Peace Colloquy  | |
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2008 Peace Award Address
The Story of Koinonia Farm
Bren Dubay
President Veazey, members of the Community of Christ, thank you for
this privilege. Suzan Hudson, Cathy Loving, Kendra Friend and Jeanette
Hicks, you’ve treated us so well. Thank you for all your help. And I
especially want to thank Andrew Bolton for finding a way to send an
e-mail no matter where you were in the world offering guidance and
wisdom as we’ve prepared these many months to make the journey from
Americus to Independence. President Veazey, on behalf of our fellow
community members at Koinonia Farm, Norris Harris and I gratefully
accept the 2008 International Peace Award.
Co-founder of Koinonia, Clarence Jordan — I like his translation of
the fourth Beatitude: “They who have an unsatisfied appetite for the
right are God’s people, for they will be given plenty to chew on.” I’m
particularly fond of the word chew. We’ve always had a great deal
to chew on at Koinonia Farm. This honor you’ve given us is going to keep
us chewing for quite some time. A peace award … and the theme of this
Peace Colloquy — “Signal Communities: Hope of Zion.” Hope. There’s an
abundance of hope at Koinonia, hope found in its formative days, in its
history, and in our present-day life together.
In an interview Clarence Jordan once gave, he was asked about peace
and social justice; he was asked, "What sort of advice do you have for
people ... what’s the best thing we can do to help the world be a better
place in which to live?" Clarence responded, "Before we can do
anything, we have to be something. Our actions have to spring
from our inner character."
Koinonia is rooted in being an intentional Christian
community, with the belief that if we follow the teachings of Jesus, we
will do work that helps our neighbors. We will do works
for peace, do works of mercy, do works of social justice.
We, at Koinonia, are formed by our shared life, by the history of those
who came before us and by the Gospels, especially by the Sermon on the
Mount, and we strive to have our actions spring from them. We cannot
deny that we’ve been shaped, in particular, by the inner character of
Clarence Jordan.
Inspired by the description of the early church in the book of Acts,
Clarence and his wife Florence along with Martin and Mabel England
founded Koinonia in 1942 in Americus, Georgia, as an experiment in
Christian living. At an early age, Clarence faced a choice whether or
not he would live a life based on hope. He was a good southern boy. Born
in the small town of Talbotton, Georgia, in 1912 — one of ten children.
His father, a successful businessman, started the town’s only bank and
owned its only general store. Clarence was a member of the privileged
class.
As was often the case in those times, church was central to this
strong southern family. And Clarence noticed at an early age what too
many of us often notice within the church—that what is taught is often
not what is lived. In Sunday school he sang, “Jesus loves the little
children, all the children of the world. Red and yellow, black and
white, they are precious in his sight. Jesus loves the little children
of the world.” The lyrics sounded like the Prince of Peace. But Clarence
noticed that the red, yellow, black, and even some of the white children
didn’t seem precious in everyone’s sight. It did not escape his young
eyes that the black children were not precious to hardly anyone he knew.
The Jordans’ backyard adjoined the backyard of the county jail. As a
preteen Clarence took to taking a shortcut through the jail yard on his
way home from school and he made friends with some of the prisoners. The
cook took a particular liking to him and gave him fatback and corn bread
every afternoon. No better way to capture the heart of a growing boy
than food. Clarence talked with men who were chained together at the
ankles, and he saw that most of them were African American.
During a revival meeting on one hot, humid night when he was twelve
years old, Clarence answered the call and joined the church. The choir
sang and one voice stood out above all the rest. The warden of the
county jail sang in a rich, deep bass “Love Lifted Me.” At this revival
when Clarence joined the church, the song on everyone’s lips and filling
everyone’s heart was “Love Lifted Me.”
