BLACK LIVES MATTER LDS LEADER DALLIN OAKS TELLS BYU AUDIENCE, AND IS A CAUSE ALL SHOULD SUPPORT
By Peggy Fletcher Stack
For the first time, Dallin H. Oaks, next in line for the presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, called Black lives matter an “eternal truth all reasonable people should support.”
That does not mean everything that is done under the banner of the Black Lives Matter movement — including “abolishing the police or seriously reducing their effectiveness or changing our constitutional government” — commands universal backing, Oaks said Tuesday in a virtual speech to students at Brigham Young University. “All these are appropriate subjects for advocacy, but not under what we hope to be the universally acceptable message: Black lives matter.”
In his speech, the 88-year-old Oaks, first counselor in the Utah-based faith’s governing First Presidency, returned to the theme he addressed at this month’s General Conference, in which he said that racism must be “rooted out.”
On Tuesday, the former Utah Supreme Court justice pointed to the “shocking police-produced death of George Floyd in Minnesota” and emphasized the words of church President Russell M. Nelson’s speech at the same conference, saying that God does not value one race over another and that “favor or disfavor with God is dependent upon your devotion to God and his commandments, and not the color of your skin.”
He reiterated Nelson’s directive to Latter-day Saints to “lead out in abandoning attitudes and actions of prejudice toward any group of God’s children.”
When it comes to taking the names of slaveholders off buildings on university campuses, including at BYU, however, Oaks said they may “accomplish nothing but a bow to the cause of political correctness.”
He may have been referring to an effort by some BYU students to remove the name of Abraham O. Smoot, a 19th-century slaveholder, from the church-owned Provo school’s administration building. Oaks — addressing a small, physically distanced and mask-wearing crowd permitted inside the Marriott Center and a much larger audience online — said he could not “condone our now erasing all mention and honor of prominent leaders like George Washington, who established our nation and gave us our Constitution, because they lived at a time with legal approvals and traditions that condoned slavery.”
Quoting Winston Churchill, the Latter-day Saint leader said: “If we open a quarrel between the past and the present, we shall find that we have lost the future.”
“The predecessors of many Americans of different backgrounds made great sacrifices to establish this nation,” Oaks added. “Whatever those sacrifices — of freedom, property or even life — let us now honor them for what they have done for us and forgo quarreling over the past. Ours is the duty to unite and improve the future we will share.”
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