent, enslavement was theft
and it also controverted the Golden Rule and the bible, and slaveholding led to
laziness in families of those who benefitted from the labor of others. Friends should free the enslaved and reimburse
them for their service.
· 1716, Nantucket, MA
meeting urged Friends to free enslaved people after one term as indentured
servants.
· “Radical” reformers did
not fear censure of their meetings and openly sowed discord. Examples are Ralph Sandiford and Benjamin Lay
(and others) who wrote that slavery is a notorious sin.” In the 1730s, Lay utilized confrontation:
standing in bare feet in the snow or kidnapping Quaker children, for example,
to demonstrate to Quakers the horrors of slavery.
· John Woolman used less
radical methods, but was considered effective in arguing through print for the
end of enslavement. He referred to enslaved people as “captives of
war.” Similarly, Anthony Benezet
published pamphlets that made anti-slavery arguments understandable to many
people. (See pages 24-30 for more.) In 1754, Woolman influenced Quaker
congregations in Philadelphia, North Carolina, Maryland, and Virginia, and
Benezet influenced British as well as American governing bodies. (Both Lay and Benezet asserted that persons
of African descent should live elsewhere from those of European descent,
however. See pages 56-60 for a
discussion of colonization.)
· Women traveled and
preached against enslavement as well, such as Rebecca Jones, Patience Brayton
(a former enslaver), and Sarah Harrison.
· Estimates from Pennsylvania
indicate Quakers “manumitted” (freed from enslavement) 3500 to 5000 from 1685 to
1827.
Highlights of Quaker Action:
Anti-slavery, Abolition
· Before and after the
American Revolutionary War, Quaker groups helped form anti-slavery societies,
formed free produce societies (for boycotts of slave-labor goods) and influenced
colonial and then state governments to adopt anti-importation and/or
anti-slavery measures. (Read more on
pages 45-50.)
· 1780s: Religious Society
of Friends (Quakers) becomes the first religious denomination to proclaim
itself free of enslaving Africans.
· British Parliament
passed the Abolition of Slavery Act in 1833, freeing all those enslaved in the
British Empire after a five-year apprenticeship.
· One-third of the delegates
to the organizing convention of the American Anti-Slavery Society, formed in
1833 by African and European Americans, were Quaker. While the organization did not treat its African
American members equally in terms of power and pay, it did call for immediate
abolition of slavery in its Declaration of Sentiments, alongside a commitment
to nonviolence.
· An estimated 60% of
members of anti-slavery organizations were women. Such Quaker women as Lucretia Mott were
active and spoke at the convention. The
Female Anti-Slavery Society of Philadelphia, formed by African and European
American women included such leaders as Sarah Mapps Douglass, an African
American woman who attended Quaker meetings.
o
In
1838, Pennsylvania Hall was burned by a mob in Philadelphia, angered by the
fact that people of African and European descent were congregating together and
that women were giving speeches. (Read
more o pages 77-79.)
· The Underground Railroad
was not “run” by Quakers, contrary to popular belief, although many Quakers did
participate and in larger percentages than may have been expected from their
numbers in American society. Frederick
Douglass wrote of Quaker assistance, the novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin referred to a Quaker couple as rescuers, and the
fact that the Railroad ran through Chester, Pennsylvania, inhabited by many
Quaker families contributed to the idea.
Levi Coffin of Cincinnati, and Thomas Garrett, of Wilmington, Delaware,
stand out.
o
Garrett
worked closely with African Americans Harriet Tubman and William Still. He claimed to have helped 2,322 escapees
between 1825 and 1863.
o
In
New Jersey, Isaac Hopper assisted 1000 African escapees in Philadelphia.
o
While
much of the Quaker community was ambivalent, men and women alike were actively
working on the Underground Railroad.
· Quakers were the only
denomination to offer compensation to newly freed persons.
· Quakers in North
Carolina and other regions supported newly freed African Americans who wanted
to resettle in free areas. Many Quaker
communities were deemed hospitable by newly arrived African Americans. (See pages 114-120 for more on this migration
period.)
The Civil War Dilemma
· Quakers generally
supported the aim of emancipating enslaved people but were torn on the use of
military force. Some Quaker men
enlisted, some were drafted, and some performed alternative service, protested
service, or paid fees to be used for nonviolent uses.
· After the war, many
Quaker congregations sent money and people to the South to work on relief activities
and educational efforts in African American communities of newly emancipated
people.
