Published: Jul 11, 2012 05:34 PM
Modified: Jul 11, 2012 05:35 PM
The late Pauli Murray (1910-1985), who grew up in Durham, is expected to have her name included in the Episcopal Church’s book “Holy Women, Holy Men,” giving her the status of a saint.
Murray, whose legacy includes her work as a feminist, civil rights activist, lawyer, author and the distinction of being the first black female Episcopal priest, was reared by her grandparents Robert and Cornelia Fitzgerald on Carroll Street.
The vote on including her and two others from North Carolina will come during the church’s General Convention, now in session in Indianapolis. As of Wednesday afternoon, the item had not made it to the floor. The convention ends Friday.
The other two nominees are Virginia Dare and Manteo, a native American, who were the first two people baptized by the Church of England on what is now Roanoke Island. The Church of England is the parent church of Anglican and Episcopal churches. (Virginia Dare was also the first English child born in the colonies.)
In a video from the convention last week, Bishop Michael Curry of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina, said, “Holy Women, Holy Men’ is one way the church lifts up people whose lives have exemplified what it means to follow in the footsteps of Jesus and make a difference in the world, and Pauli Murray is one of those people.”
“As a descendent of slaves and slaveholders, people who were members of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina, she is a symbol for the importance of bringing different worlds together, even in midst of great pain,” Bishop Curry said.
In 1977, when Murray was 66, she was ordained an Episcopal priest and she offered communion for the first time at Chapel of the Cross in Chapel Hill where her grandmother had been baptized as a slave.
In addition to her career in the church, Murray was also a lawyer, holding law degrees from Howard Law School, the University of California and Yale University.
She was turned away from UNC Chapel Hill’s graduate school in 1938 and faced many other closed doors because of her race and possibly her sexual orientation as well. People who have read her writings are generally in agreement that she was a lesbian, though Murray never described herself that way.
The Rev. Brooks Graebner, rector of St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church in Hillsborough, and a church historian, said Murray used her law degrees to teach at Brandeis University and to write her first book, a collection of all laws in every state related to race. The best known piece of her writing is the memoir “Proud Shoes: The Story of an American Family” in which she talks about growing up multi-racial in Durham’s West End.
Sarah Woodard, a deacon at St. Titus Episcopal Church in Durham, said that Murray would “turn over in her grave” from all the attention she is getting. “She would not like for us to do this. She felt her duty was to stand up for the rights of everyone.”
Last year, Murray’s childhood home known as the Murray-Richard Fitzgerald House was acquired by the Pauli Murray Project based at Duke University and a plan for its use is being developed.
“Durham can embrace Pauli Murray as an inspiration for our community’s commitment to the struggle for equality, dignity and justice,” said Barbara Lau, project director. “With this recognition as an Episcopal saint, even more people will learn about her legacy of activism and the relevance of her ideas to today’s issues.”