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Voices from the Black Belt
The Cry Of The Black
Belt - Christian Education
"If any man hear my voice and open the
door."
In a discussion of the Negro
problem it is eminently appropriate the
Freedman and his neighbor be accorded the
privilege of expressing their respective
views. The thoughts expressed in this
chapter have been gleaned principally from
the columns of the Afro-American, a colored
weekly, published by the faculty of Biddle
University, Charlotte, North Carolina.
The problem of the Negro relates to his
capacity for improvement and self-support.
Is the American Negro, after centuries of
slavery that kept the race in an infantile
condition, capable of development and self
support?
Over this question the people of our country
have expressed differing opinions, many
insisting that the servant condition is the
better one for the American Negro. The
Presbyterian Standard, published at
Charlotte, N. C., a section of country in
which the latter sentiment still prevails,
recently bore this testimony to their
progress.
"While it is true of them as a mass that
they are an infantile race, it is not true
of them in many individual cases. There are
thousands of them, who have advanced
wonderfully during the last fifty years.
They have made progress in every line. They
are owning more farms every year, and in our
cities they are buying homes, which
sometimes would do credit to a more
enlightened people. Their Churches are not
only built in better taste, but their
preachers are becoming better educated, and
are exerting a stronger moral influence than
ever before."
This frank statement fairly represents the
sentiment of the thoughtful Christian people
of the south. Some who have thought
otherwise have been led to admit that,
"while great advance has been made by a race
only fifty years old, it is still in its
infancy and therefore in the servant
condition." Nor is it any exception in this
respect.
Through adversity and hard treatment, the
Irish people who first came to this country
were largely in a servant condition. They
accepted it. They became our domestics and
built our railroads. But "Pat" is not on the
railroad now. He is found occupying the seat
of the chief justice, or serving as private
secretary of the president and filling many
other positions of honor and influence
throughout the country.
What is thus true of the Irishman is also
true of other Europeans, who came to this
country. It is an honor to them, that they
truly appreciated their condition, accepted
it and, through an honest and valiant
struggle, rose above that condition to
something better.
The American Negro is now making it evident,
that he is no exception to this general law
of progress, under favorable conditions. It
is neither necessary nor prudent to blind
their eyes in regard to their real condition
and status. Their best friends are those who
encourage them to accept the situation in
which they have been placed by an over
ruling providence, and, through a noble
endeavor, worthy of divine favor, rise to
something better.
Their friends assist them best by aiding and
encouraging them to make this noble
endeavor, without which they cannot rise.
The mass of the people must have native
teachers and preachers to serve as leaders.
This suggests the need of two kinds of
educational facilities. A common industrial
education, that will enable the mass of the
people to achieve success in their daily
avocations; and some special educational
facilities of a higher grade, to prepare the
needed supply of teachers, preachers and
other leaders.
The mass of the people need an education,
the scope of which will reach their
physical, mental and spiritual natures.
Their greatest need is instruction in the
Bible, that it may exert its saving power on
their early lives and animate them with
noble aspirations.
The Cry Of The Black Belt
"They shall cry unto the Lord because of the
oppressors and he shall send them a Savior
and a great one and he shall deliver them."
Isaiah.
The following appeal in behalf of the
Freedmen, by Rev. A. W. Verner, D. D.,
president of Scotia Seminary, Concord, North
Carolina, one of the five normal schools of
the Presbyterian board, especially intended
for girls, is so well and forcibly
expressed, we are sure it will be
appreciated by every reader.
"The urgent call from the black belt is the
cry of souls in distress, the cry of
humanity. Fifty years of unprecedented
progress, in every line of industrial and
intellectual pursuits and religious
development, on the part of a considerable
number of the colored people, show clearly,
that the negro is capable of receiving and
using to good advantage the education and
training of the Christian school."
"Industrial education, that
lacks genuine Christian culture, does not
provide leaders of the right character to
redeem the race, and many of our friends in
the south do not care to open to the Negro
the doors of opportunity, to develop and
manifest the best that is in him. It is
therefore to the Christian Church of the
north and to individuals, who have come to
recognize the bond of human brotherhood, to
whom this infant race still makes its
appeal."
"The sad and degraded condition of great
masses of the race in many localities of the
south ought to be an appeal, silent indeed
but sufficiently strong, to awaken the
sympathy of every one, capable of being
touched by the cry of needy humanity. As a
representative of the great Presbyterian
Church, that has called me into a very
important and necessary field of her work; I
earnestly appeal to our people to do more
for the establishment and fostering of
Christian schools among the great masses of
the black belt."
"The Christian Church and the Christian
school have something to give, that can be
gotten nowhere else. The public school where
established and industrial training where
available are good and necessary. But the
Christian school is still needed and very
greatly, to give moral and spiritual ballast
to the individual. The leaven of gospel
power and purity is needed, to give moral
strength to the character and the highest
degree of usefulness in life."
Christian Education
"Christian education is not narrow, it takes
in every phase of training that is essential
to produce a well developed and useful life.
It touches and tints industrial training
with a brighter and richer glow. It quickens
the faculties of the mind, adds keenness to
the power of perception, forms permanent
habits of industry and strengthens the will
or purpose to do right.
"Christian education emphasizes the fact
that it is not merely book learning-storing
the mind with knowledge of facts or training
the hands to work, but includes moral
elevation, as well as intellectual
development. It includes everything that
tends to make the life purer, better and
more useful. It begets and fosters a spirit
of hopefulness. It develops that patience
and perseverance that is needed for the best
performance of every day's duties.
"Christian education emphasizes personal
purity, purity of the family life and the
sacredness of the marriage relation. Its
whole trend and effect is upward. Its genius
is moral, spiritual, industrial, domestic,
social and individual elevation. It creates
a hunger and thirst for higher and better
things. It is the mountain summit from whose
height one gets a broader vision, a clearer
view of the possibilities and demands of
life and a truer conception of all human
relations.
"This is the provision that must be made for
our black brother. Nothing less will meet
his needs. A great responsibility rests with
negro leaders who have attained a good
degree of intelligence and refinement, but a
greater responsibility still rests upon the
people of richer blessing and greater power.
"If the spirit of true democracy, which
declares, 'opportunity for every one,
according to his capacity and merit,' and
the spirit of Christianity, whose principle
is, 'Help for the weaker as the stronger is
able to give it,' be exercised toward the
negro, many of the difficulties will vanish,
better conditions will prevail and more
desirable results will be secured."
This cry of humanity from the black belt of
our land is very touching and suggestive. It
suggests the negro's greatest and most
urgent needs, the Bible, the Bible school
and the Christian teacher.
It is the silent appeal of Joseph while
passing through the pit and the prison in
the land of Israel's enslavement. Beyond
these dark and unpleasant experiences there
awaited for Joseph a career of great
usefulness in the land of his previous
imprisonment.
Let us recognize the fact
that God has a great use for the Freedman in
this our native land, because he has
providentially brought him here and
increased his number so greatly.
A spirit of true patriotism, as well as the
tie of Christian brotherhood, prompts the
lending of a helping hand and an encouraging
word, while he solves the problem of his own
destiny of great usefulness in the home, the
school, the Church, in the shop, on the farm
and in the fields of professional
opportunity and business activity.
It may be truly said of the
Freedmen that they represent the poor of
this world, of whom the Lord Jesus said, "Ye
have the poor always with you, Me ye have
not always. Inasmuch as ye have done it unto
one of the least of these, my brethren, ye
have done it unto Me."
Choctaw Freedmen
This site
includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied .
Choctaw Freedmen and Oak Hill Industrial
Academy, 1914, Robert Elliott Flickinger
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