Great Migration to the
Present
Chapters
continue to the present day, including: the 1880s Great Migration to the North
of people of African descent, W. E. B. Du Bois and the Niagara Movement in 1905
(which led to the formation in 1909 of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People [NAACP]), and the 1911 founding of the National
Urban League. Quakers were involved in
these organizations formed to improve the safety, rights, and economic
conditions of African Americans. In
1917, the American Friends Service Committee was formed to work for national
and international peace, relief, and interracial equality. Its Nobel Peace Prize-winning work to promote
racial understanding is ongoing from the 1920s to the present.
While
we think of Quakers as being pro or even active in the Civil Rights struggle,
the authors document Quaker membership in branches of the Ku Klux Klan, even
among faculty and students at Quaker Earlham College. For the most part, however, Quaker were
actively fighting to stop lynching and promote the Civil Rights struggle. Quakers founded the Nobel Peace Prize-wining
Women’s International League of Peace and Freedom [WILPF] in 1946, and Friends
Committee on National Legislation [FCNL].
Known for their anti-war work, these organizations also fought for
anti-lynching legislation in the 1940s.
Classroom/School
Applications
1.
Students
can research policies and actions of other denominations in various Colonial
regions regarding enslavement of Africans in the 1600s-1800s and compare and
contrast with Quaker history.
2.
Research
the upstate NY land grants of non-Quaker Gerrit Smith in 1846-47. Smith gave away 120,000 acres to 3000 African
American New Yorkers in hopes of helping them start new lives on farms,
increase their wealth, and overcome the denial of voting rights established by
the New York State Assembly in 1821.
Legislation denied the vote to African Americans by setting what was
then an unreachable barrier: ownership of $250 worth of real property. Students can established his affiliation with
abolitionist John Brown. They can
research Frederick Douglass’s relationship with Brown and Smith. It would be interesting to compare Brown’s violent
uprising at Harper’s Ferry with the Quaker dilemma about non-violence as the
Civil War approached. Compare Smith’s land
grants with Quaker land grants during Reconstruction. (See pages 163-173.) Visit the website http://www.adkhistorycenter.org/edu/dot.html to learn more and
consider booking the touring exhibit Dreaming of Timbuctoo, on display at the
John brown Farm State Historic Site in Lake Placid, NY.
3.
Research
the ability of African Americans to join congregations of various denominations
and compare these histories to those of Quaker congregations in the US.
Visit
USHistory.org website: http://www.ushistory.org/tour/arch-street-friends.htm to learn about Arch Street
Friends or African American Richard Allen’s formation of Mother Bethel African
Methodist Episcopal [A.M.E.] Church, for example.
4.
Use
techniques with your classes described in the book as used by Quaker groups and
based on the work of psychologist Gordon Allport who indicated that encouraging
people to share their own cultures and common experiences would “strengthen our
solidarity with others” (p. 226). Note: Quote is taken from his forward to the
1963 book: The Art of Group Conversation:
A New Breakthrough in Social Communication, by DuBois and Li.
· Try employing the “Circles of Culture” Lesson:
How can we build caring classroom environments in which students feel safe to
tackle unsafe topics? To make our class environment a caring place for daring
conversations I use the “Circles of Culture” exercise explained in my
blog. Taking time to create a caring place
for daring conversations makes all the difference in the student (and teacher)
experience and forges our bonds as a community of readers, writers, and
upstanders, ready to build a welcoming and inclusive community in and out of
school…. This is relevant teaching and learning: today and every day. (Sample
questions: In which of your circles of culture do you find safety/refuge? Why?
In which of your circles of culture do you find discomfort or lack of
safety? Why?) Read more: http://thinkcareact.blogspot.com/2016/07/creating-caring-classroom-community_6.html
5.
Research
the economic history of slavery. The
slave trade benefitted many Americans.
How could European American “Christians” treat enslaved Africans so
cruelly? Follow the money. Why didn’t people of conscience stop it
sooner? Follow the money. Among other resources, find “Key Distinctions
for Understanding Race and Racism” at
The Tracing Center www.tracingcenter.org developed
by filmmaker Katrina Browne. Browne made the film in response to learning about
her White, Episcopalian, Rhode Island family’s deep involvement in America’s
trans-Atlantic slave trade. She has
uncovered the connections between her family history and her White privileges
compared to families of enslaved Africans, for example. (Have her speak at your
school, show her film, and visit classrooms.
Her yarn-web exercise demonstrating a small town and all craftspeople
and gardeners supplying slave ships clarifies the economic web of involvement
in the slave trade.)
6.
Research
with students the federal and local regulations that led to housing inequality,
such as “redlining” and the National Housing Act of 1934. Ask students to read and analyze the Economic
Policy Institute’s October 2014 paper: “The Making of Ferguson: Public Policies
at the Root of its Troubles,” found here: http://www.epi.org/publication/making-ferguson/.
