This week we celebrate the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. It is a special time for me and my husband, Joe, because we worked in the Civil Rights Movement in 1966, in Albany, Georgia. Dr. King had been in Albany in 1962 as part of “the Albany movement,” and the memory of his time there was still fresh in the memories of the people we lived and worked with.
Histories of the civil rights movement record that Dr. King did not believe that very much had been accomplished during his time in Albany, but he used the lessons he learned from his time there to develop his more effective initiative in Birmingham, Alabama. In fact, much actually had been accomplished in Albany by the time we arrived. Black people had been empowered to desegregate the schools and to run for office. We worked to integrate the Head Start program staff (which was a requirement to receive federal funds), under the leadership of Charles Sherrod, a fellow seminarian of Joe’s at Union Seminary in New York.
I hope you will attend the adult forum on Racial Justice on Sunday, January 28th. You may want to read Bishop Budde’s recent article about “Courageous Discipleship: the Work of Reparations.” I am on the Episcopal Diocese of Washington Reparations Task Force, along with Jonathan Nicholas. On January 28 we will have someone from the task force to speak about racial justice, and in particular about the diocesan task force and its work. If you are interested in this work and inspired by the life of Dr. King, please make sure to come to that presentation.
-Embry Howell, Senior Warden