Historical Committee

From Fort Peachtree to Atlanta: The Mennonite Story

by Sarah Kehrberg

The black and white table that once served meals at the Mennonite House in Atlanta, Ga., has taken on mythic proportions as Mennonites get ready to meet in the southern city this summer. It is the inspiration for the convention's theme: "God's Table Y'All Come." Because the original table cannot be found, carpenters and artists from around the country are making similar ones to bring to the weeklong meeting and worship event. These divided yet unified tables will be symbols of a diverse church that is bonded in profound ways.

Of course, the original table's history is not so neat and tidy. There were times of misunderstanding, petty fighting, and distrust in its past. But those eventually disappear leaving the surrounding unity, love, reconciliation, and best intentions that were present from the beginning.

And in truth, the table is only one part of the larger Atlanta Mennonite story, which began half a century ago and continues today.

From Fort Peachtree to Atlanta

Atlanta, Ga., is a young city by most standards. It began commonly enough as Fort Peachtree during the War of 1812. In 1825, the Creek Indians ceded over their lands to the State of Georgia, but the Cherokee Indians were not so easily persuaded. Despite widespread assimilation to European culture and customs, the Cherokee were forcibly removed from their Georgia lands in 1835 by the U.S. government, led by President Andrew Jackson, in the tragic Trail of Tears.

Mennonite Voluntary Service

It took another 120 years or so for Mennonites to discover the city.

Eastern Mennonite Missions (EMM) of Lancaster Mennonite Conference had short-term Voluntary Service (VS) personnel serving in Atlanta sporadically in the 1950s, but the intentional outreach in the city began with Hershey and Norma Leaman.

The Leamans, longtime overseas missionaries, are generally credited by oral history as being among the first Mennonites to make Atlanta both their home and mission field. Hershey went to study in Atlanta in 1955, and the couple began to encourage EMM to start a Voluntary Service unit there.

From its beginning in October 15, 1958, the unit in Atlanta fit into the mission of the EMM Voluntary Service. This was to be a service opportunity for young adults of the Lancaster Conference, a resource of personnel from which to start a local congregation or support an already existing group, and general one-on-one outreach. A fourth mission that emerged as the Vietnam War escalated and the government continued to draft its young men was the placement and administration of I-W men. In fact, in 1964, the Mission Board officially took over the Peace Committee (of Lancaster Conference) and merged it with the VS program under the name "Voluntary Service and I-W Committee." During the most vigorous years of the draft (roughly 1967-70) there were generally three to five couples in Atlanta, though single people also served. Almost all the men were I-W and worked in either the Grady Memorial Hospital or the Crawford Long Hospital.

In the 1972 Annual Report, Donald B. Kraybill, director of the Voluntary Service and I-W Committee wondered rhetorically if VS was necessary anymore since the draft call was so much lower than earlier years. Kraybill, of course, was arguing for its continuing merit, but the Atlanta unit and others started in the war years, were eventually shut down in the mid-seventies.

A congregation is born

The unit was not a failure, however. A local church had been started and continues to the present day as Berea Mennonite Church. In support of the second mission of starting a local congregation, the Elvin Martin family moved to Atlanta as mission workers, also in 1958, to assist "the unit in their community outreach."Already in the first year they developed a club and crafts program with the schoolchildren in their community and began conducting Sunday evening services, which were open to all. In 1962, a church building was purchased and the first baptisms of new members celebrated.

As the church grew to be more self-supporting, it "became evident the church feels that they do not need as many VSers as formerly in their area. There seems to be some fear that too many will stifle the growth of their local members." Consequently, a second unit was opened in a different part of the city. There were attempts to start additional churches both in Atlanta and in Albany, Ga., but neither was successful.

Berea Mennonite is credited as being one of the very first racially integrated churches in the city of Atlanta. Today Berea is a small church of 50-60 worshipers that even now is in the minority as a church where multiple skin colors, ethnicities, and backgrounds are represented. Former pastor Jonathan Larson quoted Martin Luther King Jr., when he said, "There is no more segregated hour in America than 11:00 a.m. on Sunday morning."

The ministry of Vincent and Rosemarie Harding

Three years after the EMM first made an official presence in Atlanta, Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) also moved to town, though under different circumstances and with a varied mandate.

Vincent Harding was the associate pastor at Woodlawn Mennonite Church in Chicago when he and his wife, Rosemarie, a social worker, were invited by the Peace Section of MCC to move south and begin "an experimental project" in which "young people from our churches would come … to serve without salary in Negro institutions … not simply because we believe in desegregation, but more importantly because we believe that the way of Christ is the way of love and serve for and with all men." They would also serve as a "kind of roving peace representative" in an "attempt to help both Negro and white Christians to grasp a fuller meaning of the gospel of love in the midst of racial conflict."

