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Subject: "Is the Rev. Jamal Bryant the Man to Save Baltimore? (Swipe)" Previous topic | Next topic
BlackSun
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Wed Apr-29-15 04:33 PM

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"Is the Rev. Jamal Bryant the Man to Save Baltimore? (Swipe)"


  

          

Is the Rev. Jamal Bryant the Man to Save Baltimore?
(The charismatic, controversial pastor who helped bury Freddie Gray wants to save his city.)


BY: DANIELLE C. BELTON
Posted: April 29 2015 3:14 PM

http://www.theroot.com/articles/culture/2015/04/is_the_rev_jamal_bryant_the_man_to_save_baltimore.html


The Rev. Jamal Harrison Bryant is emotionally spent.

The past 11 days had taken their toll when The Root spoke with Bryant, 43, over the phone Wednesday. We asked him how he was handling these “hectic” days—his home city of Baltimore mired in charges of police brutality, the suspicious death of Freddie Gray while in police custody, the subsequent peaceful protests and shocking violence leading to the National Guard’s patrolling of another American city. Bryant, who delivered the eulogy at Gray’s funeral Monday, knows that it’s been chaos, but the words to truly describe it have failed him.

Or at least words that didn’t sound “heretical.”

“Hectic” will suffice, among a few other words.

For himself, for the citizens of Baltimore, Bryant sums it up thusly: “It’s been overwhelming.”

Bryant’s search for the right words—whether in describing his experiences or during his talks with the press—is one he takes seriously, one he is careful with, considering his history. The charismatic, hip-hop-style preacher is a rising star both in the black Christian community and as an activist, traveling to Ferguson, Mo., and Staten Island, N.Y., during the Michael Brown and Eric Garner deaths at the hands of police. But his mouth—the same one that gives fiery speeches and motivates the masses—also gets him in trouble. Most notably when he quoted Chris Brown in a sermon that went viral last summer.

In a sermon he gave on black men working to find “a black woman of substance,” he referenced Brown’s hit “Loyal,” which features the chorus, “These hoes ain’t loyal,” which Bryant quoted.

A lot of women were not amused. Brown, known as much for his violent antics as for his former teen-heartthrob status, is still a sore subject for many. A pastor seemingly endorsing misogyny was problematic, especially when nearly 60 percent of the pews in black churches are filled with black women.

Still, Bryant bristles at those who have labeled him a woman-hater and maintains that his intent was in the right place. “Listen to the whole sermon and not listen to a sound bite. Anything in a sound bite can be taken out of context,” he said, adding that people often quote other parts of the viral “Loyal” sermon—namely the “Little girls with dreams become black women with vision” quote—but won’t attribute them to him because he’s been labeled a sexist.

“They wrote ‘writer anonymous,’” Bryant said. “They take my stuff out of that exact same sermon, but you couldn’t ascribe it to me at the time because you’ve connected and vilified me under the Chris Brown quote.”

Still, he regrets the wording. “It was regrettable, and I’m more mindful and conscious of what I speak now,” Bryant said.

Bryant doesn’t want things like the “hoes” comment to derail his cause: fighting against discrimination, police brutality, mass incarceration and other issues affecting African Americans. It’s true, he has views that won’t jibe with those of many progressives. He is against gay marriage, but he also says that he has LGBT people in his church. (“I’m not a gay-basher; nor am I homophobic,” he said.)

Bryant believes that it’s more important to focus on our commonalities than on the one thing we may disagree on—whether that means putting aside gay marriage, getting street gangs to sign a peace treaty in the wake of Freddie Gray’s death or marching alongside Nation of Islam members to protect citizens.

“Do we agree that the prison pipeline has to end? Do we agree that racial profiling is wrong?” he asked. “We can always focus on what we don’t agree on, but is there anything we can agree with?”

One thing that he’s found he can get people to agree with him on is the need for change in Baltimore. Change from police brutality and no accountability.

“People are looking at it just from the last 11 days and don’t realize that Baltimoreans have been under suppressed rage for years,” Bryant said. “We’ve not had protests of any magnitude since 1968, when King was assassinated.”

With Gray’s death, Bryant said, the “Pandora’s box” was opened, and although several investigations have been opened into the 25-year-old’s death, there are still no answers as to what happened to Gray while he was in police custody, sustaining injuries that would eventually kill him.

This lack of justice is what Bryant believes set off youths in Baltimore and sent them out into the streets.

“Look at somebody who is 17. Since you were 14, you’ve had George Zimmerman walk. At 15, 16, had Eric Garner and Tamir Rice. This generation of millennials have not seen a justice victory. They’re not sure whether victory will be served,” Bryant said, adding, “They’ve only seen a black president, but all they’ve seen is white justice.”

