Words from the Center — Pauli Murray Center

March Newsletter Reflection: A Note from our Development Director

“At home, wherever I felt too confined or bottled up inside, a walk with Smokey eased the tension.” – Song in a Weary Throat

Navigating a steady drum beat of ‘unprecedented’ times is universally exhausting. But! Take heart, friends. A walk with a dog can work wonders. 

The Inaugural Pauli Murray Dog Walk isn’t just an opportunity to support a mission you agree with, a group of people you appreciate, or a historical figure that matters to you. It’s an opportunity to see yourself in the stream of history and its familiar waters. Just as Pauli was frustrated and catalyzed by injustice in the past, many of us feel similarly in the present. However, joy and relaxation are vital not only as coping mechanisms, but also as acts of defiance and tools for longevity. I hope you’ll take a page out of Pauli’s book (no pun intended) and ease tension with your family, friends and furry companions with us on 3/15. 

Thank you for continuing to champion Pauli Murray’s life and legacy. Wishing you and your family joy and ease,

 

Christen Ruiz
Development Director 
Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice

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February Newsletter Reflection: A Note from our Executive Director

“However small and insignificant our contribution may seem in the face of vast human problems beyond our power to resolve…our tiny gift [can be multiplied] in ways we would not have dreamed possible.” –Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray, Sermon Given on August 5, 1984

Friends: 

I have spent the last couple of weeks listening to Pauli–through her oral history, writings, sermons, and speeches–seeking a specific message: that everything will be ok. Pauli, I’ve found, cannot offer us that reassurance. In fact, what has struck me during this exploration is the prophetic mirror they held up to today. As an elder, Rev. Murray made known the issues that characterized her reality: chaos; a deadly atmosphere that pervaded America; racism; sexism; social injustice and corruption; backlash against affirmative action and gender equality; controversy surrounding capital punishment, LGBTQ rights, abortion, “...and so on.” Pauli also rejected the instinct to fall into despair and hopelessness. 

Time and again, Pauli reminds us that the effort to build an America that so many of us envision is a cyclical experiment, characterized by cruelty, pain, defeat, wonder, victory, and joy. This is both the reward and consequence of building a just future for a society that is inherently “morally bankrupt.” However, Pauli also gives us strategies to meet the moment. Do you remember the note I wrote to you in November, on the eve of the election? In it, I offered you the precise and clear ways that Murray chose to implement justice work in their own life. Pauli wants us to be clear about what we can do, because she believes our gifts are transformative. Pauli also gives us clear guidance for how we can do our work to be most impactful: in community, leveraging interdependence; compassionately; and hopefully and patiently (for we may not see the fruits of our efforts). 

While this guidance may not make us feel better, it does offer remarkable clarity for how we can move through this era. 

Onward, 

Angela Thorpe Mason
Executive Director
Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice

P.S. – I gathered much of this guidance from a compilation of Rev. Murray’s sermons and speeches called To Speak a Defiant Word: Sermons and Speeches on Justice and Transformation. Pick up a copy from your local bookstore. Listening to Dr. Genna Rae McNeil’s 1976 oral history with Pauli Murray (little by little–it’s about 5 hours) has been transformative and grounding, as well. It can be accessed here. There’s nothing like hearing Pauli’s voice.

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December Newsletter Reflection: A Note from our Executive Director

Dear friends,

2024 has been a year of abundance for the Pauli Murray Center. We began the year commemorating the release of the Pauli Murray Quarter. The milestones didn’t stop there: we completed the decade-long rehabilitation of Rev. Dr. Murray’s childhood home, celebrated the Center’s grand opening, secured funding to purchase Pauli Murray’s ancestral land, and so much more. Our growth most certainly aligns with the work that is ahead. We are well-positioned, now more than ever, to accept Murray’s charge to march endlessly towards justice. We’ll fulfill this duty by offering programs that connect Murray’s work and legacy to today’s most pressing justice issues in the U.S. South; by integrating social justice- and equity-centered teaching pedagogies in NC classrooms, shaping the next generation of “firebrands”; and by continuing to cultivate Murray’s childhood home and ancestral land as places where justice-oriented work can be incubated and nurtured. I hope you’ll continue to walk alongside us as this work takes shape. 

