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B Y B R YA N N . M A S S I N G A L E
In an address in 1980 to the Roman Rota, a chief legal court in the Catholic Church, Pope John Paul II
cited a 17th-century maxim, “Truth is the basis, foundation, and mother of justice.” He thus highlighted
the often-noted connection between the pursuit of justice and the quest for truth. For example, the many
“Truth and Reconciliation” processes undertaken in the aftermath of severe social traumas, such as in
South Africa and Rwanda, are vivid reminders that healing estrangements between peoples and
August 12, 2017
The Ignatian Witness to Truth in a Climate of
Injustice
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establishing right relationships between social groups can only be premised upon an honest
acknowledgment of the harms committed or tolerated against others. Communal and national honesty
are the prerequisites for effective reconciliation and a just society.
By any measure or reckoning, the pursuit of racial justice is still, in the words of the African American
poet Langston Hughes, “a dream deferred.” In a report published in the summer of 2016, a United Nations
commission investigating the situation of African Americans in the United States forthrightly concluded:
Despite substantial changes since
the end of the enforcement of Jim
Crow and the fight for civil rights, a
systemic ideology of racism ensuring
the domination of one group
over another continues to impact
negatively on the civil, political,
economic, social and cultural rights
of African Americans today.
“
What accounts for this disturbing persistence of racial injustice, manifested in almost every area of our
national life, including gross disparities in criminal justice, education, poverty rates, and healthcare
services? Why, despite years of protest and agitation, do we as a nation find ourselves locked in a
seemingly endless cycle of racial recrimination, resignation, and even despair? I offer two reasons: first, a
persistent belief in an ideology of “personal responsibility”; and second, the profound, pervasive, and
perhaps even willful ignorance of the majority of white Americans about the history that has led to and
fuels our current impasses and divisions.
The Mantra of “Personal Responsibility”
One manifestation of the current ideology of “personal responsibility” was given at Marquette University
by Ben Shapiro, a noted young conservative activist and provocateur. His presence on campus was the
subject of a great deal of controversy, as a student group timed Shapiro’s lecture to coincide with
Marquette’s annual “Mission Week” celebration of its Ignatian charism and Jesuit ideals. It was especially
problematic given the university’s chosen theme for 2017 – “Racial Justice and the Call of the Church” –
and the title of Shapiro’s address, “Can You Handle the Truth?” I decided to attend his speech, which he
delivered in a packed lecture hall to an audience of overwhelmingly white male students.
Once one gets past the caustic ad hominem polemics that peppered Shapiro’s address, his position can
be summarized in the following moves:
• There was a time when institutionalized racism existed in the US, but that was 40-50 years ago.
(Note that he isn’t sure exactly when it ended, nor did he give a historical marker for its demise).
• Therefore, systemic racial injustice is no longer a reality.
• Shapiro acknowledges that there are individual racists, that is, people who do bad things and
discriminate because of racial bias.
• But society as a whole isn’t intentional in putting people of color down or holding people of color
back.
• Thus, for people of color, it is now all up to them. At the core of his argument is a plea for personal
responsibility. “Life is what you make of it” was a mantra repeated several times. In fact, he declared
that if you follow three rules, you are virtually guaranteed to achieve middle class status: (1) Finish
high school. (2) Don’t have children out of wedlock. (3) Get a job.
• Left unsaid explicitly, but assumed throughout his presentation: If you don’t get ahead, if you don’t
make it, it’s your own fault. To think otherwise is to succumb to a “psychology of victimhood” and
to allow oneself to be defeated, because there are no longer any systemic obstacles to one’s
progress.
• More pointed conclusions follow from this line of thinking: we, as a society – and especially white
people – have no obligation to help anyone, because all of the systemic obstacles and barriers to
individual advancement have been eliminated and eradicated.
• Therefore, most of all, but left unsaid: if white straight men have a disproportionate share of
society’s goods and benefits, it’s because they’ve earned them by being more intelligent, virtuous,
and responsible than other groups.
