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Last Modified on December 21, 2020

AGO Affirms That Black Lives Matter

The American Guild of Organists recognizes and affirms that Black lives matter. We call upon every chapter and all of our members to speak out against racial bias and take action to make the world a better, safer, and more secure place for the members of the Black community.

Now is the time for us to search our souls for ways to be more caring, to be better brothers and sisters to our Black colleagues, and to demonstrate our unwavering support for their professional advancement and success.

The tragic murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25, the equally senseless killing of Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta on June 12, and the death and injury of so many others are heartbreaking and inexcusable. We extend our condolences to their families and friends, and we stand in solidarity with the countless thousands of people around the world who have marched to protest systemic racism against the African-American community.

It is our turn to step up to the challenge. We must listen to diverse voices in crafting solutions to our problems. We must reach out to find new partners to help us chart the best path forward. We must engage.


“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse, and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.”

― Archbishop Desmond Tutu


We are indebted to AGO Past President Eileen Guenther who brought to our attention the accompanying commentary which she recently updated at our request. Dr. Guenther in turn has acknowledged with thanks the theologians Drs. Douglas Strong, Willie Jennings, and Soong-Chan Rah, who developed most of the material in the post.

BLACK LIVES MATTER

It was not ALL lives that were ripped from their homes in Africa;

It was not ALL lives that were separated from families and marched to the West African coast;

It was not ALL lives put into the dank, dark tombs of the slave castles;

It was not ALL lives crammed into European (and, in North America, particularly British) slave ships;

It was not ALL lives laid side by side like cargo in the hulls of the ships;

It was not ALL lives that were force fed because they staged hunger strikes;

It was not ALL lives that were casually thrown overboard to be devoured by the sharks that followed the slave ships;

It was not ALL lives that were brought to the New World as slave labor;

It was not ALL lives stripped naked and put on the auction block;

It was not ALL lives that were bought and sold by “God-fearing Christians”;

It was not ALL lives that were whipped and beaten on the plantations;

It was not ALL lives that were systematically and repeatedly raped by white slave owners;

It was not ALL lives who were hounded by attack dogs, beat with cruel instruments of torture, and intentionally sold away from their families when they dared to try and escape the horrors of slavery;

It was not ALL lives who were daily assaulted in their very identity, denied that they were made in the image of God;

It was not ALL lives who were repeatedly told they were less than human;

It was not ALL lives who were diminished by the 3/5 compromise, the Missouri compromise, the Compromise of 1850, and the Dred Scott decision;

It was not ALL lives whose communities were wiped out because they sought to build a life for themselves after emancipation;

It was not ALL lives that were told “separate but equal” with the “equal” never being equal;
It was not ALL lives but black lives that hung from trees throughout the country during the Jim Crow era;

It was not ALL lives, it was Addie Mae Collins, Cynthia Wesley, Carole Roberson, and Carol Denise McNair, four little black lives who were blown up at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church;

It was not ALL lives that were beset by attack dogs and by fire hoses;

It was not ALL lives but the black lives of Emmitt Till, Medgar Evers, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X who were systematically assassinated;

It was not ALL lives that have been victims of police violence, but it was the black life of Michael Brown;

It was not ALL lives, it was the black lives of Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, Freddie Gray, Sandra Bland;

It was not ALL lives, it was the black lives of Rev. Clementa Pinckney, Sharonda Singleton, Tywanza Sanders, Ethel Lance, Susie Jackson, Cynthia Hurd, Myra Thompson, Daniel Simmons, Sr., DePayne Middleton Doctor at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston;

It was not ALL lives, it was the black life of Alton Sterling;

It was not ALL lives, it was the black life of Philando Castile;

It was not ALL lives, it was the black of lives of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, Rayshard Brooks…and so many others;

It is not ALL lives that are targeted with unequal charges for drug offences, thereby resulting in mass incarceration;

It is not ALL lives that the prison industrial complex exploits.

