Logo

 

Banner Image:   National-News-banner-Purple
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet


'Implement policies that help, rather than hinder, Black and Brown communities' 


That was the message from the Racial Justice Advocacy Forum to the British Government at its launch on 15 February


RJAF launch

 
The Racial Justice Advocacy Forum (RJAF) is calling on the British Government to commit itself to being justice-driven, and to implement policies that help, rather than hinder, Black and Brown communities in this country.

At a packed Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church in London, attendees at the RJAF launch heard a number of speakers, many of whom were young, discuss the importance of justice and the need for Christians to speak truth to those in power. The RJAF, which is an ecumenical Christian entity that seeks to speak prophetically on behalf of Black and Brown Christians to the Government on racial injustice challenges and reparations, comprises of representatives from various Christian institutions, parachurch groups and Christians of all traditions in Britain and Ireland.
 
The launch, which took the form of a church service at the historic central London church where Revd Dr Martin Luther King Jr once preached, included attendees from all over the country. The audience heard about the RJAF’s various activities and engagements over the last two years, such as responding to the British Government’s “Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities” report (March 2021); the Metropolitan Police Service’s (MPS) treatment of “Child Q” (January 2022); the British Government’s “Nationalities and Borders Bill” (February 2022); the racial discrimination faced by Black and Brown peoples amidst the Russian invasion of Ukraine (March 2022); and a meeting with the MPS to discuss police engagement with Black communities after a spurt of stop and search stories involving young people (July 2022).

Speaking after the launch, the Revd Wale Hudson-Roberts, a Baptist minister and co-chair of the RJAF commented, ‘Since our inception a few years ago, we’ve been busy working alongside Black and Brown Christians on addressing the racism and inequality that impacts our communities in this country. We must all take the issue of racism and inequality seriously if we want to see a society that has true equity.’
 
Richard Reddie, Director of Justice and Inclusion at Churches Together in Britain and Ireland, and the other co-chair added: ‘We are very keen to play a mediation role between local communities and the Metropolitan Police to build confidence and trust between the two. We sought to do this after the fatal shooting of Chris Kaba in Streatham, southwest London in September 2022.
 
‘We also thought that it would be important to write to the British Home Secretary to express our deep concern regarding the incident of a mass assault on a Black teenage girl in Ashford on 6 February 2023. Our young people are often treated in ways that are demeaning and degrading, which can never augur well if we want to see them achieve great things.’
 
The launch also included the announcement of the RJAF’s work to equip church leaders on improving their engagement with the police, as well as a ‘reparations’ conference in London on 14 October 2023.

Finally, the audience heard how the RJAF has successfully hosted half a dozen webinars focusing on reparations for African chattel enslavement from theological, restitution, economic and educational perspectives.
 
Mr Hudson-Roberts ended by saying, ‘Our work is undergirded by our collective theological positions on justice. The Bible shapes who we are and what we do.’

 

Baptist Times, 17/02/2023
    Post     Tweet
Project Violet findings released 
Project Violet is a major study into women’s experience of ministry, which has sought to understand more fully the theological, missional, and structural obstacles women ministers face in the Baptist community in England and Wales.
New church planting programme at St Hild
In conjunction with Asbury Seminary, USA and the Centre of Church Multiplication in London, the St Hild Centre for Church Planting is launching a professional doctorate programme in Church Planting in Post-Christendom Europe
'We retain deep misgivings about the safety of the Rwanda Bill' 
Churches have reiterated their opposition to the Rwanda Bill, which passed in Parliament on 23 April
'God is doing a new thing among young adults'   
There’s been a number of ‘firsts’ taking place among young adults in our Baptist movement. It seems to me God is doing a new thing in our midst - and the younger generations are leading it, writes Isabella Senior
Baptist colleges launch projects exploring science and ministry 
Cardiff Baptist College and Regent’s Park College are among four theological colleges in the UK and Republic of Ireland to have been awarded funding to develop teaching resources incorporating science, ethics, and theology
New Firestarters conversations for 2024 
Three new Firestarters conversations, which enable congregations to rediscover a passion to help new people become Christians, are taking place in Baptist churches this year
     Latest News 
    Posted: 26/02/2024
    Posted: 08/12/2023