D O  J U S T I C E,  L O V E  K I N D N E S S  &  W A L K  H U M B L Y

Plymouth Church Blog

Facing the Past to Change the Present

Facing the Past to Change the Present

James Baldwin famously wrote, “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.” If we are deeply present to our current political and social context, we cannot help but notice the ways in which our capacity as a country to face the real complexities and injustices of our history is being challenged.


This is not a new challenge; the control of whose history is told and how it is told has always been an exercise of power and privilege. But we are experiencing in new ways organized efforts to maintain a whitewashed story of the past by suppressing and eliminating cultural historical education. We are being encouraged, pressured even, to turn our faces away from the demanding historical truths that live in and around us.


The recently released film "Till" issues a different invitation – the call to face the past and change the present. An intervention in the whitewashing of US history, this movie summons us to engage the story of Emmett Till, both his life and his heinous racist murder, more deeply and courageously. Perhaps more remarkably, it draws our attention to Till’s mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, and her life-long struggle to address her son’s lynching and educate and motivate others to join the movement toward racial justice. In some ways, this movie continues Mamie Till-Mobley’s devastatingly powerful decision to hold an open-casket funeral for her son, so that the truth of his murder might be faced, and by being faced, begin the journey toward transformation.


Associate General Minister Rev. Traci Blackmon inspires us all to face the truth so that our world might be changed:


“As I watched the story of the 1955 lynching in Mississippi of Emmett Till, my eyes filled with tears as I reflected upon the story of this 14-year-old male child filled with joy and wonder, and the stories of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Florida, 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland, 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, and so many more too numerous to name, all killed with no accountability for their deaths. It only took the all-white male jury 67 minutes to acquit Emmett’s murderers, but it took 67 years from his death for this nation to gain the courage to sign into law the Emmett Till Anti-Lynching Act making lynching a federal hate crime. There have been more than 200 attempts to pass anti-lynching legislation, dating back to the presidency of William McKinley. A nation ignorant or impervious to its past condemns its own future. I pray that our church will courageously confront our shared history so authentic healing can begin."


Click here to read and learn more.


photo: MGM Studios

Location: 1217 Sixth Avenue
Seattle, Washington 98101-3199

Mailing Address: PO Box 21368

Seattle, WA 98111

Office Hours: Mon-Thurs 10 am - 2 pm 
206-622-4865
info@plymouthchurchseattle.org

CONNECT

SERVE

GIVE

Your cart is empty Continue
Shopping Cart
Subtotal:
Discount 
Discount 
View Details
- +
Sold Out