I'M SORRY, SO SORRY
New York's Suffragan Bishop Catherine Roskam riffs on the Focus of Evil in the Modern World:
I am sorry, Africa.
Of all the places we have exploited -- and we have exploited many -- it is only from you that we also have stolen the people.
I am sorry that we took your people and held them in bondage for centuries, a holocaust of perhaps 20 million souls.
Africa, we transported your children in conditions unfit for any living creature. When they became sick or died, we threw them overboard, like so much unwanted ballast. Those that completed the excruciating journey, we sold like cattle, auctioning them off to the highest bidder.
This past summer, after going to Tanzania on pilgrimage with Carpenter’s Kids, my husband and I spent two days in Zanzibar. We visited the Anglican cathedral there, built over the site of the old slave market. We saw the tiny airless chamber below, the only one preserved to show how inhumanely the slaves were kept while waiting to be sold. We saw also the inlaid marble circle in front of the altar marking the place of the whipping post where slaves were tied one after another and whipped to see if they would cry. If they did, they brought in a lower price.
What allows such brutality to rest in the hearts of those purporting to be Christian? Where was compassion?
I am sorry, Africa. I benefit still from that brutality. The whole U.S. economy is based on stolen goods. It was built on the backs of slave labor, on the trafficking of human beings and on the precious gems and metals ripped out of the bowels of Africa over the years. The first stock sold on the stock market were African people. I am sorry. Africa, we deprived your people of language and culture, forcing upon them new names, new language, new identities.
We heinously stole their stories from them. We continued to abuse them physically, using the whip and working them to early death. We split up families, selling off children, separating husbands and wives. And to our deepest shame, we raped your women and your girl children, using some as sex slaves.
And we blasphemed against the Bible by using it as an instrument of oppression instead of liberation.
Our evil did not stop with slavery, Africa. Even after abolition, we continued to abuse your children. Every time black folk started to climb up the ladder of success behind us, we put a foot in their face and kicked them down. When they began to get just a taste of equality under the law, we changed the laws, or ignored them. We ambushed, beat and lynched in the name of Christ, burning crosses as warnings, turning our symbol of love and redemption into one of hatred and damnation. We would not let your people get ahead.
And so on for way too many more tedious paragraphs.
One notes that the Bishop conveniently left out the fact that 300,000 Northerners died to eradicate slavery. But let's get down to brass tacks. Is this country perfect? Of course not; no people or nation in the history of the world has ever been perfect. Is there racism here? Of course. We are by no means unique in that regard and Ms. Roskam knows it.
But if I truly believed that my country was as evil as the Bishop thinks her country is, I would, for the sake of my soul and my Christian witness, abandon it forthwith. Ms. Roskam, on the other hand, thinks her country is about the most vile place there has ever been or ever will be but has no problem living here and benefiting from its evil.
So if Catherine Roskam truly believes that the United States of America is anywhere near the ridiculous caricature she describes here, the fact that she still lives here means that she is not really sorry about anything but is engaged in that favorite Episcopal pastime. Cheap, pseudo-moral posturing.

Submitted by Horseman
at 3/25/2008 7:28:00 PM| Chris, I will restrain myself from getting off-thread by slicing apart your gross oversimplification of "300,000 Northerners died to eradicate slavery" and stick to the point - Ms. Roskam is indeed wallowing in the false mea culpa, mea nauseum culpa of the liberal left, by offering lip service apologia for acts and events that took place 140+ years in the past. Such drivel is an insult to those people who really did suffer from the evils of slavery because it is based in total ignorance of the realities of the slave trade. Before one can offer a sincere, meaningful apology, it first helps to have been even somewhat at fault for the acts concerned, but it even moreso helps to know what exactly it is for which one is apologizing. What I simply don't get with this sort of silliness is what people such as Ms. Roskam hope to accomplish. Would not more be gained by celebrating the progress we have made since the passage of the 13th Amendment and by striving to redouble our efforts to duplicate that progress as we move into the future? Unfortunately, to do so, we need to understand where we've been and why we were there, which those such as Ms. Roskam apparently find far too taxing and cumbersome when there is an agenda to be pursued. Pseudo-moral, indeed. |

