Quaker House Santa Fe Meeting

Quaker House Santa Fe Meeting Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Quaker House Santa Fe Meeting, Religious Center, 2098 Calle Ensenada, Santa Fe, NM.

Quakers Call Each Other Friends

10:30 am Sundays, Worship followed by pot-luck lunch

5:00 pm Wednesdays, Mid-week Worship, Arrive when you can, leave when you must

Some very interesting history
07/19/2021

Some very interesting history

Hicksite Friends and the Government of God

Well there it is.
07/12/2021

Well there it is.

The First Quaker Communities

06/19/2021

19 JUNE 1865--JUNETEENTH: HAPPY FREEDOM DAY!

The BlackQuaker Project is happy to celebrate Juneteenth, also known as Freedom Day and Emancipation Day, an important memorialization of African American history commemorating the end of slavery in the USA. Although the Emancipation Proclamation (1 January 1863) outlawed slavery in seceding states during the Civil War and the 13th Amendment (passed on 31 January 1865) officially ended the practice of chattel slavery across the country, its abolition could not be enforced until after the war’s end. Texas, like all Southern states, refused to recognize the Emancipation Proclamation. African Americans in Texas continued to be held in bo***ge until the arrival of the Union Army and the reading of General Order No. 3 on 19 June 1865, re-proclaiming freedom from slavery. Black communities across the USA have imbued the date with a deep cultural meaning for over a century, claiming it as a holiday in recognition of the ancestral struggle for Black liberation, celebrating with parades, street fairs, musical festivals, and family reunions. As of 17 June 2021, 2 days ago, 19 June has become a federal holiday, JUNETEENTH!

As we celebrate Juneteenth, let us also acknowledge the contributions of African American Quakers to the anti-slavery movement. Benjamin Banneker (9 November 1731 - 9 October 1806) was a friend of Friends, free African American, astronomer, surveyor, and mathematician. Banneker corresponded with Thomas Jefferson as he was writing early drafts of the Declaration of Independence, and later, petitioning him to recognize racial equality.

Cyrus Bustill ( 2 February 1732—1806), an ancestor of Sarah Mapps Douglass and Paul Robeson, was a founding member of the Free African Society. Early in life, he refused to marry and have children as he did not want to bring them into slavery.
William Boen (1735 - 1824), Mt. Holly, NJ, escaped enslavement. He petitioned to join the Religious Society of Friends for four decades, putting pressure on the Religious Society of Friends to allow more people of color into its body. His applications were deferred until 1814.

Paul Cuffe (17 January 1759 - 7 January 1817) was a New England Quaker philanthropist, ship captain, and Pan-Africanist. He served jail time after protesting his inability to vote by refusing to pay taxes, constructed an in*******al school for his children, guaranteed the construction of the Westport (MA) Friends Meetinghouse, and built trade connections between Sierra Leone, in West Africa, and the USA. Most important, he organized efforts for enslaved Africans in the USA to return to freedom in Africa.

Elizabeth (1766-1866, last name unknown) was a Methodist minister who attended Quaker worship and received support from Friends in defending her right to minister as a woman. She established a school for Black orphans.

Sojourner Truth (1797 - 26 November 1883), broke free from slavery and successfully sued for custody of her son who had been sold to an Alabama slave owner. She was an active speaker before Black and white audiences, regarded as an honored orator who traveled throughout the various states on behalf of Black Freedom and women’s rights. There is a statue of her in Northampton, Massachusetts, among many others throughout the USA, celebrating her anti-slavery activism.

Sarah Mapps Douglass (9 September 1806 - 8 September 1882), a prolific educator, author, and abolitionist, published in various anti-slavery journals. She encountered racial prejudice in the Religious Society of Friends, being forced -- like her Quaker mother, Grace Bustill Douglass -- to sit in segregated seating on the back bench in Philadelphia’s Arch Street Meeting. She was a founding member of the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society in 1833.

Robert Purvis (1810-1898) was an abolitionist and chair of the General Vigilance Committee, which coordinated operations of the Underground Railroad in Philadelphia. While not a Quaker, he, like Sojourner Truth, had close ties to Friends. He was a founding member of the American Anti-Slavery Society and served as president of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society from 1845-1850.

You will find additional information on these Friends, friends of Friends, and other Black Quakers in Black Fire: African American Quakers on Spirituality and Human Rights, edited by Harold D. Weaver Jr., Paul Kriese, and Stephen W. Angell (Philadelphia: Quaker Press of Friends General Council, 2011).

For those discovering Juneteenth in recent years, we encourage reflection on both the long efforts towards ending slavery and the many horrors of White Supremacy that have followed. This includes not only the Jim Crow laws and practices that followed enslavement, but also the razing of numerous Black communities (such as the Greenwood District in Tulsa, Oklahoma), the discrimination of African Americans in the GI Bill, particularly in the areas of home ownership and access to education, and historical racist medical practices (most notoriously the Tuskegee Syphilis Study), to name a few examples. As Juneteenth becomes more visible outside of the Black community as a federal holiday, we hope to see further recognition and memorialization of important acts of Black and other resistance to oppression in USA, African American, and world history.

