Sacred Places Summer 2011 | Page 8

UPDATE on Partners: Pennsylvania Office IN THE PAST FEW MONTHS, Partners for Sacred Places has witnessed a surge in interest and concern around historic religious properties that are shutting their doors in Philadelphia. Partners’ Executive Vice President Tuomi Forrest drew attention to the essential community resources that we lose when this happens in a recently published Philadelphia Weekly article, “Crossed Out: Inner-City Churches Crumbling Before Our Eyes.” Not only do neighborhoods lose spiritual centers and social service programs, they also risk losing their architectural icons when closed religious properties are threatened by demolition, like the controversial case of Church of the Assumption, where Saint Katherine Drexel was baptized. In the next five years, Partners predicts that this issue will grow, as dozens more congregations follow the path toward closure and possible abandonment or demolition. In April, Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter reached out to Partners with an interest in collaborating around this question: How can resources be spent and decisions be made most effectively to protect historic sacred places? Talks with the Mayor, Deputy Mayor Alan Greenberger, Philadelphia City Planning Commission Executive Director Gary Jastrzab, and Director of the Philadelphia Historical Commission Jon Farnham have made it clear that an effective approach to the issue needs to go to the heart of the problem – it must help congregations expand their capacity to avoid closing, let alone face demolition. Collaboration with the City has opened up a wealth of opportunities to better understand and address the issue of at-risk historic sacred places. It reflects a joint commitment to rethinking how existing resources can be more effectively directed to most strategically deal with the issue, and to seeking out new resources to deal Philadelphia’s Metropolitan AME Zion Church, built in 1861, was demolished in February 2011 to make way for construction of six new rowhouses. Photo courtesy of Laura Blanchard. 7 • Sacred Places • www.sacredplaces.org • Summer 2011