I dwell on Shapiro’s argument and views because he is not an aberration. His presentation of this
worldview is but an exaggeration of a typical point of view present among many Americans, especially
white Americans. His line of thinking explains why so many white people, and especially white Christians
and Catholics, are so anemic and tepid in their engagement with issues of racial justice. They believe
society is now a level playing field. Therefore, notwithstanding a few bad apples – of both and all races –
black failure and racial disparities are due to personal irresponsibility, laziness, and lack of effort.
Let us consider a concrete example of how this insistence upon the demise of systemic racism and
assumption of personal responsibility plays out.
Such thinking explains in great
measure the apathy or
indifference of white Christians
toward police violence and
misconduct in our society,
especially as these are
experienced by communities of
color and protested by the
Movements for Black Lives. A
recent Public Religion Research
Institute report related how
over 80 percent of black
Christians believe that police-involved killings of black people are part of a much larger picture of racial
injustice. However, an almost equal number of white Christians believe the opposite, holding that such
deaths are mainly isolated incidents with no connection to one another. (Seventy-one percent of
Catholics hold this view.) Indeed, white non-Christians are more likely to see a systemic problem than
white Christians.
In other words, white Christians are among the least likely to believe that there is a systemic race based
problem with policing in our country. They admit that bad things happen. But these are “isolated
incidents” – that is, the fault of a few renegade individuals – not events that point to deeper systemic
faults in the institutions of our society. The majority of white Americans, it would seem, hold that racial
injustice is no longer a pressing issue in society; it is, rather, at most, an episodic aberration committed by
some bad people.
A Pervasive (Willful) Ignorance of Truth
Yet, note how the widespread acceptance of an ideology of personal responsibility – put more
colloquially, the mentality of “it’s their/your own damn fault” – is abetted by a pervasive ignorance of the
real history of racial injustice in our country. (Recall how the first and necessary move made by Shapiro is
a declaration that systemic institutional racism has been eradicated). African American religious scholar
Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., states that “willful blindness” to our history allows so many to “absurdly believe...that
black social misery is the result of hundreds of thousands of unrelated bad individual decisions by black
people across this country.”
Ben Shapiro speaks to students in a packed lecture hall at Marquette
University (http://marquette.edu/).
http://marquette.edu/
In May 2015, approximately 50 students, faculty, and administrators gathered outside of Grewen Hall, Le Moyne College
(http://www.lemoyne.edu/), to express their solidarity in support of the people of Ferguson. Following a moment of
silence, the group walked throughout the main academic complex before reconvening outside for prayer and reflection.
One of the best independent assessments of the lack of accurate knowledge of our nation’s racial history
comes from the United Nations’ investigation of our racial practices referred to earlier. It notes that most
Americans have not been and are not being taught the true history of the country’s complicity with what
it called the “crimes against humanity” that were perpetrated upon communities of color, especially
African Americans. Two of its findings are especially pertinent:
• In particular, the legacy of colonial history, enslavement, racial subordination and segregation, racial
terrorism and racial inequality in the United States remains a serious challenge, as there has been
no real commitment to reparations and to truth and reconciliation for people of African descent.
Contemporary police killings and the trauma that they create are reminiscent of the past racial
terror of lynching. Impunity for State violence has resulted in the current human rights crisis and
must be addressed as a matter of urgency. (emphasis added)
• There is a profound need to acknowledge that the transatlantic trade in Africans, enslavement,
colonization and colonialism were a crime against humanity and are among the major sources and
manifestations of racism, racial discrimination, Afrophobia, xenophobia and related intolerance.
Past injustices and crimes against African Americans need to be addressed with reparatory justice.
Note how this report relates that ignorance of our past compromises our ability to cope with present-day
racial injustices, which are the enduring manifestations of an unacknowledged and actively avoided past.
Glaude concurs, opining that being “willfully ignorant” of our history of racism “has consigned so many
black people to poverty with little to no chance of escaping it.”
http://www.lemoyne.edu/
http://www.refworld.org/docid/584073d34.html
Thus, it comes as no surprise that the U.N. task
force, in its recommendations for a more racially
just society, concluded: “Consistently, the school
curriculum in each state should reflect
appropriately the history of the transatlantic
trade in Africans, enslavement and segregation.”
