Sister Thea did not hesitate to challenge and even chide the bishops for their complicity in a “church of paternalism, of a patronizing attitude” toward people of color.
Racial Justice
Saved by Grace: Striving for a more racially just and equal church
“I am asked how I can remain Catholic when the church I now serve in had ownership of a member of my family.” – Cora Marie Billings, R.S.M.
Black theology and a legacy of oppression
After the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., James H. Cone denounced the lukewarm responses of mainline Protestant and Catholic Christians to the plight of black Americans.
A Professor, a President and the Klan
Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education (May 1954), racial tensions in Alabama heightened considerably. When in February 1956 Autherine Lucy, a black student, began attending class at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, white students and community membe
Will this prophet be heard? America’s editors on the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
Vantage Point April 20, 1968: The editors on the death and dream of Martin Luther King, Jr.