These historical events did not involve the destruction and death of ALL lives, they were black lives that have been systematically targeted and abused by American society. Yes, all lives matter, including those of police officers, but black lives have NOT mattered for 400 years, and that’s why we must vehemently and consistently assert that they matter now–and in the future.

We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.

― Elie Wiesel

“There comes a time when silence is betrayal.”

“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”

“In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”

― Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.

AGO partner organizational statements on how Black lives matter…

RCCO (Royal Canadian College of Organists)

EMA (Early Music America)

NPM (National Association of Pastoral Musicians)

ACDA (American Choral Directors Association)

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Katherine Comstock says

    November 18, 2020 at 6:36 pm

    #SorryNotSorry but the Murder of George Floyd is completely different from the death of Rayshard Brooks and comparing the two shows a lack of study, a lack of the necessary context and a very glaring observation on White Liberalism’s continued and failed attempts to look relevant. If anyone took the time to study the facts surrounding the attempted arrest and subsequent death of Rayshard Brooks, instead of giving into the culture of click bate and social media “news” this wouldn’t be an issue. Especially shocking coming from an organization and a community that is culturally dedicated to education and higher learning. Leaving out the necessary nuance does nothing for our society with regards to moving forward and making effective change in the world of rooting out systemic racism and Police reform. As a member, this statement does not represent me. Thank you! -Katherine

  2. Katherine Comstock says

    September 9, 2020 at 5:29 pm

    “the equally senseless killing of Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta on June 12……………”

    if I may, no. The death of Rayshard Brooks is NOT equal to the death of George Floyd and saying so causes more damage to the cause. The fact is, we can’t look at every single death at the hands of a police officer in the same light as George Floyd. Floyd was sensessly murdered, I will not argue that. But blindly comparing his death to every single police related death that has come before, and has since come after, makes for very broad and more emotionally (not logically) centered generalities. It completely leaves out the legitimate degrees of nuance and conveniently wipes away the very real facts that NEED to be discussed in the on-going dialogs on Law Enforcement in the 21st century. You really want to know the facts? There is NOTHING that would have stopped Rayshard Brooks from taking the officer’s Gun instead of his taser. Even then, there is still nothing that would have stopped him from using that taser to eventually steal the officer’s Gun and/or cause lasting harm to himself, or someone else. Did anyone who composed this statement actually watch the FULL 45 minute video? Or take 20 minutes to ask and familiarize themselves with the bias training the Atlanta Police Department undergoes? Isn’t this organization about education about the integrity of research? Or are we just trying to appear trendy? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhdpG2XzRXQ just some thoughts. –Katherine

  3. Richard Janowski says

    July 28, 2020 at 10:22 pm

    You indicate that AGO’s policy statement was intended only to affirm that Black lives matter, not intended as an endorsement of the organization Black Lives Matter. My question is why now does AGO feel compelled to make such a statement. Is it because Floyd and Brooks were killed by police officers? What about the hundreds of black killings each and every week in our urban areas mostly by other blacks? What about black Milwaukee preacher Bernell Trammell who was shot in the face and killed near his church? This happened a few days ago, yet not a peep from the mainstream media. Is it because he was a Trump supporter? I wonder.

    Social injustice has been around for a long time, right? My family survived the Nazi work camps during WW ll and then post-war displacement to come to the greatest country in the world. They had no money and little education and were often the butt of Polish jokes. They worked hard and overcame many obstacles, including sub-standard working conditions, to achieve a small part of the American dream. They were never slave owners. They never complained about how unfair the system was or whether they were victims of discrimination. When we drove around and saw a beautiful home, my parents would say “with hard work and perseverance, you can have a home just like that.” Not, ‘we dont live in a nice home, because the system doesnt work for people like us’.

    In my opinion, AGO is focusing on a small part of the much larger problem facing more than just those who are killed by police. Also, if you really wanted to to take stand against racial injustice, you could have done so without using the words associated with a marxist, Anti-American organization whose co-founder refers to whites as sub-human genetic defects. That is why my wife withdrew her membership.