In short, telling and facing the truth of our tragic
past is an essential part of achieving justice in the
present. What Canadian Jesuit philosopher
Bernard Lonergan called the “flight from
understanding” is a major contributing factor to
the racial apathy and indifference that result from
a race-based ideology of personal responsibility.
The Ignatian Witness to Truth
What, then, are the challenges and opportunities of this state of affairs for Jesuit higher education in the
United States? What does it mean for Jesuit campuses to be “sanctuaries of truth” in the midst of so
much injustice, denial, and willful ignorance? What does the summons to fidelity to our mission entail in
such circumstances?
First, a reclaiming of and recommitment to the fundamental inspirations and values of the
Society of Jesus. One of the lasting memories of my undergraduate theology courses at Marquette was
studying the book The Faith that Does Justice (https://www.amazon.com/Faith-That-Does-Justice-
Examining /dp/1597525693). It was a compilation of articles written by Jesuits in the mid 1970s, reflecting
on how the promotion of justice was an essential part of Christian faith. I no longer remember the
specifics of the articles. But the title arrested me then and inspires me still. It was the first time that an
explicit connection was made between my belief in God and my hunger for justice.
I then discovered that this deep connection is a fundamental Jesuit conviction, first articulated in 1975
during its 32nd General Congregation and then reaffirmed repeatedly since, most notably in 2000 at
Santa Clara University by then Father General Peter-Hans Kolvenbach.
(http://onlineministries.creighton.edu/CollaborativeMinistry/Kolvenbach/Kolvenbach-SantaClara.pdf ) His
words are powerful and prophetic:
(http://www.refworld.org /docid/584073d
Click here to read the U.N. Report of the
Working Group of Experts on People of
African Descent on its mission to the United
States of America.
https://www.amazon.com/Faith-That-Does-Justice-Examining/dp/1597525693
http://onlineministries.creighton.edu/CollaborativeMinistry/Kolvenbach/Kolvenbach-SantaClara.pdf
http://www.refworld.org/docid/584073d34.html
Since Saint Ignatius wanted love to
be expressed not only in words but
also in deeds, the Congregation committed
the Society to the promotion
of justice as a concrete, radical but
proportionate response to an unjustly
suffering world. Fostering the
virtue of justice in people was not
enough. Only a substantive justice
can bring about the kinds of structural
and attitudinal changes that are
needed to uproot those sinful oppressive
injustices that are a scandal
against humanity and God.
“
Therefore, a first step for Jesuit campuses is a forthright and public commitment to this legacy of seeking
justice as a vital component of our identity and mission – a commitment that is not just rhetorical but
effective. How do we come to see ourselves as custodians of sacred trust, “the service of faith through
the promotion of justice,” that has been committed to our care? How do our campuses continue to
inspire new generations of young people, captivating them with book titles, courses, experiences, and
witnesses that show them the deep connection between love of God and justice for their neighbors?
To put this first step negatively: If, in the midst of a society scarred by racial injustice, Jesuit colleges and
universities are not forthright witnesses of “concrete, radical but proportionate responses” to unjust
suffering, then we fail to embody what makes us unique among institutions of higher education. And if we
are no different from any other college or university, especially lower-cost competitors who can offer just
as valuable an educational product, then we have no reason to survive – and in all likelihood, we will not.
Second, acknowledging that we have much to learn and to “un-learn” about our racial ( and
racist ) history. Malcolm X once said, “Untruths have to be untold. We have to be untaught before we
can be taught, and once untaught, we ourselves can unteach others.” He thus stated the implication of his
belief that injustice in America is sustained by a not accidental strategy of miseducation and omission.
The bottom line is that most of us have been taught many half-truths and untruths about our nation’s
dealings with communities of color.
If “truth is the basis, foundation, and mother of justice,” then an important contribution of Jesuit higher
education toward a racially just society is fostering a deeper and truer knowledge of this nation’s legacy
of racial animus and privilege. Our curricula should insure that no one graduates from our institutions
without a sustained engagement with the reality of racial injustice. This is wholly and entirely consistent
with our institutions’ mission to discover and disseminate knowledge. This leads to a pressing question:
How do our curricula both reflect and respect the intellectual contributions of the majority of the human
race? For we cannot fulfill the mission of discovering and disseminating knowledge of the human
condition if, by omission or silence, we ignore, downplay, or disparage insights and knowledge arising
from the majority of humankind.