That night he went home happy. Jesus had called him and he had
answered yes. But when he heard the screams coming from the county jail
behind his house, Clarence’s joy turned to something else. He knew about
the device called a stretcher — a prisoner’s feet tied down, arms tied
up over his head, someone pulling the rope stretching the arms until,
sometimes, they were pulled out of the shoulder sockets. A prisoner was
being stretched that very night, and Clarence recognized his screams. He
knew the prisoner by name; he had talked with him many times. And
Clarence knew the man pulling the rope. It was the warden who only hours
before had been singing “Love Lifted Me.”
Likely we have all felt the way Clarence felt that night. There are
so many reasons simply to walk away from Christianity if we pay
attention to what many people in the faith are doing. The same can be
said for Islam, Judaism, or any religion — even secular institutions. At
twelve years old, Clarence had a choice between cynicism and hope. He
was outraged at God. He shook his fist at God. But as he did so, a
thought came to him, “This is what man is doing to man. This isn’t what
God is doing.”
So Clarence landed squarely on the side of hope. He wanted what
humans were doing to humans to change. As he grew, he zeroed in on
farming as a way to help his neighbors He understood that the systems of
sharecropping and tenant farming held both poor blacks and poor whites
in bondage. Putting his hope first in agriculture, he went off to the
University of Georgia to earn his undergraduate degree. But he wasn’t to
begin farming immediately. Something within him stirred, and he traded
the plow for the pulpit—at least for the time being. God had called him
again, this time to the ministry.
While attending seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, Clarence “fell in
love with the Greek,” as his wife, Florence, often declared. One word in
particular caught his attention: Koinonia. It means “community,
holding all things in common, fellowship, commune.” The koinonia is what
that first small band of believers in the New Testament called
themselves. Though Clarence went on to earn a Ph.D. in New Testament
Greek, school wasn’t all studies for him. He spent time serving urban
African-American communities. Now his hope shifted to activism, to
working for a cause, for the inner city poor. But something began to
haunt him. He recorded this revelation in his journal:
The thing that just bowled me over was the realization that
whites had the very things that I wanted blacks to have, and the
whites were living in such a hell. Why should I feel that blacks
would be in any less a hell if they had these things? There had to
be something extra somewhere. I was driven in a desperate search for
spiritual resources.
He came to believe that the spiritual resources he was looking for
could be found in the koinonia—a group of people living, working
together, and sharing all things in common, demonstrating a life rooted
in the gospel, putting their hope in God. Service would naturally flow
from there.
So in 1942, the two young couples, full of this hope, bought a
broken-down farm in southwest Georgia and there a koinonia was born.
Brother and sisterhood, nonviolence, and economic sharing were to be its
fundamental guidelines. Farming was to sustain it. Clarence’s degree in
agriculture would finally be put to good use. The community’s work for
peace and social justice was to be carried out in small acts, in every
day service to others. The Jordans and the Englands picked the poorest
county in Georgia, and moved to a farm to be neighbors to the
sharecroppers and tenant farmers.
They quickly learned that being a good neighbor works best when it
goes both ways. Clarence had book knowledge about agriculture but lacked
the practical skills. The story goes that each morning he and Martin
would climb up on the roof of the farmhouse to see what their neighbors
were doing in the fields. Then they would climb down and do the same
thing. They acknowledged and respected the wisdom of their neighbors,
they listened to them, talked with them, became friends and things began
to happen.
Clarence was walking in the cornfields one day and met a young woman
who he learned had five small children. “Where do you get the milk to
feed all these children?” he asked. There was a long silence, then the
young mother answered, “Well, Mr. Clarence, when it’s hard, we try
harder.”Koinonia had cows. So, that very day, the farm started a cow
lending library. Neighbors would check out a cow. When the cow went dry,
they would bring it back and get another one. Without any fanfare, they
had been provided a means to give their children milk to drink. It was a
very practical action, springing from the inner character of this little
band of believers living on this little farm in Georgia. The community
tried to live the way of Jesus, tried to carry it out in everyday life.
