The Southern Baptist Convention, the nation’s largest Protestant denomination, has kicked a rural Oklahoma church out of its membership after photos and videos of their pastor impersonating singer Ray Charles in blackface emerged on social media.
A spokesperson for the organization said the executive committee ruled that the Matoaka Baptist Church in Ochelata, Oklahoma, was “not in friendly cooperation” with the convention. The decision came after the church, led by the Rev. Sherman Jaquess, failed to “cooperate in resolving concerns regarding discriminatory behavior on the basis of ethnicity,” according to CNN.
Jaquess, a white man, was seen in a video dressed in a Jheri curl wig, black body paint (face, neck, hands), and red lips during a Valentine’s Day talent show in 2017. The preacher said he was trying to honor the late Grammy Award winner.
Related: ‘They Will Never Recognize My Picture Now’: Blackface-Wearing Trump Supporter Locked Up After Harassing People in Target, Starbucks
The incident was highlighted on Facebook in April by local activist Marq Lewis.
The activist published screenshots of pictures from the talent show and said, “You can honor anyone by not putting on blackface, and he is ignoring the historical references and all of the satirical types of caricatures that African Americans have gone through in this country.”
Lewis also said the preacher’s actions were “actually a slap in the face of African Americans and all people of color.”
The pastor said earlier in the year that he thought the hoopla about the costume was misplaced.
“We have people [who] are offended by a lot of things, but it’s hard to play Ray Charles if you don’t play a Black man; it wasn’t anything,” he said.
The clergyman was shocked at people being offended despite him looking nothing like the brown-skinned Charles, who wore his hair for most of his career in a military-styled crew cut.
During a…
Read the full article here