Unitarians drop Jefferson's name from Southeast group
DURHAM, N.C. (RNS) To many Americans, Thomas Jefferson is a symbol of
liberty and religious freedom, the architect of American democracy and a
standard bearer for progressive politics.
But to members of America's most liberal denomination, the
slave-holding legacy of the nation's third president has become a
liability.
On Saturday (April 30), delegates to the Thomas Jefferson District
of the Unitarian Universalist Association voted overwhelmingly to drop
his name from their organization.
Under the change, the district that spans North and South Carolina,
as well as parts of Virginia, Georgia and Tennessee, will be known as
the Southeast District.
"It's an issue of how Americans grapple with the heroism of Thomas
Jefferson, and at the same time stand for all that comes tomorrow in
terms of being an open congregation, growing in our faith and sending a
message of love," said LaTonya Richardson, a delegate from the Unitarian
Universalist Congregation of Winston-Salem, N.C.
Or to put it more succinctly, the district wanted to send a message
that it was open to African-Americans and sensitive to those put off by
Jefferson's complex relationship with the institution of slavery.
A motion to change the district's name failed to get a necessary
two-thirds majority in 1997 and again in 2010. On Saturday, fewer than
10 of the 160 people who attended the meeting at the Eno River Unitarian
Universalists Fellowship in Durham voted "no," but those who did spoke
passionately.
"We cannot dump Jefferson and claim forgiveness and redemption are
part of our spirit," said Gae Pinschmidt, a delegate from the Unitarian
Universalist Fellowship of Fredericksburg, Va.
The change to the district's bylaws had been in the works since
1993. That year, the denomination scheduled a Thomas Jefferson Ball and
encouraged members to come in period costume. African Americans
objected, asking whether they should wear "rags and chains."
The Thomas Jefferson District, which includes 62 congregations,
began a two-year study that looked at Jefferson's commitment to liberty
alongside evidence he owned hundreds of slaves and fathered seven
children with Sally Hemings, a slave he inherited.
It also examined the many reasons Unitarian Universalists claim
Jefferson as one of their one -- he, like other Unitarians, rejected a
belief in the Trinity and said Jesus was a great prophet but not God.
Jefferson even produced his own version of the Bible that deleted all of
Jesus' miracles.
Although African-Americans represent a tiny minority of the 200,000
Unitarian Universalists in the U.S. and Canada, the denomination proudly
upholds the principle that every person has inherent worth and dignity.
After Saturday's vote, Anita Lee, a delegate from Richmond's First
Unitarian Universalist Church, said she felt proud to be a member,
"I feel like this group of Unitarian Universalists," she said, "is
living up to its principles."