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Category: 13. Religion
MITC001. Mitchell, Lynette Blair. A
place of belonging. News and Observer (Raleigh, NC) Friday,
12 April 2002.
Publication type: Newspaper article
This article focuses on the Triangle Native American
United Methodist Church, which formed in Raleigh in July 2001. With
around forty regular attendees, it is Raleigh's first Native American
church. It meets in the Methodist Home for Children's conference room.
The United Methodist Church has had a ministry to Native Americans since
1988, focusing its donations one Sunday each year to Native Americans
as well as funding scholarships for Native Americans to attend divinity
school.
The pastor of Triangle Native American United Methodist
Church, Sylvia Collins, is Lumbee. Her divinity degree is from Duke
University. Darlene Jacobs, Lumbee, who attends the church, is the community
service program director for the North Carolina Commission of Indian
Affairs. She states that of the Native Americans she encounters in her
work, about 90% are connected to a Christian church.
The article notes that North Carolina has about seventeen
Methodist churches that are primarily Native American.
Additional Subjects: Triangle Native American United Methodist
Church | Sylvia Collins | Darlene Jacobs | Raleigh, NC
This annotation was written on: August 30, 2002; edited
on April 29, 2003.
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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