WCC > Что мы делаем? > Unity, mission, evangelism and spirituality > Just and inclusive communities > Racism

Churches overcoming racism

Overcoming racism and the need to focus attention on the life and dignity of its victims has been a major WCC concern for several decades. Regrettably, new forms of racism constantly emerge and racial violence is on the rise.

The WCC challenges the churches to address racism in their own structures and life, and draws on their work and experience in this struggle. Over the coming period, work will concentrate on:

  • analyzing contemporary forms of slavery while commemorating the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the slave trade; a 2007 conference in the Caribbean will attempt to express churches' views on repentance and reparations and on the crisis to human dignity in today's globalized world;
  • through a "Sisters" network of Black, Indigenous, Dalit and ethnic-minority women who suffer from racism, sexism, casteism, exclusion and marginalization, the WCC supports women's leadership development and networking;
  • a publication on youth perspectives on racism in the 21st century;
  • churches overcoming racism in Europe: in a context of large-scale migration to Europe and the changing face of Christianity on the continent, a consultation will attempt to synthesize theological insights with concrete examples of good practice from the experience of Christian communities.
As part of an Ecumenical Study on Racism, this paper is a discussion-starter at the 2002 WCC central committee meeting on churches acting through transformative justice to overcome racism.
WCC report on its participation in the UN World Conference against Racism Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance (WCAR) held in Durban, South Africa, from 31 August to 7 September 2001
A revised and expanded version of a dossier produced for the WCC Harare Assembly, 1998
Statement by the International Ecumenical Conference in Commemoration of the 200th Anniversary of the Abolition of the British Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, December 2007.