Today, my colleague Zahara Hill and I are launching “The Reconstruction,” a series that celebrates historians and other experts who’ve committed themselves to rebuilding the public’s historical memory at a time when many conservatives are trying their hardest to destroy it.
This is an homage to the authors, lawyers, medical professionals, sports historians, chefs, religious leaders, business people and others who’ve documented the experiences of Black people in their respective fields to ensure that those voices make it into the historical record — and stay there.
And I’m starting today with Black faith leaders.
In Black churches, the “Black radical tradition” refers sometimes to the legacy of church leaders and parishioners who use their faith and their position within the community to push for social justice.
Martin Luther King Jr. is a prime example. Although whitewashed portrayals of King tend to paint him as a docile peacemaker, the reality is that his faith motivated him to espouse views that many people at the time considered too radically progressive.








