The Crossroads Project

From the source: "The Crossroads Project responds to challenges that call for deeper public understanding of and scholarly engagement with Black religious histories and cultures. Facing racial inequities shaping the impact of COVID-19 on Black people, religious communities and leaders have responded, adapting spiritual and material resources to the pandemic. Black religious leaders are articulating moral grounds for social change amidst intensified racial and economic justice activism, and elected officials routinely turn to Black clergy as representatives of “the African American community.” The project emphasizes the diverse landscape of Black religions, reflecting the voices and leadership of those not featured in traditional accounts. Surveys show that African Americans have a consistently high degree of religious participation, even as the number of religiously affiliated Americans declines. In the contemporary context, urgency about the importance of a robust understanding of the complexity of religion in African American history and life animates our work in this project."

Dublin Core

Title

The Crossroads Project

Date

2021

Contributor

Language

Date Created

2022-08-14

Spatial Coverage

United States [n-us]

Abstract

From the source: "The Crossroads Project responds to challenges that call for deeper public understanding of and scholarly engagement with Black religious histories and cultures. Facing racial inequities shaping the impact of COVID-19 on Black people, religious communities and leaders have responded, adapting spiritual and material resources to the pandemic. Black religious leaders are articulating moral grounds for social change amidst intensified racial and economic justice activism, and elected officials routinely turn to Black clergy as representatives of “the African American community.” The project emphasizes the diverse landscape of Black religions, reflecting the voices and leadership of those not featured in traditional accounts. Surveys show that African Americans have a consistently high degree of religious participation, even as the number of religiously affiliated Americans declines. In the contemporary context, urgency about the importance of a robust understanding of the complexity of religion in African American history and life animates our work in this project."

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