Remembering Jonathan Myrick Daniels

August 18, 2024

This week we pause to remember Jonathan Myrick Daniels, civil rights activist and Episcopal seminarian at the Episcopal Divinity School, who sacrificed his life in the service of voting rights marchers in Selma. He defended Ruby Sales, shielding her from death in an altercation with law enforcement on August 20, 1965.

Daniels was responding to Martin Luther King’s call for clergy of all faiths to support voting rights and the integration of churches. He first attended the Selma to Montgomery March and returned to Selma to assist in a voter-registration project in Lowndes County. Daniels explained his return to Selma in this way: “something had happened to me in Selma, which meant I had to come back. I could not stand by in benevolent dispassion any longer without compromising everything I know and love and value. The imperative was too clear, the stakes too high, my own identity was called too nakedly into question…I had been blinded by what I saw here (and elsewhere), and the road to Damascus led, for me, back here.”

The Episcopal Church honors Daniels on August 14th. He is recognized as a martyr and was added to the observances of Lesser Feasts and Fasts in 1999. August 14, 1965, was the day he and the other activists were arrested in Fort Deposit, Alabama for protests calling for the integration of public places and voting rights (six days before his assassination). Continue reading

James Baldwin’s Relevance for Our Time

August 4, 2024

August 2, 2024 marks the one-hundredth anniversary of James Baldwin’s birth in New York City in 1924. Provocative and controversial during his own time and beyond, Baldwin is being remembered in tributes highlighting his artistry, influences, and the relevance of his work to today’s world.

The BBC released several broadcasts in this vein last month. Among them is the “Front Row” podcast of July 29, 2024, which hosted Colm Tóibín, author of On James Baldwin (Brandeis University Press, 2024). Tóibín noted that Baldwin was a careful reader, a masterful writer, and one who drew upon the ritual of religion to craft soaring and serious prose. Another contributor, Bonnie Greer, noted that Baldwin’s rhythmic sensibility had roots in the craft of Harlem Renaissance poet Countee Cullen, one of Baldwin’s at DeWitt High School. Continue reading