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Subject:
From:
Felix Ossia <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
AAM (African Association of Madison)
Date:
Fri, 1 Aug 2003 19:29:44 -0500
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** Visit AAM's new website! http://www.africanassociation.org **

La. Church Offers to Pay Whites to Attend 
By DOUG SIMPSON 
Associated Press Writer 

August 1, 2003, 3:14 PM EDT 

SHREVEPORT, La. -- Week after week, Bishop Fred Caldwell grew tired of
seeing so few white faces in his predominantly black church. So now he
is offering to pay whites to attend. 

Starting Sunday, Caldwell will pay whites $5 an hour out of his own
pocket for attending Sunday services, and $10 an hour for Thursday night
services. The idea hit him during a sermon last week, he said. 

"This idea is born of God. God wants a rainbow in his church," said
Caldwell, bishop at Greenwood Acres Full Gospel Baptist Church, with a
congregation of about 5,000. 

Caldwell said he has gotten mainly positive responses from his
parishioners and from whites, a number of whom have told him they will
attend his services for free. 

One was Ron Ward, who said he and his wife are the only white members of
a church in a nearby town. Ward said he became frustrated after failing
to persuade his white friends to join. 

"It's time for people to stop being separated from each other," Ward
said. "I wanted to come down here and help this minister in any way I
can." 

Caldwell said he believes the country is too segregated in all areas,
but most of all in its churches. 

"The most segregated hour in America is Sunday morning at 11 o'clock.
The Lord is tired of it, and I'm certainly tired of it," he said. "This
is not right." 

The bishop's plan has become the talk of Shreveport, a city of about
200,000, almost equally divided between black and white residents. In
bars, restaurants and coffee shops, residents debated the idea of paying
people to attend church. 

Some wondered whether the bishop's regular congregation would feel
neglected. 

But many black congregants said they approved of the project and even
donated to the cause. 

"This is not just somebody paying white folks," said Loretha Bradley, a
black member of Caldwell's church. "It's the idea behind it that's
important." 

Copyright © 2003, The Associated Press 

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