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Sand Creek Massacre Research
Center Supported
*
FORT WORTH, Texas (UMNS)—Support
for The United Methodist Church to
contribute $50,000 to the development of
a research and learning center at the Sand
Creek Massacre National Historic Site
was expressed April 28 in action by
General Conference 2008.
The United Methodist Church’s
top legislative body authorized the
contribution. However, the action will not
be final until the conference adopts the
denomination’s 2009-2012 budget May 2.
The Sand Creek Massacre
National Historical Site is a memorial to
more than 160 Native Americans – mostly
women and children – who were
massacred in 1864 by troops led by a
Methodist lay preacher, Col. John
Chivington. The historic site, 160 miles
southeast of Denver, opened to the
public in June 2007.
In 1996, the United Methodist
General Conference expressed regret for
the Sand Creek massacre and issued an
apology for the “actions of a prominent
Methodist.”
The United Methodist
Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns will work with the
United States National Park Service to
develop the Sand Creek Massacre
National Historic Site Research and
Learning Center, according to the petition
passed by a vote of 426 to 378.
“This is an act that the whole
church needs to own,” said Lonnie
Brooks, a delegate from the Alaska
Missionary Conference and board
member of the United Methodist
Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns.
Opposition to the legislation
focused on finances because the $50,000
contribution is not part of the $642 million
general church budget. “It should have
been included in the budget,” said Jeff
Jernigan, a lay delegate from North
Georgia.
“We really need to show that
we’re in support of healing the
generations (of Cheyenne people) that
have come out of that story. This is a
good thing that the church is doing to
fund this,” said the Rev. Alvin Deer,
former executive director of the Native
American International Caucus.
Josh Davies, a lay delegate from
the Rocky Mountain Conference, said, “I
urge members to please do our part to
wipe this smear off our history.”
*White is associate editor of Interpreter
magazine.
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