Onward, 

Angela M. Mason
Executive Director 
Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice

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November Newsletter Reflection: A Note from our Executive Director

Dear friends,

I'm writing this note to you on Nov. 4th, on the eve of what will be yet another consequential Election Day. When you read this, we will likely have begun navigating the headwinds of the election results and ultimate election outcome. Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray envisioned, for her lifetime, an America that we continue to aspire towards. A nation where each person lives a free, dignified life, without concern for their rights or shrinking any part of their identity. As a 30-something, Pauli Murray offered strategies for how they sought to advocate for this America: "...by persuasion, by spiritual resistance, by the power of [their] pen, and by inviting violence upon [their] own body...by positive and embracing methods." As you consider the strategies you've employed to help us achieve the America we are still striving towards, remember that Pauli Murray reminds us that freedom is our inheritance. As we navigate this election's outcome, we must also take up Murray's charge that comes as a result of that inheritance: we are heirs to the "...tradition of an endless march toward freedom..." Though they may feel so, these times are not unprecedented. Rev. Dr. Murray lived in times where democracy hung in the balance. So did her parents, grandparents, and great grandparents. Steward your inheritance with care. Our work does not end after November 5th. 

Onward, 

Angela M. Mason
Executive Director 
Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice

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Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray on 11th American Women’s Quarter

Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray on 11th American Women’s Quarter

DURHAM, N.C.– The Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice eagerly awaits the U.S. Mint’s Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray quarter. To be released in 2024, the 11th quarter in the  American Women's Quarter Program will celebrate Rev. Dr. Murray’s life as an activist, writer, lawyer, and Episcopal priest. Rev. Dr. Murray will join other recipients like writer Maya Angelou, astronaut  Dr. Sally Ride and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. While the face of the quarter will continue to depict George Washington’s likeness, the reverse (tail) depicts Rev. Dr. Murray’s eyeglass-framed face within the shape of the word “HOPE”. The word “HOPE” honors Rev. Dr. Murray’s belief that significant societal reforms were possible when rooted in hope.  A line from her poem “Dark Testament,” characterizes hope as “A SONG IN A WEARY THROAT,” an inscription in the design.

This significant recognition of Rev. Dr. Murray’s life and legacy has been championed by advocates and activists around the world, including her niece, and Pauli Murray Center board member, Rosita Stevens-Holsey. “The Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray's quarter design is certainly one of the most unique of all of those in the American Women Quarters Program,” she said. “When I see my aunt's face looking out through the letters of the word "hope", it brings to mind that she never lost hope in a society and world that needed to change to embrace the rights of all humans.  Her selection as one of the honorees is validation and a testament to more than 50 years of achievements in social justice, women's rights, civil rights, and human rights.”

As we approach the 2024 quarter release, the Center is excited to celebrate this milestone in company with our supporters and friends in North Carolina. May Rev. Dr. Murray’s work and life keep modeling progress, justice, and community.

About the Pauli Murray Center

The Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice engages diverse communities to lift up the life and legacy of activist, legal scholar, feminist, poet, Episcopal priest, and LGBTQ+ community member, the Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray, in order to address enduring inequities and injustice in our nation. The Pauli Murray Center is a National Historic Landmark site anchored by Pauli Murray’s childhood home in Durham, North Carolina. The home stands on its original site, a one-acre plot, in the historically Black working-class West End neighborhood. PMC is quickly becoming a fully operational, visitor-ready site. Over the next few years, we will completely rehabilitate and create an accessible historic home and education center; build on our robust calendar of workshops, both on the ground and virtually; host community dialogues and invitations to action; and lead creative arts programming.

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Pauli Murray to Be Featured on U.S. Quarters

The Pauli Murray Center is thrilled to share that Pauli Murray, the pioneering activist, scholar, poet, and priest, will be featured on a series of U.S. quarters beginning in 2024 as part of the U.S. Mint’s American Women Quarters Program. The program, which began in 2022, celebrates figures in U.S. history who have made outstanding contributions to American civil rights, history, art and culture, science, and more. Murray will be honored alongside Patsy Takemoto Mink, Dr. Mary Edwards Walker, Zitkala-Ša, and Celia Cruz. The designs will be released in mid-2023. 

This recognition presents an opportunity to explore Pauli’s own writing, and more recent scholarship, about their relationship to gender and womanhood. We do not and can never know Murray’s gender identity – Pauli Murray described themself as a “he/she personality,” requested hormone therapy, and also self-described as a woman. The Pauli Murray Center currently uses she/her and they/them pronouns when discussing Dr. Murray’s life. We encourage those interested to explore the many resources about Pauli Murray, gender, and pronouns, including Dolores Chandler’s Pauli Murray: Black Revolutionary and Simon D. Elin Fisher’s Pauli Murray's Peter Panic: Perspectives from the Margins of Gender and Race in Jim Crow America

The Pauli Murray Center hopes that this unique honor will encourage those who might come across a Pauli Murray quarter to learn about their vision for a just world – including exploring Murray’s legal impact, activism, scholarly and poetic writing, and her legacy in Durham and beyond.

About the Pauli Murray Center

The Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice engages diverse communities to lift up the life and legacy of Black activist, legal scholar, feminist, poet, Episcopal priest, and LGBTQ+ community member, the Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray, in order to address enduring inequities and injustice in our nation. 

The Pauli Murray Center is a National Historic Landmark site anchored by Pauli Murray’s childhood home in Durham, North Carolina. The home stands on its original site, a one-acre plot, in the historically Black working class West End neighborhood. We are becoming a fully operational, visitor-ready site. Over the next few years, we will completely rehabilitate and create an accessible historic home and education center; build on our robust calendar of workshops, both on the ground and virtually; host community dialogues and invitations to action; and lead creative arts programming. 

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Interview with the Rev. Winnie Varghese

Barbara Lau recently interviewed the Rev. Winnie Varghese, who is giving a sermon at the annual Diocesan observance of the Feast of the Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray. To learn more about the service, which will be held on June 22, 2022, visit this page on our website.

This interview was edited for length.


A national leader in the Episcopal Church, the Rev. Winnie Varghese is known for her inspired writing, teaching, and preaching. Before becoming the 23rd rector of St. Luke's, she served as Priest for Ministry and Program Coordination at Trinity Church Wall Street in New York City.

Prior to Trinity, Winnie served as Rector and Priest-in-Charge at St. Mark’s in the Bowery in New York. Winnie was also Chaplain at both Columbia University and University of California Los Angeles. She is a native of Dallas, Texas and is married to Elizabeth Toledo, a public relations executive. They have two grown children.

Winnie serves on the Board of Trustees of Union Theological Seminary, she chaired the General Convention’s Committee on the State of the Church from 2015 to 2018, and she served on the Board of Trustees of the Episcopal Divinity School, 2013-2016. She is also a published author, editor, and podcaster.

Winnie’s parents immigrated to the United States from India, and Winnie spent part of her early childhood years there. She attended Agnes Scott College in Decatur, GA and earned her bachelor’s degree from Southern Methodist University in Dallas. She then attended Union Theological Seminary and graduated with her Master of Divinity degree in 1999. She was ordained to the deaconate in Los Angeles in 1999 and to the priesthood six months later in 2000.


I think what drew me to Pauli Murray is that she created a reality that was true to her lived experience in her body. She didn’t deny the things that she held true, even when they didn’t align with the movements of the time. I just feel a really deep resonance with that. I feel called to serve the church, a church that didn’t know what to make of me through most of my life.
— Rev. Winnie Varghese

Barbara Lau: Recently, someone who knew Pauli Murray shared that everyone who knows Pauli has a “Pauli story.” What’s your Pauli story?

Rev. Winnie Varghese: I have so many stories people have shared about Pauli Murray, so I'll tell you one. When I was the rector of St. Mark's Church-in-the-Bowery, which is in the East Village [in New York City], a man came to visit me who wanted us to bury the ashes of his mother on site. Now the scandal is that it's the East Village in Manhattan so you can imagine there's very limited space to bury anyone. Somehow he had figured out that we're one of the few places that still had a crypt that could open, and you could put ashes in it. Very few people are buried there because there is very limited space.

So he comes to ask me this, and so we're trying to figure out what to do, right? I like him a lot and he says, “My mother has lived in this neighborhood forever. When I came out as a gay man she was really supportive. She was part of the Harlem Renaissance, and knew all of these amazing characters who were part of my growing up.” She sounds wonderful.

He looks at me and says, “Have you heard of Pauli Murray?” 

“Yeah I’ve heard of Pauli Murray.”

He says, “My mother was the house mother at one of the women's dorms at Howard. The Dean of the Law School - the man that organized the law school to study what became the critical move of civil rights and shifted the nature of how we understand our constitution, he intentionally recruited people like Thurgood Marshall and others to come together to figure this out.

Pauli Murray applies to Howard and she's admitted. That dean of the Law School goes to this man's mother and, according to him, says, “We've admitted this woman and she would have to live here. She lives a questionable lifestyle, and if you say no, and there's nowhere for her to live then we don't have to admit her and that's fine. You can say no.” So she said, “Yes, why not? I don’t know what the problem is.”

Of course, we buried his mother. It made me wonder how many people, for all of us, no matter how fierce and mighty we are, are also equipping and empowering. 

I told that story to a gathering of leaders at St. Mark’s. As I’m telling the story, this older Black woman who has been there forever, said, “Oh, yeah. Pauli Murray was a member of the church. She was the first woman on the vestry. She wrote some really heated letters - I'm sure they're in a file. She was the first woman, and she was so angry with a lot of what we were doing. We were all separatists then, there was a Black and brown caucus. She was so enraged by it that she wasn't very pleasant to be around, and then she quit out of frustration by how horrible the men on this vestry were.” Someone brought me the Pauli Murray file. That's my Pauli Murray story. 

BL: Where did you first learn about Pauli Murray?