Third, accepting that solidarity with the racially “other” means living in the midst of human
conflict. I teach courses that focus on race, white supremacy, and religious complicity. Students are
often bewildered, confused, and dismayed as they encounter new knowledge, question previously held
beliefs, and face the uncomfortable truth that religious leaders have not always been agents of social
justice. Sometimes they express their discomfort in less than mature ways. And, as this winter’s
controversy at Marquette demonstrated, fostering honest engagement with racial privilege generates
intense and often passionate resistance. Radical responses to unjust suffering, what Father Kolvenbach
detailed as a core component of Jesuit higher education, will generate not only sincere
misunderstandings but also polemical counterattacks. The road to a just society must go through the
path of social conflict.
Untruths have to be untold. We
have to be untaught before we
can be taught, and once
untaught, we ourselves can
unteach others. - Malcolm X
“
Institutions, because of their instincts for self preservation, are inherently averse to conflict and risk. Yet,
the unique nature of institutions founded upon an Ignatian charism demands a different and even
counter-intuitive approach. There is no other way we can be faithful to our mission of truth in the midst
of social injustice. To paraphrase the insight of Martin Luther King, Jr., the ultimate measure of our
institutional integrity is not where we stand in times of convenience and comfort but where and how we
stand in times of challenge and controversy.
At the very least, we must make it absolutely clear – effectively and not only rhetorically – that intolerant
words, actions, or postings will not be tolerated on our campuses. Students, staff, and faculty of color
must not only know this but also feel it as an existential commitment from the highest levels of the
university. How we engage the controversies of witnessing truth in a climate of injustice will often be a
matter of deep discernment. Yet the commitment to doing so, and accepting the inevitable risks that such
a stance entails, are the acid tests of fidelity to our Ignatian values.
Finally, being beacons of hope. The promotion of truth inherently undermines ideological appeals to
“personal integrity” that evade the demands of justice. It necessarily generates obstacles and resistance.
Yet, this is consistent with the spirit of the Spiritual Exercises as those who engage them move from a
contemplation of the suffering Jesus to an encounter with the risen Christ. The resurrection is not an
escape from conflict. Rather, it summons us to engage conflictual reality in light of a new experience: an
experience of being loved beyond death. This fills one with the courage to struggle for a justice founded
on truth, in the words of St. Ignatius, “not counting the cost.” Because no cost is too great in the light of
such great love.
In teaching about racial justice and white supremacy, I have learned that it is important to leave students
with a sense of hope. This is not the facile optimism that maintains that good always prevails over evil,
and sooner rather than later. But it is the hope that believes that good ultimately (though not always)
prevails, and often at a great price. This is the hope to which the Ignatian Exercises lead us. It is the only
hope that is adequate in the face of the long and bitter struggle that racial justice requires. It is an
important contribution that our institutions, each in their own way, can offer to our fellow citizens.
The “service of faith.” The “promotion of justice.” The “quest for truth.” Witnessing to the inherent links
between these realities in concrete and radical ways is the summons of Jesuit higher education in the
midst of unjust racial suffering.
Bryan N. Massingale (https://www.fordham.edu/info/23704/theology_faculty/10228/bryan_massingale) is
James and Nancy Buckman Professor of Theological and Social Ethics at Fordham University in New York.
He is the author of Racial Justice and the Catholic Church (http://www.orbisbooks.com/racial-justice-and-
the-catholic-church.html)(Orbis, 2010 ).
ONLINE EXCLUSIVE:
Rev. Bryan N. Massingale, theologian at Fordham University, addressed the AJCU Commitment to Justice
Conference on August 11, 2017. Reading the signs of the times, particularly with regard to racial justice, he
challenges Jesuit universities to move more intentionally toward mission integrity in order to make our
https://www.fordham.edu/info/23704/theology_faculty/10228/bryan_massingale
http://www.orbisbooks.com/racial-justice-and-the-catholic-church.html
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Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident