Meet six UCC clergy who traveled to Minneapolis to put faith in action

Long tables piled high with hats, scarves, long underwear, winter coats, and hand warmers lined the lobby of Westminster Presbyterian Church in downtown Minneapolis, where more than 600 religious leaders from across the country gathered on Jan. 22.

The warm clothing had all been donated from neighbors around the area – including from Creekside UCC – for the faith leaders readying to join in collective public actions in sub-zero temperatures.

“People had dug through their closets and went out in the below-freezing temperatures to deliver these items, working to ensure that all those who had come in from other areas would be cared for, too,” reflected Megan Bergert, UCC Minister for Refugee and Migration Ministries, who was among the faith leaders who traveled cross-country to the gathering.

Over 600 faith leaders gathered at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Minneapolis Jan. 22. Coats were donated by surrounding communities as mutual aid for keeping clergy warm for their public witness.

This was one of many acts of care that echo throughout the Twin Cities and demonstrate how quickly people have built networks of response and resourcing since an influx of federal agents began in early January.

Within less than one week of the organization MARCH (Multifaith Antiracism, Change & Healing) inviting out-of-state faith leaders to come to Minneapolis for training and to participate in the general strike and walkout organized by labor leaders and faith groups, hundreds made quick arrangements to show up for support and training.

As the Rev. Rebecca Voelkel, pastor for justice ministries at Lyndale UCC, welcomed the clergy packed into the sanctuary on Jan. 22, she reflected to them, “In the face of all the pain and suffering in our cities and our country, you are a beautiful, beautiful sight.”

UCC ministers and leaders were prominent among the crowd of religious and moral leaders with around 100 in attendance. Below are reflections and photos from six of them.

A group of 17 UCC clergy traveled together from Oklahoma to Minneapolis.

Neighborhood patrols as community care

The Rev. David Wheeler, senior minister of New Covenant Christian Church, traveled with a van of 17 UCC clergy from Oklahoma. He was deeply touched by the opportunity to sing among clergy kindred of so many different faiths and traditions, and he undertook a shift patrolling the neighborhood together with a UCC colleague.

“It was shocking. What we see on the TV or internet does not adequately depict the crisis in Minneapolis. In person, it feels like an occupied territory being held captive by military forces. There is an emotional edge and tension that cannot be described with words. What mattered most to me was the sense of community, solidarity, and care when the clergy were together,” Wheeler said. “What I’ll bring home is a determination to build connections and systems in Oklahoma so that we can protect our neighbors and keep everyone safe from the lawless, violent oppression of ICE. We are already working on it.” 

200 faith leaders packed the entrance of the Target corporate headquarters for a sing-in and protest Jan. 22.

Protesting businesses working with ICE

The Rev. J. Bennett Guess, a former UCC executive minister and national officer and the current executive director of ACLU Ohio, was part of 200 interfaith leaders who participated in a sing-in and protest at the Target corporate headquarters as part of the Jan. 23 economic blackout in Minneapolis. The Target Corporation, a Minneapolis-based company, has participated with ICE, allowed them to use store parking lots, and donated $1 million to Trump’s Inaugural Committee.

“We are living through an era of great political tyranny and cruelty, but this crisis is also one of great moral and spiritual consequence. That’s why it is so fitting that these massive protests were led, in part, by faith leaders. We must ask ourselves to look inwardly, to reflect and act out of a deep, urgent concern for our shared humanity, not merely political perspective or party affiliation,” Guess said. “We are witnessing great persecution and brutality right now, mostly directly targeted at Black and brown people and communities, but we are also witnessing an awakening, an uprising, among this country’s people of faith, who are now loudly demanding justice and a collective reexamination of our nation’s soul, to find a far better moral center and compass.”

UCC leaders were a visible presence in Minneapolis, wearing stoles over heavy coats as they did shifts of neighborhood patrol and participated in the ICE Out of Minnesota march.

Over 100 clergy arrested at the airport

Two pastors of First Sandwich UCC traveled from Massachusetts to the gathering and stood among faith leaders demonstrating against ICE tactics at the Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport, where around 100 clergy were arrested. In the frigid cold, protesters called on airlines, particularly Delta Air Lines and Signature Aviation, to stop cooperating with ICE operations in Minnesota.

Over 100 clergy were arrested at the Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport protesting airlines that cooperate with ICE.

Rev. Tina Walker-Morin, senior minister, reflected on gathering first with the large group of faith leaders and then in the collective Jan. 23 march through Minneapolis.