  4. John West says

    July 16, 2020 at 8:53 pm

    It’s disappointing to see so many miss the ENTIRE point of the statement. But it is not surprising considering the demographic of the AGO in general. As a black American, thank you for this statement.

  5. George M. Giblin Jr says

    July 13, 2020 at 3:24 pm

    The AGO statement in support of racist positions as those advanced by persons who apparently believe they are speaking against intolerance is indefensible. Stating that “Black Lives Matter” whether referring to some organization using that title, or to people who are attempting to live lives opposed to prejudice, is a racist statement in my opinion. One cannot identify “Black” life as something of peculiar value without revealing something less than the “color-blind” identification of inherent value in all human beings as so well exemplified in the words of persons such as Dr. Martin Luther King. It gives me concern that the protest rioters will soon be out tearing down King’s statues/memorials, along with others who have made such great contributions to this country. The AGO should retract the statement.

  6. Max Walker says

    July 1, 2020 at 7:42 pm

    That absolute, sophomoric drivel that you posted by AGO Past President Eileen Guenther is an outrage. You say that you didn’t intend to support the BLM org, but that’s what you did. So either you are outright lying, or you made an ill-advised, uninformed, foolish, and offensive statement. Then you doubled down on it with Mme Guenther’s writing. Either way, you have lost credibility as a serious organization and as a serious National Council. Like others have said, I am out. I cannot stand under your banner if you no longer even know what you stand for.

  7. Max Walker says

    June 24, 2020 at 12:55 am

    Black Lives Matter is an openly Marxist organization that is at open ideological war with the founding principles of the USA and of the AGO. They are a violent insurgent group, not civil rights activists. As I type this, BLM is burning our flag near the White House. Is this what you stand with?! I call on the AGO National Council to recant and to denounce BLM.

    • James Thomashower says

      June 24, 2020 at 1:02 pm

      The AGO’s policy statement was intended only to affirm that Black lives matter. The statement was neither written nor disseminated with the intention of endorsing an organization. We were supporting a principle. The initial caps were used for emphasis only, nothing more. — James Thomashower

    • Chris Walchesky says

      July 2, 2020 at 8:09 pm

      I was unsure what I thought of the radical, pro-abortion, Marxist front, BLM group until I saw the endorsement of…

      *checks notes*

      The American Guild of Organists?

  8. Stephen T Roberts says

    June 18, 2020 at 5:01 pm

    Whatever one may think of this issue, and the earlier actions of the AGO in regard to the “Me, too” movement, one question should be obvious: why on earth does the AGO have to get involved with such controversial matters? The AGO is rapidly losing membership, and the cancellation of the national convention is bound to have severe and negative financial ramifications. Sometimes I get the idea that those people at AGOHQ are just rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. I am a long time member of the Clarence Dickinson Society who originally had planned to leave a large portion of my estate to the AGO. Now I shall only leave a pittance. To Hell with this organization!

    • James Thomashower says

      June 24, 2020 at 12:54 pm

      Stephen, thank you for your comments. The AGO National Council chose to prepare and disseminate a statement affirming that the Guild supports the fundamental principle that Black lives matter. This decision was reached after thoughtful discussion and debate in response to the extraordinary and emotionally charged outpouring of international grief and outrage over racial injustice. We could have chosen to stay absolutely silent, but as we thought about and discussed that option, we felt the best way forward was to join with other organizations like NPM, ACDA, and EMA that have stepped up to issue their own statements in support of those who protest racial injustice.

  9. Dorothy Riess MD says

    June 18, 2020 at 4:41 pm

    Is this an official statement from AGO, or your personal opinion? Since when does AGO “support” an organization without approval of the membership? It is my understanding that BLM is a front for DNC.

    • James Thomashower says

      June 24, 2020 at 12:40 pm

      Yes, this is an official statement of the AGO. It is not a statement in support of any organization such as BlackLivesMatter.org nor was it ever intended to be, but rather a statement supporting the concept that Black lives matter. We simply emphasized the point by putting initial caps at the beginning of all three words.

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