Submitted by Mrs. Lawrence
at 3/25/2008 8:05:23 PMFirst, Catherine Roskam has a husband?
Second, Catherine Roskam has most noticably failed to apologize for Bishop Spong's Lambeth 1998 anti-African and incredibly prejudiced comments:
Spong was interviewed for The Church of England Newspaper by its deputy editor, Andrew Carey, who happens to be the Archbishop of Canterbury's son. Africans, said Spong, had "moved out of animism into a very superstitious kind of Christianity." They had not "faced the intellectual revolution" of the West or the discoveries of Copernicus and Einstein. |

Submitted by ccinnova
at 3/25/2008 8:28:48 PM| I await +Roskam's apology to the 40-50 million unborn children killed by legalized abortion in the United States over the last 35 years. But I seriously doubt I'll hear +Roskam issue such an apology anytime soon, if ever. |

Submitted by Jim the Fireman
at 3/25/2008 8:30:51 PM| If Ms Roskam did a little research she would find that the African tribal leaders were complicit in slavery. Slave traders didn't just go and hunt down potential slaves in the jungles of Africa. Doing that would get them killed. Rather, tribal leaders rounded up potential slaves (prisoners taken in war, trouble makers in the tribe, etc.) and sold them to the slave traders in return for rum and other goodies. Indeed, Africa still is a location where slavery is practiced. But somehow we are the focus of Ms Roskam's venting of bile. |

Submitted by Jim the Fireman
at 3/25/2008 8:33:36 PM| The honorable Ms Roskam should spend some time reading "Time on The Cross: The Economics of American Negro Slavery" by Mssrs. Fogel and Engerman. It is one of the few books written on the subject that sticks to history as it happened and not how we wished it happened. |

Submitted by JM
at 3/25/2008 8:46:20 PM| Indeed, Jim. Roskam's delusions about slavery are ultimately demeaning and insulting to blacks. To think that they would let a few white men invade their lands and take thousands of them prisoner without offering stout resistance is absurd. For the most part, the initial sellers of slaves were blacks. |

Submitted by Ken
at 3/25/2008 8:48:37 PM| Ya'll beat me to the best comments. Jim the Fireman gets it right about who actually stole these people. It's my understanding that the slave-traders were Arabs or English. Undoubtedly, some American traders were involved as well, but when it's all really about you, they don't count. Nothing really does count, does it, outside of American white people? Meaning, the right American white people: upper-middle class Episcopalian white people, when you get right down to it. We are the only ones that matter on this earth and everything is a reaction to us, the center of the known universe. I'm sure Ms. Roskam feels really good about herself now and, of course, it sells well in the New York Times. And we can't let history get in the way of that, now can we. Finally, consider what happened to conquered peoples in other cultures. Think: human sacrifice. Sort of like the murder of 40+ million unborn babies. |

Submitted by Peter Brown
at 3/25/2008 9:18:28 PMWait a second: Zanzibar? Perhaps Roskam doesn't know that, of the slaves sold from Zanzibar, barely any wound up in the New World. The East African slave trade was generally carried on by Muslims and was eventually suppressed by the Royal Navy. Of course, Americans (and Christians) were active participants in the West African slave trade. (Providing an important end market does count as active participation. Kind of like the drug trade, which thrives in no small part on US demand.) On the flip side, I still think Roskam's attention would be better focused on our sins, rather than those of (some of) our ancestors. Peace, |

Submitted by Grandmother
at 3/25/2008 9:53:10 PM| According to the census of 1860, there were 4 million slaves in the United States. Of course that included children, etc. Wonder what happened to the rest of them? Oh right, I remember some congressman or other said they were dumped overboard if they were sick, or they died, and "to this day, the sharks follow the trail through the ocean".. I kid you not. Grandmother |

Submitted by Truth Unites... and Divides
at 3/25/2008 9:56:12 PM| "...engaged in that favorite Episcopal pastime: Cheap, pseudo-moral posturing." Yup. That sums it up. Left-wing, puffed-up-with-self-righteous-pride pharasaicalism over their social justice gospel. Just makes you want to puke. |

Submitted by LP
at 3/25/2008 10:02:39 PM| When she and her fellow PEcUSA bishops apologize to the world for their complicity in the abandonment of the faith, for the handing of the laity over to damnation by their false teaching, and for their willing cooperation with Satan by their apostasy and rejection of Scripture and Tradition... then I'll be impressed.
pax, |