“On Thursday and Friday, we witnessed the power of the Spirit when people come together. Beside me in training were Muslims, Unitarian Universalists, Buddhists, Jewish, and Indigenous faith leaders, just to name a few. The Spirit that gathered 600 faith leaders (and 650 more who answered the call but could not attend because physical space was limited) knew no faith tradition; it knew no divides. I felt the power in the people coming together – not just among the 600 leaders, but marching in the streets with 50,000 other people. It was a beautiful and powerful reminder that the collective Spirit is greater than any one person,” Walker-Morin said.

Over 100 clergy were arrested at the Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport protesting airlines that cooperate with ICE, in addition to hundreds more who protested there together.

“We cannot stand divided if we intend to prevail over violence, control, and disregard for humanity,” said the Rev. Jennie Valentine, minister of faith formation. “‘No one is getting left behind this time. No one is getting left behind. We get there together or we never get there at all’ are the lyrics from a song we learned in training. Wherever we are, we must cross dividing lines so that we can all link arms to ensure that no one is left behind to be harmed – physically, spiritually, and emotionally. I return home with intention, determination, and a quiet knowledge that as this authoritarian push continues to spread across the country as expected, together we can protect each other and refuse to allow this inhumane treatment of people to continue.”

Several clergy held a pilgrimage from George Floyd Square to Renee Good’s memorial.

ICE Out of Minnesota March

Many faith leaders, including Bergert, participated in the Jan. 23 march when, organizers reported, over 700 businesses shut down statewide and over 50,000 people took to the street in peaceful protest.

“What I learned in Minneapolis is that there is a place for everyone in the support, witness, and action. We were marching down the streets of Minneapolis to ally ourselves with migrants, and, concurrently, to show solidarity against all forms of authoritarianism and denigration of civil and human rights. As a representative from the UCC National Setting, it was imperative for me to be able to join the UCC organizers on the ground and bring the support of UCC congregants across the country. ‘Who keeps us safe? We keep us safe!’ is a familiar organizing chorus, and that ‘we’ needs to include a deep collective meaning. ‘We’ isn’t just the tiring, tireless community members at the epicenter of the action; ‘we’ encompasses all who understand us tobe created by God, all who believe in Christ’s call to care for one another, all who can see that the flourishing of any one person is tied to the flourishing of their neighbor.”

Rev. Shannon Jammal-Hollemans and Rev. Greg Briggs join tens of thousands to march in Minneapolis.

What love looks like under federal occupation

Also traveling from Massachusetts, the Rev. Robin Barlowe, senior pastor at First Church in Sterling, reflected that her time in Minneapolis offered some of the best training for ministry that she had ever received.

“The people of Minneapolis taught me what it looks like to love one another under federal occupation, and what it means to keep neighbors safe. They collect food to deliver to people who are afraid to leave their homes; they protect the daycares and schools with their bodies at drop-off and pick up; they walk the children of immigrants to school; they volunteer for once-a-week ICE patrol, whistling when ICE are about to snatch their neighbors and filming for public record; they build back doors that ICE has beaten down; they collect and donate money for rent to people of color who are too scared to leave their homes to go to work. They manage to do this all at the same time that they work a day-job and go to yoga. When they get tired, they lift each other up. When they are in despair, they sing. These people are not ‘protesters,’ much less ‘agitators.’ They are people like you and me who love their communities. And as one Minneapolis professional said, ‘We aren’t special… We just know how to neighbor.’”

Many UCC clergy gathered as community one evening at Creekside UCC in Minneapolis.

Spreading knowledge nationwide

The organizers who invited and hosted the faith leaders in Minneapolis communicated the importance of rooting in accountability to impacted communities, as well as the urgency to build the relationships, skills, and commitments needed for sustained action across the country

“The organizers in Minneapolis are remarkable,” Bergert said. “Their generosity in outreach, their clarity of message, their thoughtfulness in connecting. It was very clear that the action in Minnesota is possible because they have been building relationships between interfaith alliances and community resources for years. They haven’t considered the work of justice to be ‘done,’ ever.

“Rev. Dr. Tanya Sadagopan, Minnesota Conference minister, is working to lift up and support the clergy and community members, and you can see the ways in which the folks in the different settings of the organizing in Minnesota help sustain each other through sharing of resources, of time, of space. To be ready to face imminent threat, you can’t hunker down and shut others out; more than ever, it’s a time to open up to being present in others’ lives, in their worship, in their day to day concerns, so that when the time for organizing is most urgent, you’re already connected in a community of care.”


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Categories: United Church of Christ News

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