Bryant, who had harsh words for President Barack Obama (“Black America has given Obama a pass. Can you imagine if Bush called these black children thugs? We’d be matching down Pennsylvania Avenue now. It’s hard to protest Pharaoh when you think he’s Moses”), was a bit easier on Baltimore’s mayor, Stephanie Rawlings-Blake.

Rawlings-Blake has been under fire for her handling of the riots that eclipsed the protests of Gray’s death, with many blaming her initially lax approach for allowing parts of Baltimore to burn.

“Her greatest failure is not in policy but in P.R. She has not effectively or efficiently communicated what has taken place,” Bryant said.

As an example, Bryant pointed out that Rawlings-Blake announced that the officers involved in Gray’s arrest were put on paid administrative leave, but she didn’t explain that her hands were tied and Maryland statute states that an officer cannot be fired unless he or she is charged with a felony.

Then she made another faux pas in the eyes of Bryant: She called the rioting youths thugs.

“To call these children thugs when her team obviously forgot a year from now, when there’s an election, these thugs will be in voting booths,” Bryant said. “She forgot she’s not a politician—she’s a black politician. You can’t plead the center. You can’t pander to who’s writing the contribution checks at the expense of your base. She’s going to have to do a goodwill tour through the hood to clean that up.”

Because of his dedication to the church (“I’m one of the few people in the world that I’m actually glad to be a pastor. I don’t want to be bishop overseer. I don’t need a robe”) and his vision for Baltimore, Bryant has decided to keep his focus on the grass roots. While he doesn’t know where the next five to 10 years will take him, he is rooted in the belief that he must dedicate himself to changing Baltimore.

“I gotta change my city,” he said. “That’s where all my effort and all my energy is.”


Primal Music For Life!

  

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Is the Rev. Jamal Bryant the Man to Save Baltimore? (Swipe) [View all] , BlackSun, Wed Apr-29-15 04:33 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
I feel Baltimore's time has passed
Apr 29th 2015
1
Hey, it happened for Atlanta with the 96 Olympics.
Apr 29th 2015
3
I say GO forth and do great things Rev. Jamal Bryant!
Apr 29th 2015
2
Wow, I remember when y'all were dogging Rev. Bryant, but now.
Apr 29th 2015
4
I understand you have an agenda, but please fall back on this.
Apr 29th 2015
5
      I do have an agenda, it's call being fair.
Apr 29th 2015
7
           you really are just a terrible human being
Apr 29th 2015
9
           So let me get this right. I support Rev. Bryant's initiative and
Apr 29th 2015
10
           You know what else is fair? Having a leader who didn't prey on teenagers
Apr 29th 2015
11
                The Brother admittedly messed up and owned his error publicly
Apr 29th 2015
12
                     yet u shit on gang members who r trying 2 b positive
Apr 29th 2015
13
                     Let me school you Buck, while you toss a Red Herring.
Apr 29th 2015
15
                     we learned the term for it today: the Dunning-Kruger effect
Apr 29th 2015
18
                     Why don't you do something productive for your future today?
Apr 30th 2015
21
                          you piece of shit ass m'fucker, why dont *you*?
Apr 30th 2015
27
                               Jesus loves you too.
Apr 30th 2015
29
                     You need to understand the shame priority
Apr 30th 2015
28
                     Un-uh...the price for that is you don't get to lead. You missing that po...
Apr 29th 2015
14
                          Who are you to decide who God chooses to lead?
Apr 29th 2015
16
                               Miss me with that annointing shit. He's a professional public figure.
Apr 29th 2015
19
                                    Like I said, Who are you?
Apr 30th 2015
20
                                         . . .
Apr 30th 2015
22
                                              Good Morning sunshine.
Apr 30th 2015
24
I wish we'd get off this messianic tip.
Apr 29th 2015
6
Most of us on the ground are off of it...there are more like Jamal
Apr 29th 2015
8
To say nothing of where it leaves a movement when that person falls
Apr 29th 2015
17
totally agree...
Apr 30th 2015
25
there is no one single person that can "save" Bmore or any other city
Apr 30th 2015
23
Everyone has a role. I appreciate Jamal's efforts...
Apr 30th 2015
26
Word. Elijah Cummings is my dude.
Apr 30th 2015
30
This I can agree on...role(s)...not an avatar
May 01st 2015
32
One man can't Save Baltimore, but Obama can save the country. ??
Apr 30th 2015
31

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