Ya hemos dado cuenta repetidas veces de esa costumbre de la policía estadounidense de matar a sus propios compatriotas en situaciones de lo más dispares, sobre todo si se trata de ciudadanos negros o hispanos. Pero esto de andar quemando iglesias de comunidades negras del sur histórico de ese país nos parecía, francamente, demasiado. Pues bien, la nota que sigue es de Bethania Palma Markus y apareció en el sitio web Raw Story. Acá va:
Título: Who’s
burning black churches? Arsonists hit at least 3 Southern congregations in the
last 7 days
Epígrafe: At
least five black churches burned overnight this week, and three have been
attributed to arson.
Texto: Last
week's shooting at Charleston's Emanuel AME was perhaps the deadliest attack on
a black church since the 1963 church bombing by the Klan in Birmingham, Alabama
that killed four children. Since then, another specter from America's violent
racist history is again rearing its head - setting black churches ablaze.
At least three
have been intentionally set on fire in recent days, according to a survey of
news reports compiled by the Daily Kos.
On Monday,
someone set fire to College Hills Seventh Day Adventist Church in Tennessee,
according to local WATE. The arsonist placed bales of hay outside the church
doors and lit them ablaze, fire officials told the station. They also burned
the church van.
On Tuesday, God's
Power Church of Christ in Georgia was intentionally set on fire, authorities
told ABC News. Electronics and other equipment were also stolen in the early
morning fire. Authorities told reporters there is "no evidence" of a
hate crime.
On Wednesday,
Briar Creek Baptist Church in North Carolina burned in the middle of the night,
causing $250,000 in damage, NBC News reports. Authorities are investigating
whether the intentional blaze was a hate crime. It took 75 firefighters to bring
it under control.
On Friday, Glover
Grove Missionary Baptist Church in South Carolina, was virtually destroyed in
an overnight blaze, the Aiken Standard reports. While the cause of the fire is
still under investigation, the FBI has been called in.
Another blaze on
Friday morning in Florida at predominantly-black Greater Miracle Apostolic
Holiness Church caused $700,000 in damage. The fire is under investigation but
fire officials believe it to be accidental, the Tallahassee Democrat reports.
Burning black
churches has historical significance that harkens back to the civil rights era,
according to the Atlanta Black Star.
"From
slavery and the days of Jim Crow through the civil rights movement and beyond,
white supremacists have targeted the Black church because of its importance as
a pillar of the Black community, the center for leadership and institution
building, education, social and political development and organizing to fight
oppression," David Love writes.
The Ku Klux Klan
has ramped up recruiting activity in the days since the Charleston shooting.
Residents in California, Kansas, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, and Georgia
woke last weekend to find bags in their lawns filled with candy and Klan flyers
seeking new members.
White supremacist
Dylann Roof, who has been charged with the attack that killed nine at
Charleston's historical Emanuel AME on June 17, left behind a racist manifesto
that said, "We have no skinheads, no real KKK, no one doing anything but
talking on the internet. Well someone has to have the bravery to take it to the
real world, and I guess that has to be me."
The fires also
come as activists and politicians begin the process of removing the Confederate
flag from public property, sparking protests.
"We're still
talking about this issue and it's 2015," Briar Creek pastor Mannix Kinsey
told CNN. "And so we all have to consider, what else do we need to do to
actually be able to work together?"
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