Submitted by LaVallette
at 3/26/2008 1:44:20 AM| Ms. Roskam, hubby and all her family have decided to exchange places and all they own with a poor African family of equivalent size and all their penury. If slavery had not been abolished Ms.Roskam and family would have far preferred to exchange with a slave family in Africa Ms. Roskam wants to achieve sainthood by becoming the American Christian example of what restitution is. After all by their fruit you shall know them. Hmmmmmmmmmmmm. On second thoughts Ms Roskam, in the spirit of Christian generosity, has decided that she would much prefer to pass the privilege of restitutional sainthood through such an 'exchange" to a more deserving white family> |

Submitted by Wilbur Foss-Empie
at 3/26/2008 2:20:19 AM| Ken and Peter are correct: Zanzibar was the center of the Arab, Muslim slave trade, which began centuries before and continued long after the Atlantic slave trade was stopped by British Christians and slavery was ended by Northern US soldiers. It was British colonial forces (Christian if anything) that stopped the Zanzibar trade. So Roskam is really denouncing Arab Muslims here, along with the black African leaders who profited tremendously by selling captives from other tribes they had raided (as did the local rulers in west Africa). I hope she will apologize for her racist and Islamophobic screed. |

Submitted by Matthew
at 3/26/2008 4:15:01 AM| Yet another meaningless apology for something she isn't really responsible for to a people who didn't really suffer for it. Slavery existed. It was horrible, mean and cruel. The slaves are all dead. The slave owners are all dead. Even the cotton and tobacco that the slaves harvested has long since vanished into dust. The descendants of the slaves live here, in the Caribbean and in Brazil. The people in Africa are the descendants of the people who sold the slaves to the white men. You have to love the Episcopalian bishops. They do love their soundbites, don't they? They apologize for that which they did not do and do not apologize for that which they did do. And there is no health in them. |

Submitted by Sibyl
at 3/26/2008 5:42:09 AM| "They apologize for that which they did not do and do not apologize for that which they did do. And there is no health in them." Yep, Matthew, slavery to sin is one slavery TE'c' is perpetuating by purposely ignoring the fact that all sin including unholy sexual acts *and thoughts* are sinful, harmful, addictive. Sin is any departure from God's dominion, image and design. Sin is a lie against Truth, Love and Life as defined by God's Word. Sin(done by and to us) deceives, disorients and distorts our identities and our behavior. Sin has consequences, often a snowball effect because our thoughts, words and deeds change the chemistry, structure and function of the different areas of brain cumulatively and interactively. Only confession (returning and agreeing with God about sin and its evil and the harm it causes) and the power of God can reverse the effects of sin. Unfortunately, TE'c' wants to close the hospital and declare that every twisted soul is 'well' and 'good' and deny the only Savior, Jesus Christ. |

Submitted by Whitestone
at 3/26/2008 5:52:15 AM|
John 8:34 - "Jesus answered the, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin...If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed."
Hebrews 7:25 - "Wherefore, He is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by Him, seeing He ever liveth to make intercession for them." |

Submitted by Russell
at 3/26/2008 7:11:55 AM| Goodness she hates America. She might even say God#$*n America. But she is Episcopalian. I suspect that this sermon is a jump to the defense of of OBama and J. Wright. "The whole U.S. economy is based on stolen goods. It was built on the backs of slave labor" A staggering hyperbolic accusation that has never been substantiated by studies because it just is not true. Was there an impact, of course but the whole economy, don't think so. |

Submitted by VaAnglican
at 3/26/2008 7:34:16 AM| Gee, there must be some mistake. The picture was of Roger Ebert. |

Submitted by dwstroudmd
at 3/26/2008 8:20:28 AM| Hmmm, she forgot the parts about the tribal competition to deliver slaves to Islamic and Christian traders, the utilization of Africa by the Brits, the Dutch, the Islamics, and she ignores the on-going slave trade and rape of the continent by the Islamics and the Chinese. I'm wondering how well she even googled the subject before emitting this methanous burst likely to harm the atmosphere? And she completely ignores the good done for Africa by President Bush's policies over the past 8 years - which even TIME and NEWSWEEK had to acknowledge! Gee, do you think she has an agenda or sumpin'? |

Submitted by David+
at 3/26/2008 8:37:18 AM| If this lady did all she says she did toward Africans, then she needs to resign the office of bishop immediately. |

Submitted by Tom (St. Louis)
at 3/26/2008 8:38:13 AM| The first stock sold on the stock market? I don't think so! She might have written a thoughtful piece about slavery but all she has done is shown what a twit she is. |