In October 1961 the Hardings took a move of faith and went to the chosen city of Atlanta. While Atlanta was in the South (and thus fully segregated), they believed it was "not of it." It had a more liberal approach to race relations and "the Negro desegregation leadership (including King) are using it as a base." After buying a large building on Houston Street, which was dubbed "Mennonite House" by the Quakers who had a similar "Quaker House," the Hardings settled into their new assignment.

At the end of that first summer Vincent wrote, "The life of our family together at Mennonite House was one of the most meaningful parts of our experience in Atlanta." The 13 summer VSers came from all over the northern United States and Canada, included Mennonites and non-Mennonites, and ranged "in color from dark brown to light pink." They lived as a family, eating, working, and worshiping together. They "put Atlanta traffic in real difficulty just by appearing together in public day after day," and because of their radically desegregated lifestyle had their phone tapped and the house under surveillance by the police. The VSers served their purpose of working for racial reconciliation in an atmosphere of charged racial tension by quietly serving in black establishments as whites or vice versa.

In a news release written by Vincent and Rosemarie, they discussed the different VSers-Bill Cooper, a recently committed Christian from university in Toronto; Pauline who worked in Martin Luther King Jr.'s Southern Christian Leadership Conference office; and Liz, a Southern Baptist, who had not realized the leaders of this program would be black and had trouble shaking Vincent's hand on first meeting him, but gave hugs all around at the end of the summer. This was a powerful and intense time, and it was during this first heady summer that the magnanimous table was built.

The news release says that Bill and Vincent built it. They requested $45 in June 1962 for the materials, wanting a "table large enough to seat us all." It was around this table, made half of a light, blond maple and half of dark mahogany or cherry, that "the family's life centered. There we ate together, spilling over into long discussions. There we worshiped together. There we confessed our faults to one another, and sought to learn how really to bear each other's burdens." They also shared the table with numerous guests of "every color." These included the Peace Marchers, Coretta Scott King, various neighbors, and anyone else willing to share "with us the house of reconciliation."

The black and white table was used for several years, but eventually was lost. Efforts to locate it have not been successful.

After that first summer the stresses of staging a full-scale reconciliation war on racial segregation and maintaining the day-to-day operations of a rather large household of varying personalities started to take its toll.

The VS unit had problems getting I-W status from the National Service Board for Religious Objectors. The Board couldn't "see [the Georgia State Director] sticking his neck out in an unproved situation. … The VS and Peace Section proposal for Atlanta has not been proved … and is packed with dynamite (as well as with dynamic) with the south." This issue continued to make for tensions between the radical racial reconciliation agenda and the more practical need to place young Mennonite men in I-W service.

Money was a constant misunderstanding. It was never clear how much of the budget came from the Peace Section and how much from Voluntary Service. The VS director expected this unit to be self-supporting with the meager wages that the various volunteers made at their jobs. But Mennonite House was also involved in costly projects: travel, hosting guests passing through the city, and civil rights organization work. Most letters from Akron (MCC headquarters) included some wonderment about how expenses could be kept down.

The Hardings traveled a great deal, which interrupted house life and took a toll on Vincent and Rosemarie. Part of Vincent's assignment was, in fact, to travel to the various Mennonite communities talking about their work and vision in Atlanta. Both Vincent and Rosemarie also attended numerous conventions and conferences on civil rights and the southern struggle. They had close ties with Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders and often were going to Birmingham or Montgomery or some other southern city to join in vigils or marches.

In the 18-month review of the program, "the Hardings recognize that to operate a Mennonite House … requires more time and guidance than they have been able to give it." MCC leadership and the Hardings agreed, "there must be more clarity as to the role and function of Mennonite House." Was it primarily a base for a VS unit that supported and ministered to the needs of the workers? Or was it a Christian fellowship that in its very nature served as a witness to the world and was able to "assimilate and minister to those who have spiritual and emotional needs and are searching for answers"? These issues were never fully resolved. VS workers became more frustrated over extra guests that came and sometimes stayed for months around the large, welcoming table, and by the lack of organization in the House. The Hardings became frustrated with the lack of hospitality and commitment to the overall mission of racial reconciliation.

