10/80
The 272 by Rachel L. Swarns
For more than a century, the Catholic Church financed its expansion and its institutions with profits made from the purchase and sale of people they enslaved. This chapter of Church history has only recently come to the attention of the public.
"Without the enslaved, the Catholic Church in the United States as we know it today would not exist," writes author Rachel Swarns. She says the priests prayed for the salvation of the souls of the people they owned, even as they bought and sold their bodies.
In 1838, the Jesuits sold 272 enslaved people, which helped save what is now Georgetown University from bankruptcy and helped stabilize the Jesuits in Maryland. Swarns wrote about this sale in 2016 in the
New York Times article "
272 Slaves Were Sold to Save Georgetown. What does It owe Their Descendants?"
This was as difficult to read as any book about concentration camps in WWII. I learned about this history in a recent issue of US Catholic Magazine which I have subscribed to for all my adult life.
As far as reading, I think it’s more a 3.5/5, it’s informative and I finished it because I think it’s an important book.