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A Tribute to Margaret Hope Bacon
This granddaughter described Margaret discovering Lucretia Mott’s grave at Fair Hill Burial Ground in north Philadelphia, which at the time was overgrown, neglected, surrounded by a neighborhood also terribly neglected and abandoned. I can imagine Margaret discovering Lucretia’s grave on that day in 1992 – finding the small gravestone among the trash and debris, brushing it off, picking up the trash, clearing the space to reveal the lettering. That day was the beginning of the transformation of that burial ground to become a place of witness and love – for the lives of those interred there, the lives of the Quakers tending the graves, and for the neighbors living close. That day began a relationship Bruce Birchard, General Secretary of FGC, was a good friend of Margaret and her husband, Allen. He had care of the memorial meeting for worship, and he told a story about Margaret’s indomitable spirit: "I served with Margaret Bacon on what is now called Membership Care Committee for Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting. Our meeting was one of the early ones to seriously consider the possibility of marrying same gender couples under our care. After several years of discernment, the meeting finally found unity in a decision to hold “ceremonies of commitment” for same gender couples, but not marriage ceremonies. Although we had several same-gender couples in our meeting, however, not one of them approached the meeting about having a “ceremony of commitment.” After a year or two of no action, someone (and it may have been Margaret) brought the matter up again in our committee. We had a strong sense that our work was not done. Shouldn’t we bring the matter back to the meeting for further discernment? One member of the committee—a lesbian woman—said, “I don’t know if we should do this. I’m not optimistic about the ability of our meeting to move further on this matter.” Margaret spoke at that point: “This is not about being optimistic or pessimistic. This is about being faithful. I understand the fears we have, and I know it will be hard and challenging work. But I have faith that this meeting can come to unity to marry same-gender couples.” It took another year and a half, but we did come to that unity, and it was a supremely joyous day when we found ourselves clear on that decision." As Fair Hill has no more space to bury Quakers, Margaret was buried at another Quaker burial ground, Friends Southwestern Burial Ground in Upper Darby, the place where my husband serves as caretaker and we live in the caretaker’s house. Now her grave will serve as a constant reminder to me and others to live my life courageously, grounded in faith.
Margaret wants to know. In tribute to Margaret, we are offering 15% off any book listed here that she wrote. Please take some time to peruse her works, a wonderful collection which illuminates the lives of Friends.
Find all of Margaret's in print books at her author's page at QuakerBooks. In Peace, Here is an interview conducted with Margaret by Angelina Conti in 2008. Here is Margaret’s obituary in the Philadelphia Inquirer. Margaret gave FGC many of her old books, you can find some of them here. New Got Silence? T-Shirts Available
This conversation on Facebook inspired the t-shirts we just produced, which have the new FGC ‘Seed’ logo on the front and “Got Silence? www.quakerfinder.org” on the back. They are available in v-neck, men’s traditional or women’s tiny sized shirts in a dark teal blue or cranberry red. We think they look great!
Pre-Order Parker Palmer's New Book
“Democracy,” writes Palmer, “is a non-stop experiment in the strengths and weaknesses of our political institutions, local communities, and the human heart—and its outcome can never be taken for granted. The experiment is endless, unless we blow up the lab, and the explosives to do the job are found within us. But so also is the heart’s alchemy that can turn suffering into compassion, conflict into community, and tension into energy for creativity amid democracy’s demands.”
You can pre-order the book from QuakerBooks for a 10% pre-publication price through August 15th, 2011. Read an interview that Chel Avery pulled together with Parker Palmer a couple years ago. |
New Books![]()
Counterpower, Making Change Happen
The Early Quakers And The 'kingdom Of God'
Ending Cycles Of Violence
John Woolman's Path To The Peaceable Kingdom
Killer Cure
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