St. Louis Religious Leaders Want More People To Learn About Racism

Camille Phillips/St. Louis Public Radio

The Archdiocese of St. Louis is inviting people of different faiths on a tour Saturday from downtown St. Louis to north St. Louis to explore ways to eliminate racism in health care, education, housing and the criminal justice system.

Religious leaders from across the region will lead people beginning at 9 a.m. from the Basilica of St. Louis, better known as the Old Cathedral, near the Gateway Arch in downtown St. Louis, to Gateway Elementary and Sumner High Schoolin north St. Louis. They are asking people to acknowledge how racism has harmed Black St. Louisans and to work to help bring equality.

“Jesus tells us to love our neighbors, and Jesus also tells us to feed the hungry, clothe the naked,” said Joyce Jones, program director of racial harmony at the Archdiocese of St. Louis. “If we just take each individual action and focus on doing those things for each and every person, then we’ll be able to eradicate racism.”

Along the journey, clergy will highlight injustices faced by Black St. Louisans. At the Old Cathedral, near the area where slave traders once sold Black people and where an enslaved Black man, Dred Scott, sued for his freedom, they will discuss the effects of racism in the criminal justice system.

Religious leaders will guide a conversation about housing during the second stop at Gateway Elementary School, which sits on a portion of the former Pruitt-Igoe Public Housing Project, off North Jefferson Avenue and Gateway Drive. The last stop is in the Ville neighborhood at Sumner High School. The high school is near the former Homer G. Phillips Hospital, built to serve Black St. Louisans. Leaders will focus on discrimination in health care and education.

People need to acknowledge racism to learn to eliminate it, said the Rev. Charles Norris of St. James African Methodist Episcopal Church in St. Louis.

He said people should not turn a blind eye to racism.

“We need to remove those masks that allow us to be comfortable with inequities that continue in the way in which they currently exist in,” Norris said.

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Andrea Henderson joined St. Louis Public Radio in March 2019, where she covers race, identity and culture as part of the public radio collaborative Sharing America. Andrea comes to St. Louis Public Radio from NPR, where she reported for the race and culture podcast Code Switch and produced pieces for All Things Considered. Andrea’s passion for storytelling began at a weekly newspaper in her hometown of Houston, Texas, where she covered a wide variety of stories including hurricanes, transportation and Barack Obama’s 2009 Presidential Inauguration. Her art appreciation allowed her to cover arts and culture for the Houston African-American business publication, Empower Magazine. She also covered the arts for Syracuse’s Post-Standard and The Post and Courier in Charleston, South Carolina.