The Hardings were also at odds with the traditional Mennonite shovels and buckets model of peace and justice work. Vincent wrote, "As usual, John Yoder hit the nail on the head at our Peace Section Executive Committee meeting when he spoke about the uncomfortableness of the Mennonite church in involving itself in the midst of conflict and revolution rather than coming along later on to pick up the pieces." Edgar Stoesz echoed this in a statement on the goals and mission of the newly created Mennonite House: "As we refrained from participating in its annihilation, but helped later to reconstruct Germany, so we decline to participate in the interracial conflict but seek rather to bring reconciliation and goodwill. This in no way indicates a passive attitude on the part of the church but rather selection of an area of the problem where our contribution, based on our understanding of the Scriptures and pertaining to human relationships, is most effective."

Vincent, however, saw things differently. Early on he wrote, "We need somehow to move away from the passivity suggested by our dependence on the phrase 'nonresistance,' to a new sense of involvement and participation implied in the term 'peacemakers.'" He recognized that this meant risk and the danger of "finding ourselves with strange bedfellows (perhaps on a prison floor), or of making common cause with those whose ultimate convictions are not exactly the same as our own." But given the daily reality of the Negro in the south in 1962, he never doubted that it was worth the risks.

Putting this belief into practice, Vincent was arrested as part of a public protest in Albany, Ga., just 160 miles south of Atlanta. Just months after their arrival in Atlanta, Vincent and Rosemarie had gone to Albany, where more than 700 people were arrested for protesting segregation. Over the months, they stayed in touch with the situation, with Vincent serving as a mediator between "the mayor, police, segregationists, Negro leaders, white and Negro ministers." He was jailed in Albany on July 23, 1962, after refusing to cease praying and move of the City Hall grounds. MCC sent bail money, and although they allowed that the decision needed to made in the "context of Albany," they encouraged Vincent that his "particular calling … could be better exercised out of jail rather than in." Vincent ended up spending three days behind bars when "requests from Dr. Martin Luther King and from Police Chief Pritchett [a white] brought him out with the chief, himself, signing the security for the bond."

MCC tried to be supportive of Vincent's arrest, but acknowledged that the constituency would raise questions. MCC continued to ask the Hardings not align themselves closely with non-church groups.

And finally, the Hardings were discouraged by the complacency of Mennonite communities they found in their travels. Not only were many "totally unaware" of segregation and racial injustice in their own backyard, but they didn't think there was anything they could do, picketing, boycotting, and other forms of protest being seen as inappropriate for a nonresistant pacifist.

The end of an era

In the fall of 1964, the Hardings took a six-month leave of absence from Mennonite House. Vincent was working on his doctoral dissertation, and they needed a break. They never went back.

Six months later, in April 1965, J. Winfield Fretz was sent to Atlanta to review the program and make recommendations for the future. He ended up suggesting strongly that the unit remain, but its energies should be directed towards the need for quality, affordable daycare centers in their communities. Fretz wrote that the interracial service was multi-sided. It was "more than fighting directly for civil rights now.'" He felt that MCC's "reputation, image and genius is that of a Christian bridge building agency."

Conclusion

Though MCC's active role in civil rights lasted only four years, the work at Mennonite House was powerful. The Hardings introduced the Mennonite Church to a more activist position before the Vietnam War protests and riots began in earnest.

The black and white table of Mennonite House is no longer in use, but the spirit lives on. The sharp contrast and uniqueness of white and black still exists, but so does the spirit of unity-in Berea Mennonite Church, in Atlanta Mennonite Fellowship (started in the early 1990s), in Celebration Fellowship (an Eastern Mennonite Missions church plant in 1995), and in the greater Mennonite Church, we trust for years to come.

Sarah Kehrberg, Lexington, Kentucky, is an editor at Herald Press. She graduated from Bethel College, North Newton, Kans., with majors in music and history.

Photos/Captions:

11-Kehrberg.jpg-Gathered around the table-half maple and half mahogany or cherry-the VS family "ate together … worshiped together … confessed our faults to one another, and sought to learn how really to bear each other's burdens." (All photographs are from the Mennonite Central Committee Photograph Collection, Mennonite Church USA Archives-Goshen, Ind.)

12-Kehrberg.jpg-Vincent and Rosemarie Harding worked "for racial reconciliation in an atmosphere of charged racial tension," but were "discouraged by the complacency of Mennonite communities they found in their travels."

13-Kehrberg.jpg-David Augsburger interviews Vincent Harding on the Mennonite Hour radio program, September 22, 1963.

14-Kehrberg.jpg-MCC VSer Antje Lijsbeth Koopmans from Holland with a preschool child.

15-Kehrberg.jpg-Mennonite House, 540 Houston Street, Atlanta.

16-Kehrberg.jpg-Interracial Bible school teaching team, 1963.

 


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