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New World A-Coming - Black Religion and Racial Identity during the Great Migration (Paperback)
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New World A-Coming - Black Religion and Racial Identity during the Great Migration (Paperback)
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Winner of the 2017 Albert J. Raboteau Book Prize for the Best Book
in Africana Religions Shows how early 20th-century resistance to
conventional racial categorization contributed to broader
discussions in black America that still resonate today When Joseph
Nathaniel Beckles registered for the draft in the 1942, he rejected
the racial categories presented to him and persuaded the registrar
to cross out the check mark she had placed next to Negro and
substitute "Ethiopian Hebrew." "God did not make us Negroes,"
declared religious leaders in black communities of the early
twentieth-century urban North. They insisted that so-called Negroes
are, in reality, Ethiopian Hebrews, Asiatic Muslims, or raceless
children of God. Rejecting conventional American racial
classification, many black southern migrants and immigrants from
the Caribbean embraced these alternative visions of black history,
racial identity, and collective future, thereby reshaping the black
religious and racial landscape. Focusing on the Moorish Science
Temple, the Nation of Islam, Father Divine's Peace Mission
Movement, and a number of congregations of Ethiopian Hebrews,
Judith Weisenfeld argues that the appeal of these groups lay not
only in the new religious opportunities membership provided, but
also in the novel ways they formulated a religio-racial identity.
Arguing that members of these groups understood their religious and
racial identities as divinely-ordained and inseparable, the book
examines how this sense of self shaped their conceptions of their
bodies, families, religious and social communities, space and
place, and political sensibilities. Weisenfeld draws on extensive
archival research and incorporates a rich array of sources to
highlight the experiences of average members. The book demonstrates
that the efforts by members of these movements to contest
conventional racial categorization contributed to broader
discussions in black America about the nature of racial identity
and the collective future of black people that still resonate
today.
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