7.
Research
the integrated efforts of such labor leaders as A. Philip Randolph with Quaker Bayard
Rustin (both African Americans) and A.J. Muste, European American in the 1940s,
and the work of the AFSC alongside the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
[SCLC] to promote non-violent work for racial equality in the Civil Rights
struggle and Poor People’s Campaign of the 1960s.
8.
Debate
the issue of reparations, as did many Quaker meetings. The authors state: “Based on available
records, it seems many Friends accepted the notion that they, and people of
European descent in general, did indeed owe African Americans a debt. Whether the benefits enjoyed by European
American were expressed in historical terms connected to the enslavement of
Africans or in the more contemporary term of ‘white privilege,’ few questioned
the underlying obligation” (p. 280).
What do your students think?
Visit such pro/con websites as Opposing
Viewpoints to find support material for each side of the debate.
9.
Investigate
the meaning of this statement from the 1967 Friends National Conference on Race
Relations, held in Black Mountain, NC: “It becomes increasingly clear that the
existing social-economic-political-legal-military system—the framework within
which the white establishment operates—simply cannot be patched up in such a
way as to end exploitation and degradation.
We must be prepared to discover how much we ourselves, sharing in and
profiting from the operating of the system, are contributing to the power which
maintains the very practices we are fighting against” (p. 288). How do your students perceive this statement?
10.Research Mahatma Gandhi’s
non-violence philosophy or research Quaker Bayard Rustin’s civil rights and
peace work.
11.Investigate the social
programs of the Black Panthers in the 1960s and ‘70s and the cooperation that
existed between the AFSC, various Quaker meetings, and the Panthers. (See pages 310-316 for details.) View the film The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution and research the
systematic attacks on Black Panthers by law enforcement officials. Find links
here: http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/videos/the-black-panthers-vanguard-of-the-revolution-trailer/.
12.Research the histories
of such notable Quaker schools as The George School, Westtown Friends, Media
Friends School, Sidwell Friends, and others, and compare their integration
histories. (Start with information on
pages 319-340.)
13.Similarly, research the
integration histories of Quaker colleges, such as Haverford, Swarthmore,
Earlham, and Guildford, and learn about African American students’ experiences
in such colleges. (See pages 341-359.)
14.What about integration
in Quaker congregations today? And, what
about integration and feelings of welcome and inclusive community in
congregations of other denominations, or professional groups, sports clubs, and
other social organizations?
· At a Pendle Hill Forum
in 2002 African American historian Emma Lapsansky said, “I think that if we…
can regularly examine ourselves and continue to follow our spiritual Light, can
keep an eye on where we’ve been as well as on where we need to go… and open
ourselves to a wide variety of ways and places where we might meet others where
they are, not where we have stuck them in our imaginations; if we can remember
that social justice is a bit like housework—no matter how well you do it, it
just has to be done again; and perhaps most important, if we can keep our sense
of humor, then we have a good chance to be carried over those places where it
seems God has abandoned us” (p. 393).
· In response, European
American Quaker Melanie Sax wrote, “I saw how the static, frozen image of guilty
white oppressor versus angry victim of color tends to keep everyone stuck
playing the same old tune…. We do not have to stay stuck and hopeless. We can be empowered to co-create together what
happens next to continue bring forth Light into the world’s family” (p. 394).
· How do you and your students
interpret these remarks? and
· What do they discern as the
actions to which they might lead in your classroom, school, and community?
17.In her epilogue, African
American co-author Vanessa Julye gives these recommendations for European
Americans Quakers. What do your students
think of these excerpts? How might they
apply in your school/community?
a.
“Stop
taking whiteness for granted. Make
whiteness visible…. Acknowledge that whiteness does not symbolize normality and
that it is associated with unearned privilege….
b.
“Acknowledge
and dispel stereotypes about African Americans…. Let go of those fears and
negative feelings, and replace stereotypes with realistic information.
c.
“Participate
in workshops, discussions, conferences and other activities that promote racial
justice.
d.
“Widen
your circle of friends. Get to know people of African descent….
e.
“Talk
about racism, but know that addressing the issue is highly emotional and
difficult. Listen to each other….
f.
“Promote
racially inclusive collaboration within your community… Take action in
addressing racial reconciliation at all levels of society and government….” (Read
her full set of recommendations on pages 396-397.)
For Quakers and non-Quakers, for students and teachers, and for people of all backgrounds, there is much to learn from and much work to do. Let’s get started, using the resources of this book.
-Susan Gelber Cannon, April 2017