The essay below was originally posted at .Mic on Juneteenth. Religious Socialism is reprinting the essay to mark one week since the massacre.
A seemingly ever-present cloud of grief burdens the souls of black folk in America. Wednesday evening, according to evolving reports, a 21-year-old white male named Dylann Roof shot and killed nine individuals at Emanuel African Methodist
Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. Rev. Clementa Pinckney, the church’s pastor and a South Carolina state senator, was among the dead.
Grief in this instance is an affective and political act. It’s a simmering anger and anguished contemplation about the harm imposed on black communities — inadvertently, individually and institutionally — by a culture and political economy that prioritizes and protects whiteness.
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Rev. Andrew Wilkes is the co-pastor of young adults and social justice at the Greater Allen AME Cathedral of New York. An alumnus of Hampton University, Princeton Theological Seminary, and the Coro Foundation's Fellowship in Public Affairs, his writing has been featured in the Washington Post, BET.com, and the Huffington Post. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram: @andrewjwilkes
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