Submitted by st. anonymous
at 3/26/2008 8:43:33 AM| And we created AIDS, too. Don't forget we created AIDS to kill off the African population, because, uh... uh ... I'll have to get back to you on that one... |

Submitted by Wild Bill
at 3/26/2008 9:08:41 AM| What was the first listed company on the New York Stock Exchange? Bank of New York, which was the first corporate stock traded under the Buttonwood tree in 1792, and the first listed company on the NYSE. |

Submitted by Gregg the obscure_
at 3/26/2008 9:55:10 AM| In the Gospels, Jesus was most highly appreciative of those who went out of their way to point out the sins of others, didn't He? Certainly much better than drudging up one's own dirty laundry. |

Submitted by Scott W.
at 3/26/2008 10:08:26 AM| Actually I don't think she hates America nearly as much as she loves herself. America-hating is just a handy script in the play called, "ME,ME,ME!" |

Submitted by Christopher Hathaway
at 3/26/2008 10:13:06 AM| She's apologizing to a land mass. She's apologizing to A LAND MASS! As for those fundamenatlist living on that land mass, the ones just a few years out of animism, well who the hell do they think they are telling us how to behave as Christians? Meanwhile, I'm off to Kansas to apologize to the Prairie for wiping out the buffalo. |

Submitted by Tom
at 3/26/2008 11:20:21 AM| "Those that completed the excruciating journey, we sold like cattle...." Shouldn't it be "Those who..."? "Those that" would be for, uh, things. Like cattle. |

Submitted by Daniel Muller
at 3/26/2008 12:30:35 PM| Actually, although "who" would be more typical, "that" is also correct as a relative pronoun for persons. At the same time, atypical grammar is useful for calling attention to oneself. ;-) |

Submitted by Matthew
at 3/26/2008 1:24:04 PM| I think I'd better demand that the entire country of Canada apologize to me for the seventh grade. Everyone except for that cute redheaded girl who lived across the street from us. And the Canadiens. They were awesome that year. But all the rest of Canada owes me! |

Submitted by Alice C. Linsley
at 3/26/2008 1:25:12 PM| I want to see the Iraqis and the Iranians apologize to the Jews for kidnapping their forebearers and taking them as slaves to Babylon and Persia. |

Submitted by Ken
at 3/26/2008 1:49:39 PM| She's apologizing to A LAND MASS! And interesting and impostant point. Of course, she would say she is apologizing to the African people, but her words betray her, just as her dishonest (or perhaps ignorant) twisting of history betrays her. Like most white liberals, she has really just found another way to dehumanize black folks. |

Submitted by Truth Unites... and Divides
at 3/26/2008 1:57:46 PM| Does Roger Ebert have an identical twin sister, or did he have a transgendered sex change? Anyways, two thumbs down, waaaay down! |

Submitted by Dean Reed
at 3/26/2008 1:59:30 PM| Christopher W, No need to apologize for wiping out the buffalo. In fact, it is a good thing. Less methane released into the atmosphere. By wiping them out, we may have shown easter love to a couple islanders in Fiji. |

Submitted by HOB
at 3/26/2008 2:21:48 PM| Goodness! Let's all fly to a luxury island resort and discuss this. |

Submitted by Linda
at 3/26/2008 2:46:34 PM| Tearing down the institution from within. It worked with TEC and now the sights are set bigger. |

Submitted by Andy MD
at 3/26/2008 2:51:02 PM| Good point Dean. We should eliminate all cows. Presto! The bovine flatuence issue is solved! |

Submitted by Tom (St. Louis)
at 3/26/2008 3:12:11 PM| Isn't somebody from New York going to apologize for their "Insuff'able" Bishop? |

Submitted by Truth Unites... and Divides
at 3/26/2008 3:30:00 PM| "Tearing down the institution from within. It worked with TEC and now the sights are set bigger." Frick. That's liberalism for ya. Both the theological variety and the political variety. That poisonous, cancerous ideology will just suck the marrow and life out of everything you hold dear. |

Submitted by Senior Priest
at 3/26/2008 6:07:32 PM| Mizz Roskam is wrong. "We" Europeans also kidnapped South Pacific Islanders for slavery in the 19th century. Those slavers were called "Blackbirders" for some reason. |

Submitted by John
at 3/26/2008 10:56:51 PM| I don't read the bible very often, but from the looks of things, Africa started the slavery thing. Not a excuse, but why should I feel bad about something that was practiced in this country for a few hundred years, vs what Africa practiced for a few thousand. |