What does the celebration of Juneteenth mean to you and your community? How long have you been aware of the holiday’s importance? Please comment below with your comments and questions.

To learn more about how Retrospective Justice can be practiced to establish accountability for past acts of oppression against African Americans, please read our Pendle Hill pamphlet, Race, Systemic Violence, and Retrospective Justice: An African American Quaker Scholar-Activist Challenges Conventional Narratives by Harold D. Weaver Jr. (Pendle Hill Press, Wallingford, PA, 2020). Also see Dr. Weaver’s 2021 Friends Journal article “A Proposed Plan for Retrospective Justice.”
Consider signing up for our mailing list to follow our ongoing work, including the expanding Quakers of Color International Archive.

-- The BlackQuaker Project

06/05/2021

“Seek harmony, not balance. Do not cut your life into pieces and measure their worth on a scale. Instead gauge your success by how well you have loved. Let your life sing. Join your song to the Great Symphony that has played long before your birth and will go on sounding after your death.” – Valarie Kaur

Photo by Kathy Barnhart.

06/01/2021

On this date in 1660 (June 1st), a woman named Mary Dyer was executed by hanging in Boston, Massachusetts. She was a Quaker, a traveling preacher, one of several who repeatedly defied a Puritan law banning Quakers from Massachusetts Bay Colony. She was about 50 years old. Some sources say her ex*****on took place on Boston Common. Actually, the gallows at the time were located about a mile south, in the Boston Neck area.

Photo: The Mary Dyer statue, Beacon and Bowdoin Streets, Boston.

~The Marginal Mennonite Society Heroes Series

This is what "attender" means.
05/31/2021

This is what "attender" means.

Attend to what love requires of you.

05/28/2021
05/28/2021

For Memorial Day weekend, I'm sharing here the names of 50 MMS heroes who were conscientious objectors to war. Many went to prison. Some lost their lives.

Cyrus Pringle (1838-1911) Quaker
Archibald Baxter (1881-1970) Socialist
Arthur Eddington (1882-1944) Quaker
Thomas Catchpool (1883-1952) Quaker
Roger Nash Baldwin (1884-1981) Unitarian
Mark Briggs (1884-1965) Socialist
Michael Hofer (1893-1918) Hutterite
Joseph Hofer (1894-1918) Hutterite
Floyd Schmoe (1895-2001) Quaker
John T. Neufeld (1895-1961) Mennonite

Ernest Swalm (1897-1991) Brethren in Christ
Leopold Engleitner (1905-2013) J.W.
Arndt Pekurinen (1905-1941)
Kenneth Rexroth (1905-1982)
Bennett W. Andrews (1906-1994)
Franz Jagerstatter (1907-1943)
Wally Nelson (1909-2002)
Glenn E. Smiley (1910-1993) Methodist
Bayard Rustin (1912-1987) Quaker
William Stafford (1914-1993) Church of Brethren

Sun Ra (1914-1993)
Wilhelm Kusserow (1914-1940) J.W.
George Willoughby (1914-2010) Quaker
Ralph DiGia (1914-2008)
James Peck (1914-1993)
David Dellinger (1915-2004)
Grant M. Stoltzfus (1916-1974) Mennonite
George Houser (1916-2015) Methodist
Igal Roodenko (1917-1991)
Gordon Zahn (1918-2007)

Eric Baker (1920-1976) Quaker
Delbert Gratz (1920-2000) Mennonite
Alex Comfort (1920-2000)
Roy Kepler (1920- 1994)
Cornelius J. Dyck (1921-2014) Mennonite
William Worthy (1921-2014)
Wolfgang Kusserow (1922-1942) J.W.
Larry Gara (1922-2019) Quaker
Gordon Kaufman (1925-2011) Mennonite
Ernie Goertzen (1926-2004) Mennonite

Paul Eddington (1927-1995) Quaker
James Lawson (1928- ) Methodist
Staughton Lynd (1929- ) Quaker
Arthur Gish (1939-2010) Church of Brethren
Jim Forest (1941- ) Orthodox
Chuck Fager (1942- ) Quaker
Muhammad Ali (1942-2016) Muslim
Steve Reid (1944-2010)
Randy Kehler (1944- )
Sam Steiner (1946- ) Mennonite

05/26/2021

25 May - Happy Africa Day!
Remembering George Floyd

05/09/2021

We will not have great
questions decided by
irrelevant agencies. Our
husbands shall not come
to us, reeking with carnage,
for caresses and applause.
Our sons shall not
be taken from us
to unlearn all that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience.

05/07/2021

Our doors are open w/ social distancing, great ventilation & everyone wearing masks.

Address

2098 Calle Ensenada
Santa Fe, NM
87505

Opening Hours

Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm
Sunday 9am - 5pm

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