MOSAIC Fall 2017 | Page 41

streets of the neighborhood, claiming “the white priests have returned for school and have repainted the statue white.” The administration’s reaction was just as immediate. After consulting with the chancery, the rector accompanied two senior seminarians to the grotto, Paul Brohl and Dick Deighton. Together they painted the extremities black again, on Sunday evening, September 17. “The three of us proceeded out of the residence hall and down a basement corri- dor. Monsignor began to explain the mis- sion he wanted us to undertake,” Brohl recalls about the event. “He found a can of black paint, a couple of small brushes, and a step ladder. We spent about twenty min- utes repainting the hands, feet, and face. “We wanted to do it carefully because the original painter had taken time to do a good job.” Deighton remembers that just as they finished their handiwork, four police cars roared up to the grotto, and several officers came running toward the paint- ers. “With shotguns in the ready posi- tion. This was post-riot Detroit, after all,” Deighton relates. Apparently, the officers thought that trespassers had returned to the campus and accomplished the repaint- ing. “My recollection is one of the officers said, ‘Looks like we’re too late.’” “Monsignor explained that we had done the deed—and he wanted it to stay that way,” Brohl adds. “I was never so happy to be in the presence of the seminary rector in all my years at Sacred Heart!” As Monsignor Canfield explains in his succinct note about the event, “The deci- sion was reached to repaint it black, to re- tain the symbol that we feel Christ is for the Negro as well as the white man.” WHAT DOES IT MEAN TODAY? Father Grandpre taught history at the seminary high school and oversaw build- ing maintenance until 1977. In a 2007 interview, he tells of a ritual he directed du ring his tenure. The statue would take a beating from the elements, so each sum- mer the maintenance crew would pains- takingly scrape the peeling paint from the statue and repaint it, the body white and the extremities black. “It was kind of a proud thing for us. We “THE STATUE IS ONE OF THE FEW POSITIVE VISIBLE SYMBOLS REMAINING IN THE CITY OF THE STRIFE-FILLED SUMMER OF 1967.” wanted to maintain this symbol of what happened in 1967,” said Grandpre. This tradition of maintaining the visual significance of Black Jesus continues. In 2006, the statue went through exten- sive renovation. Sculptor Frank Varga stripped away multiple layers of paint, down to the cast stone, that had been ob- scuring the fine details of the statue. Fin- gers from the hands had fallen off, weak- ened by the weather, so Varga replaced both hands with pewter replicas. Using a special polymer, he repaired the delicate details of the nose, mouth, eyes, and feet. In 2012, a group of seminarians spent over three hundred worker hours repair- ing the grotto area as a summer work proj- ect. Led by a seminarian with construction experience, the men jackhammered loose and then re-mortared all of the slate flag- stones of the walkway and the stair steps leading up to the statue. One seminarian with expertise in religious statue restora- tion repaired some of Black Jesus’ facial features. With the approval of the admin- istration, the men painted the heart of Jesus vivid red and the rays of light ema- nating from the heart bright yellow to ac- centuate this source of all graces. The seminarians recall with humor how neighbors would question them pro- tectively about the intent of their work— and then give thumbs up and shouts of approval after being told the statue was being repaired, not removed or painted white again. Episodes such as this indicate that over the years, the Black Jesus grotto and im- age has evolved in its meaning. It was conceived as an expression of traditional Catholic piety, transformed by the fires of urban unrest into an icon of controversy, but now represents Jesus’ love for all races and the equality of all peoples, particularly to Detroit’s black citizens. The statue has immense historical val- ue, as well. A former seminary adminis- trator in a 2007 interview suggests that the statue is one of the few positive vis- ible symbols remaining in the city of the strife-filled summer of 1967. As such, it speaks less of violence and more of the struggle for racial identity. Monsignor Lajiness and Sacred Heart’s leadership believe that spiritual renewal and social good can be encouraged using the Black Jesus grotto as a symbolic focal point. On Saturday, September 9, semi- narians, resident priests, and friends of the seminary gathered before the shrine and prayed for an end to racism and peace in our nation’s communities. Led by Mon- signor Lajiness, the gathering recited Day- time Prayer and prayers to end racism rec- ommended by the United States bishops. “The prayer service will be the first in a series of events throughout the year through which Sacred Heart will engage in the national prayer and conversation about the sin of racism,” Monsignor said, noting that the gathering was in re- sponse to the violence that had broken out at a protest march in Charlottesville, Virginia. “With great humility we place ourselves before the Sacred Heart of Jesus and pray for healing.” As Monsignor Lajiness further ex- pressed, “The open arms of the Sacred Heart presents a powerful image of hope and solidarity. The statue reminds us that God, through his incarnate Son, embraces all of humanity and every race.” Or, in the words of Pope Pius XII, Black Jesus has become “A source of and symbol of unity, salvation and peace” for all people of goodwill. shms.edu 39