WV: I've been trying to think about this and I don't know. As long as I can remember, I have had a picture of Pauli Murray on my desk from when I was in seminary. 

I think of all the different ways I might have encountered her - I think what happened is I encountered her through her activism and not through the Episcopal Church. Then I saw a picture of her with a collar on and was so moved by it that I just kept it. That was before the Internet was really a thing, so I got Proud Shoes and I got some articles and she was kind of a personal mentor to me in my mind.

I know I didn't learn about her in seminary. I think it was just my own digging around, and then, when I came back to New York, started to understand that I was living in spaces that she had been in, and then began to learn from people who knew her personally.

BL: How is the Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray an inspiration for your ministry?

WV: I just learned, a couple of years ago, that we share an ordination date. She was ordained on January 8th. I had no idea. 

As a young adult, I assumed that I would have a life as an activist and would be fairly on the margins of things. My sense of what is right tends to be a little bit on the radical side. She, like Dorothy Day and others, I find her story so inspiring. 

What was inspiring was I didn't understand the faith component of her life until a little bit later in my own life. I was really moved by her vision for what is right that is so internally driven in a world where segregation was the way of the land. Fighting segregation was about defining oneself as purely Black or white. Feminism was white. Poverty and illness were defining. She wasn't defined by any of those categories for me was so true to my life.

If I wanted to exist in this country, people like me didn't exist. In my young mind, I could disappear. When I would ask professors about it, to try to understand where I fit as an Indian woman, as a queer woman, and at that time not necessarily looking like the gender people expected me to look like - imagining a future with a vocation in the church? Those things literally didn't exist.

I think what drew me to Pauli Murray is that she created a reality that was true to her lived experience in her body. She didn't deny the things that she held true, even when they didn't align with the movements of the time. I just feel a really deep resonance with that. I feel called to serve the church, a church that didn't know what to make of me through most of my life.

Pauli Murray walks through categories that we still struggle with. To me, so inspiring and so brilliant. The emotional and intellectual capacity to produce what she produced? And to stay alive? And to be true to all of these identity pieces? Her belief that the system should work for her, that systems can work for her, that she would force them to work. It’s so profoundly inspiring.

BL: So I noticed that you use she/her pronouns, and that Pauli Murray pushes us to think more in a more complicated way about gender and gender fluidity. I just wonder, as a member of the LGBTQ+ community, how do you see Pauli inviting us into a deeper conversation?

WV: I think one of the remarkable things to watch in Pauli Murray’s legacy is how many communities deeply identify with some part of her story. She is able to tell her story in such a way, and live her life in such a way that in 2022, fifteen-year-olds are still identifying with that story in ways that, frankly, Pauli Murray couldn't have imagined.

I think the right way to talk about Pauli Murray is without pronouns - the right way to talk about many things is without pronouns. I apologize for my own inaccuracy. 

Queerness is much bigger than my expression of queerness. Pauli Murray invites us to some humility in our identities. If the world doesn't like the version you are or says that who you are should look a different way - I feel like Pauli Murray didn't do that. Pauli Murray plays with identity, tests it, shifts.

Again, such admiration, for forcing doctors to be better than they were, and medicine to be better than it was.

BL: What is inspiring your Sermon that you're going to be offering here in Durham?

WV: I find that for Pauli Murray in particular,  Pauli Murray will inspire that sermon.

I have no doubt in my mind that I will hear something so resonant with this time and this particular political crisis and crises around liberation. I think I’m one of the millions that feels like Pauli Murray speaks to me directly. I'm really grateful to have this opportunity to come to St. Titus - it's an opportunity to refresh my reading and my listening. I’m really, really honored 

BL: We look forward to your ideas about what Pauli Murray is calling us to do today, and we can't wait to host you in Durham. Thank you so much.

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Exhibition Opening at the NC Museum of History

The Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice is delighted to announce that our exhibit, Pauli Murray: Imp, Crusader, Dude, Priest, will be at the North Carolina Museum of History in Raleigh!

Our exhibit uses life-size photographs, an annotated timeline, quotes, and interactive elements to introduce visitors to Pauli Murray, a 20th-century multiracial Black, queer, human rights activist.

The exhibition will be open to visitors from May 28, 2022 to November 27, 2022.

Learn more about the exhibition and how to visit here.

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"This Is My Purpose": Interview with Aya Shabu

Callie Swaim-Fox, Johnson Service Corps fellow for the Pauli Murray Center, recently spoke with Aya Shabu, performer, theater choreographer, dancer, and founder of Whistle Stop Tours. Whistle Stop Tours collaborates with the Pauli Murray Center to create and lead traveling performance through the West End neighborhood, inspired by local history and the Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray's ancestors.

Watch and listen to the interview above to learn more about Aya Shabu’s perspective and goals.

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