• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Current
  • Home
  • About
    • About Current
    • Masthead
  • Podcasts
  • Blogs
    • The Way of Improvement Leads Home
    • The Arena
  • Reviews
  • 🔎
  • Way of Improvement

Haitian evangelicals: GOP ticket “fuels xenophobia and perpetuates damaging stereotypes”

John Fea   |  September 15, 2024

In case you missed it, today on CNN JD Vance doubled-down on the view that Haitian immigrants, here in the country legally, are eating pets in Springfield, Ohio.

Watch:

Vance comes across as really slimy in this interview. He tells Bash to “shut up” and questions her integrity as a journalist. Vance is a smart guy. He knows exactly what he is doing here. This guy has sold his soul for political expediency.

I don’t think there would be any bomb threats in Springfield, Illinois if Donald Trump and JD Vance did not promote this false story.

Here is the mayor of Springfield:

Wittenberg University, a school that is already going through some tough budget cuts, canceled all events today after receiving a bomb threat.

Haitian evangelicals affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention are speaking out. Here is a taste of Diana Chandler’s piece at Kentucky Today:

The U.S. Republican presidential ticket’s unfounded claims that Haitian immigrants are stealing and eating pets in Ohio are alarming, harmful rhetoric that “fuels xenophobia and perpetuates damaging stereotypes,” a group of Southern Baptist pastors and other Christian leaders advocating for Haitians globally told Baptist Press.

“We must reject inflammatory remarks,” the Haitian Christian Leaders Coalition (HCLC) told Baptist Press Sept. 12, “and uphold the dignity and respect every human being deserves, including Haitian immigrants.

“This nation was built by the hard work of immigrants, and Haitians have played a significant part in shaping its identity.”

Keny Felix, an HCLC vice president who is also president of the Southern Baptist Convention National Haitian Fellowship of about 500 Haitian churches, lamented the accusations lodged against Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, by Republican Vice Presidential Candidate J.D. Vance, and repeated by Republican Presidential Candidate Donald Trump on the global stage in reference to all immigrants in Springfield during the Sept. 10 U.S. presidential debate.

HCLC objects in particular to Vance’s Sept. 9th X post, “Reports now show that people have had their pets abducted and eaten by people who shouldn’t be in this country,” and his post that Haitians were “draining social services” in Springfield. And HCLC objects to Trump’s debate response to moderators’ inquiry about immigration, “In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs, the people that came in, they’re eating the cats … the pets of the people that live there.”

Both Springfield Mayor Rob Rue and Springfield police have said there have been no reports of such crimes in the city, with the Springfield News-Sun reporting Sept. 9 that Springfield police had “received no reports related to pets being stolen and eaten.”

“We were shocked and dismayed by the statements of Donald Trump,” Felix told Baptist Press, amplifying an HCLC prepared statement. “We know that words have consequences. Words that are disparaging against any group, let alone a group that is already suffering … is not reflective of who we are as a people.”

Spreading such disinformation can “lead to significant harm” to Haitians in Springfield, Felix said, and is “problematic. It comes down to common sense. But I think it’s all reflective of this trend of – whether we call it racism, or whether we call it xenophobia. It’s dangerous.”

Messengers to the 2023 SBC Annual Meeting adopted a Bible-based Resolution on Wisely Engaging Immigration, and Felix said it is disturbing that evangelicals are not calling out Trump’s and Vance’s behavior, just as evangelicals critique the leaders’ stances on abortion and other policies.

“For me, the disappointing factor is that evangelicals are not calling out the behavior that is not consistent with what we call evangelical life,” Felix said, “which is love your neighbor as you love yourself. And so when we fail to do that, it puts us in a challenging position then to share the Gospel – we often say the Gospel of love and grace – when we support someone who spews the opposite through their words.”

Trump’s and Vance’s words are reminiscent of statements that were made to denigrate Felix and his peers on middle school playgrounds, he said.

“But to hear this from a national debate stage, which is pretty much a job interview for a role that we recognize as the presidency of the United States, the commander in chief, the leader of the free world,” Felix said, “and to talk in those terms without any regard, it’s very hurtful. It’s very sad.”

Felix and other HCLC leaders planned to establish contacts with Springfield community leaders and Haitian civic leaders from across the U.S., hopefully in advance of visiting Springfield to collaborate on ways to support the Haitian community there.

Read the rest here.

Filed Under: Way of Improvement Tagged With: 2024 presidential election, Dana Bash, evangelicals and politics, Haitian evangelicals, immigration, nativism, Ohio, Wittenberg University