If they sang “Love Lifted Me,” they wanted to mean it.
There were many seemingly small acts of kindness, but the Koinonians
weren’t without their detractors. From the beginning, their black
neighbors were invited to be part of the Koinonia, eating, working, and
sharing lives with their white neighbors, which was against the law in
the Jim Crow South. Some people seemed willing to overlook the fact that
the Koinonians were breaking the man made laws — maybe because Clarence
was a popular preacher and speaker. He had a way of saying things that
caused people to frown and to squirm, but mostly, in those early days,
they smiled and nodded. The real hostility was to come later.
In 1950, Koinonians brought along a young man – a university student
from India to church one Sunday. Mistaken for a black man, this incident
led to the expulsion of the Koinonians from membership in the church. It
wasn’t until 1954, however, that the hostility erupted into physical
violence. That year, the Supreme Court heard Brown v. Board of Education
and ruled in favor of the integration of public schools. The violence
against Koinonia was to begin shortly thereafter — shootings, bombings,
fences cut, dynamiting, trees cut down, sugar in gas tanks. Drive-by
shootings became the nightly routine at Koinonia. But the people of
Koinonia did not return violence for violence. Instead, they put up
streetlights and stood guard, armed only with flashlights. They believed
that their presence in the light might deter people from coming and
shooting. It was a miracle no one was killed.
It wasn’t the physical violence that ultimately brought Koinonia to
its knees, but rather, it was the economic boycott. No one in Sumter
County or even the surrounding counties would do business with Koinonia.
They couldn’t farm anymore. There was good cause to lose hope, but they
chose to start a mail-order business instead. Clarence had a great sense
of humor and used it to respond to the horrendous situation. He coined
the direct mail-order business’ advertising phrase that we still use
today, “Help us ship the nuts out of Georgia.”
When the violence began, some sixty men, women, and children were
members of this experiment in Christian living. Some were still there
when the worst of the violence began to subside in the late fifties,
but, due to the economic boycott, by 1963 there were only three families
left — the Brownes, the Wittkampers, and the Jordans. By this time, the
farm could not support even three families, so at a community meeting it
was decided the Browne family would leave. Twenty-one years into the
experiment, where was the hope? What did living peacefully, what did
attempting to live social justice rather than simply talking about
social justice get them?
Though Atlanta must have looked attractive at this point—Clarence
actively sought to sell the farm and move there—he stayed put and paid
attention. Using Southwest Georgian vernacular, he wrote the Cotton
Patch version of a portion of the New Testament. He preached, gave
lectures, and was invited to present workshops at many places around the
country.
Then, in 1963, along came Millard and Linda Fuller. Like Norris, did
they find the place or did the place find them? What we know is that
they came to stay for an hour, but stayed for a month and joined in a
dialogue with Clarence and others at Koinonia. Five years and many
conversations later, the Fund for Humanity and partnership housing was
born. The dream was to build homes for people in the area, charging no
interest and making no profit. Koinonia built 192 houses, and, out of
this work, birthed Habitat for Humanity.
Before the first of those 192 houses was completed, though, Clarence
Jordan died of a heart attack at the age of fifty-seven. Terrorism and
economic boycott had not killed Koinonia. Would the death of its leader?
Cynics said, “Yes.” But hope prevailed once more. People continued
coming, and Koinonia continued living its central ministry of
hospitality. To this very day people come, and incredible things
happen—people are renewed, organizations are born. And always, always
there is a handful of people staying put and paying attention. One in
particular, Florence Jordan, stayed put and paid attention until her
death in 1987.
The 1970s saw the return to farming, the start of cottage industries.
Many conscientious objectors to the war in Viet Nam did their community
service at the farm, and it was a time of great activity surrounding the
Civil Rights Movement. The mail-order business flourished. Yes, times
were good in the 70s and 80s, but then came the 90s and yet another
shift that threatened to lead Koinonia away from hope.
