Ferguson turmoil draws U.S. evangelist's
rapid response team
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[March 16, 2015]
By Richard Valdmanis
FERGUSON, Missouri (Reuters) - Hours after
two police officers were shot at a protest in Ferguson, Missouri, last
week, a black Kenworth truck in North Carolina hauling a collapsible
conference room began rolling down the highway toward the scene, intent
on bringing peace and saving souls.
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The truck, one of Christian evangelist Billy Graham's Rapid
Response Team vehicles, sped toward the latest U.S. crisis armed
with chaplains trained to help people cope with everything from
tornadoes to mass shootings.
"The police force needed chaplains after the shooting, and we've
also been serving the protesters," said Al New, manager of the
team's U.S. deployments, who drove the truck.
Ferguson, reeling since the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael
Brown seven months ago and subsequent demonstrations, has been
thrust into the center of a national debate on race and policing.
Tensions flared this month with the release of a U.S. Justice
Department report detailing what it called systemic bias in the
police force and a court system that disproportionately levied steep
fines on Ferguson’s black residents.
On Sunday, when officials announced a suspect had been arrested in
the shooting of the police officers, shouting and shoving broke out
among scores of protesters outside Ferguson's police station.
Soon, uniformed Graham chaplains emerged from the mobile conference
room parked across the street, talking people down and even dragging
a woman by the wrist from an angry crowd.
Over the course of the day, the chaplains invited people into the
truck, offering snacks and prayer.
Graham, now 96, became one of America's best known Christian
television and radio evangelists in the 1950s and 60s, serving as
spiritual adviser to presidents from Dwight Eisenhower to Richard
Nixon, and supporting Martin Luther King's civil rights campaign.
With son Franklin now in charge, the Billy Graham Evangelistic
Association operates a variety of programs such as the Rapid
Response Team.
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The program, set up after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, has 1,800
volunteer chaplains in the United States and has chalked up more
than 250 deployments, from tornadoes and hurricanes to shootings.
New, a former firefighter from Tennessee, said the donor-funded
Rapid Response Team first visited Ferguson in November, after a
grand jury cleared a white police officer of wrongdoing in Brown's
death, touching off street violence.
Chaplains, he said, soon found themselves at the mercy of the city's
most feared drugs gangs.
"Two gang members came and told us to leave," New said. But after
talking, the neighborhood's female gang leader, nicknamed 'The
Queen,' decided to let them stay.
"From then, the gangs were our protectors," New said.
He said three gang members gave up their guns and another 100 area
people "gave themselves to Jesus."
(Editing by Chris Michaud)
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