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Faith leaders: Police used gas that caused tears, coughing when clearing DC park

RNS

On Tuesday evening President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign asserted that media outlets had falsely reported that law enforcement used tear gas to disperse protesters and faith leaders outside the White House. 

The police had broken up a protest on Monday shortly before the President crossed the street and posed with a Bible in front of St John’s, an Episcopal church that had been damaged by fire earlier in the week.

US protests St Johns Church

Tear gas floats in the air as a line of police move demonstrators away from St John’s Church across Lafayette Park from the White House, as they gather to protest the death of George Floyd on 1st June in Washington. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers. PICTURE: AP Photo/Alex Brandon.

The campaign referenced a statement from US Park Service that insisted “no tear gas was used by [United States Park Police] officers or other assisting law enforcement partners to close the area at Lafayette Park.” The statement added that the Park Service’s actions were allegedly in response to escalation by demonstrators.

Trump also tweeted an article about the subject, calling it “a must read!”

US protests Donald Trump holding Bible

President Donald Trump holds a Bible as he visits outside St John’s Church across Lafayette Park from the White House on Monday, 1st June, 2020, in Washington. Part of the church was set on fire during protests on Sunday night. PICTURE: AP Photo/Patrick Semansky.

AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY LEADER: DON’T USE THE BIBLE AS A POLITICAL “PROP”

The American Bible Society has added its voice to those urging caution about proper use of the Bible in political settings after President Donald Trump held a Bible aloft outside St John’s Episcopal Church in Washington earlier this week.

“In this time of pandemic fear and social isolation, in this time of racial injustice and senseless violence, in this time of economic uncertainty and generational pain, we should be careful not to use the Bible as a political symbol, one more prop in a noisy news cycle,” said Whitney T Kuniholm, a senior vice president of the Philadelphia-based society, in a blog post.

Asked if the statement was a response to a specific government leader, Kuniholm noted the conversations that started after Trump’s appearance.

“The President’s visit on Monday to St John’s Episcopal Church with a Bible in-hand sparked a lot of dialogue across the nation about the Bible,” Whitney T Kuniholm, a senior vice president of the Philadelphia-based society, told Religion News Service in a statement.

“Since Monday, other politicians have referenced the Bible as well. At American Bible Society, we believe this is an opportunity to encourage conversation and be a resource to share the life-affirming message of God’s Holy Word.”

Trump is not the only politician to use the Bible as a prop recently. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat from California, read from a Bible this week when asked about Trump’s photo opportunity.

Kuniholm noted in the blog post that “leaders of all political stripes have solemnly held up the Bible and used it as inspiration in our most difficult moments”. But he said “the Bible is more than a symbol. It’s a message of unity, justice, hope, love, faith, and liberty. It’s a message of Good News for all people. That’s what gives it power.”

The society, founded in 1816, offers free access to a Bible app that can be downloaded on digital devices. Through to 15th June, it plans to ship a free Bible to US residents who request one through its website.

“At American Bible Society we call Americans of all faiths or no faith at all to look beyond the symbol and read the Bible for yourself,” Kuniholm said.

The post came two days after Trump walked over to St John’s Episcopal Church from the White House and held a Bible aloft for cameras after law enforcement cleared clergy and demonstrators from the site.

The President’s use of the Bible in particular has drawn national attention and widespread condemnation: Numerous faith leaders have condemned his photo opportunity and treatment of demonstrators, including heads of entire Christian denominations such as the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

– JACK JENKINS and ADELLE BANKS, RNS

His campaign insisted that news organizations correct their stories. 

However, according to faith leaders who were at the park that day and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, law enforcement used chemicals that are regularly described as tear gas while breaking up the protest. 

The Park Service statement claimed law enforcement used chemical agents such as “smoke canisters and pepper balls,” which the CDC says are also referred to as tear gas, as first reported by The Washington Post.

“Riot control agents (sometimes referred to as ‘tear gas’) are chemical compounds that temporarily make people unable to function by causing irritation to the eyes, mouth, throat, lungs, and skin,” reads a CDC fact sheet. The CDC document later mentions the use of “pepper spray.”

Several faith leaders who were at the demonstration on Monday told Religion News Service that not only were the protests peaceful, they also witnessed or were affected by gas used by law enforcement that caused coughing and tears.

Rev Gini Gerbasi, who serves as rector of a different St John’s Episcopal Church, in Georgetown, but who previously worked at St John’s in Lafayette Square, told RNS this week that she and a seminarian encountered the gas as law enforcement officials “turned holy ground into a battle ground” by forcibly expelling them from the church patio.

“I’m not a chemist, but what I saw with my own eyes were clouds of smoke,” she said. “I saw people with tears pouring out of their eyes, their eyes red and swollen.”

Gerbasi said that her glasses helped protect her from exposure to the gas but that she was still coughing and tending to a sore throat for hours.

Julia Dominick, a student at Virginia Theological Seminary and former trauma nurse who was with Gerbasi, was less fortunate. Dominick said she was helping a demonstrator clear substance from their eyes when police began to advance.

“There was the yellow-gray smoke in the air,” said the seminarian. “As we were all trying to move down the street back towards the St John’s patio, your eyes are burning. You’re coughing. I had a mask on, and it was going through the mask.”

She said the gas became a “cloud that enveloped the crowd,” in which “everybody was having burning eyes, coughing, burning nose, burning throat.”

Dominick later described the substance as tear gas in a Facebook post, and she told RNS, “I stand by what I called it.”

Rev Will Ed Green, a United Methodist minister who was at the park for the duration of the protest before being expelled by security forces, tried to help peaceful protesters who struggled to see after coming in contact with the gas.

“Starting at about 6:20pm, you could smell and taste the chemical agents in the air,” he said. “People began to cough and cry, and increasingly so for the next 15 to 20 minutes after. At one point people ran from the flank of 16th Street, and that was the point at which I was helping people off the ground because they literally could not keep their eyes open to run.”

He added: “In the years that I have been attending protests at the White House and around the country, I have never seen what I would call state-sanctioned violence being used against people who were protesting state-sanctioned violence.”

Rev Glenna J Huber, the rector of the Church of the Epiphany who was at St John’s but left as the National Guard arrived, said she also witnessed the use of gas throughout the day. She and other clergy were positioned at the church near an emergency medical station set up by Black Lives Matter organisers, where she saw many demonstrators seek treatment after encountering the gas.

“I witnessed the spraying of an agent that caused protestors to run away and some sought medical attention from BLM nearby,” she said in an email. “Those who were closest were rubbing their eyes and coughing…A reasonable person would assume that they were tear-gassed.”

All of the faith leaders RNS spoke with expressed frustration as to why the President, his administration and conservative writers would focus on the chemical agent instead of on the treatment of what they said were peaceful protesters.

“What the agent was was not relevant, except for how could we help rinse it out of people’s eyes, and how could we help them stop coughing – that’s the only relevant lens for me in any of this,” Gerbasi said. “I’m bewildered as to why that addresses the moral human issue…Why would you shoot anything at innocent protesters?”

She was echoed by Dominick, who argued that the debate distracts from the point the demonstrators were trying to make.

“We need to get back to the focus of justice and systemic change for persons of colour,” she said. “I think we need to get back to Black Lives Matter. I think we need to get back to witnessing what has happened in our past and working toward change.”


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Despite the chaos of Monday’s expulsion, Dominick returned to the White House again Tuesday afternoon to demonstrate. She said she intends to do so Wednesday evening as well.

“The focus needs to be on the fact that we have a 400-year history of oppressing people of colour – they deserve change.”

 

 

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