In 1993, for noble reasons, Koinonia changed the experiment a bit.
Throughout its history, Koinonia’s neighbors had been mostly African
American, but no African Americans had chosen to join fully as members
of the koinonia, to give up all of their possessions and permanently
take on this way of communal living as their own. Community members were
white, and the few employees that Koinonia had were mostly African
American. So in 1993 Koinonia shifted the focus from service growing out
of communal life to service coming from a social service business. The
common purse was set aside, everyone was put on salary and more people
were hired. The hope was that if Koinonia added additional employment
and leadership opportunities, more of its African-American brothers and
sisters would become more actively involved.
The shift to a nonprofit corporate structure didn’t work. The unity
that had existed disappeared as the spirit of partnership and
cooperation gave way to a hierarchical structure of employer and
employees. The board of directors hired a series of executive directors
from outside the Koinonia community who were not successful in
generating the sort of income necessary to sustain a large staff.
Financial and spiritual crisis engulfed Koinonia.
Within a year of the change, nearly all of the Koinonians who had
come to the farm to live communally—some had lived there for fifteen,
twenty, thirty years—were gone. By 1999, it was discovered that the farm
was a million dollars in debt and foreclosure was imminent. Any
self-respecting cynic would have shut the place down. But hope won out
again. People rallied, and the debt was paid off. But how was Koinonia
to go forward? Again, a handful of people stayed put, paid attention,
and had faith that a way would open.
In May 2003, by accident I dropped by Koinonia for 45 minutes. Now,
Norris will tell you that it was no accident. But I’d never heard of
Koinonia. I had no interest in stopping by some farm in the middle of
nowhere. I’d been in Americus for a week with a group of students
volunteering at Habitat for Humanity and I was anxious to return home to
Texas. But when the volunteer coordinator would not take no for an
answer and my upbringing wouldn’t allow me to be rude … at least not out
loud … I responded like any polite Texan and said, “Yes, m’am, we’ll go
to the farm.” Again, this was May 2003. By the last weekend of January
2004, I was named the executive director and moved to Georgia in May
2004 — one year after dropping by for 45 minutes … I’m still pinching
myself. So, like Norris I came to Koinonia in the conventional way. Or
was it so conventional?
Koinonia continued to struggle, but we held tight to the hope our
founders passed on to us. We quadrupled our prayer times. We asked for a
way to open. Like that friend mentioned in the eleventh chapter of
Luke—the one who goes to a neighbor at midnight asking for a loan of
three loaves of bread—we persistently knocked on God’s door. “What do
you want next from Koinonia?” we asked. “How can we best serve in the
twenty-first century? We are your servants, oh Lord. What do we do with
this unsatisfied appetite for the right?” We were hungry for the answer
to these questions, and the answer that came to us was this: “Keep
working, keep praying, and keep inviting others to join you. Be obedient
and return to the original vision.”
So we have. In 2005 after many long discussions and a whole lot of
praying, we recommitted ourselves to communal living. I, like Norris, am
what we call a steward, a full member of the koinonia serving as one of
its servant leaders, promising to stay put and pay attention. In 2005,
we began a process — we studied our history, accessed the present, we
prayed — this process was to lead us to put into words Koinonia’s
mission and vision for the 21st Century. We didn’t know it would take us
three years to complete the task — ahhhhh, the downside to living in
community: long meetings.
Nearly seven decades after the Jordans and the Englands began this
demonstration plot for the kingdom of God, we still have an unsatisfied
appetite for the right, and we still continue to live in hope. For you
in the Community of Christ and in other faiths we celebrate and
prayerfully support your journey to also be Zion, demonstration plots of
the kingdom, signal communities of hope. There is plenty for all of us
to chew on. If travels ever bring you to southwest Georgia, come chew
with us. We’d love to have you visit us. And when you do we hope you see
us demonstrating this mission and this vision we adopted in 2008 by the
way we live. Thank you.
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