by Alex Jack,
his son, Educator on Health and Diet
As
the clouds of war gathered over Europe in 1937, Homer A. Jack,
a young Cornell graduate student, found himself teaching at
a small college in Athens. He was completing his Ph.D. in
biology and visited Europe to finish his thesis on the biological
field stations of the world. On a tour of the continent at
the end of the following school year, he visited Stalin's
Russia, Hitler's Germany, and Mussolini's Italy. In Moscow,
the authorities confiscated his camera, in Germany and Austria
he witnessed overt anti-Semitism, and in Italy he observed
ominous signs of spreading fascism. The lessons he learned
about totalitarianism far outweighed the knowledge he acquired
of the local flora and fauna.
Returning home to upstate New
York, Homer threw himself into peace activities to prevent
America from being drawn into a second world war. He edited
the Rochester No-War News and helped organize a rally
that attracted 3000 people. Homer's grandparents had immigrated
from Central and Eastern Europe to avoid poverty and oppression.
His parents, Alexander and Cecelia Jacobowitz (later shortened
to Jack) had been active socialists and freethinkers. In Rochester
they had known and marched with Susan B. Anthony, the leader
of the suffragist movement. As an only child, Homer shared
his parents' radicalism, distrust of organized religion, and
worship of nature. Tom Paine's lyrical refrain, "The world
is my church and my religion is to do good," summed up the
Jack family's theological outlook.
At Monroe High School in the
early 1930s, Homer met Esther Rhys Williams, the daughter
of the local Unitarian minister and lead actress in many school
plays. At Cornell, Homer kept in touch with the radiant sociology
major at Oberlin College, and in 1939 the young couple were
wed. The radical roots of Esther's family matched the Jacks,
extending from descendents of Samuel Adams, the Revolutionary
War mastermind, on her mother's side to the Kremlin where
Esther's uncle, journalist Albert Rhys Williams, was a biographer
and confidant of Lenin during the Russian Revolution. Over
the years, Esther's father, Rev. David Rhys Williams, had
earned his own reputation as a fiery orator and champion of
labor, civil rights, and pacifism. As the drums of war started
beating, he was one of the few Rochester clergymen to support
Homer's anti-war activities.
Unitarians
with President Truman at the White House
As these political and personal
forces converged in his life, Homer abandoned a career in
science for the ministry. "I was much more interested in men
than mice," he later quipped. With his father-in-law's encouragement,
he enrolled at Meadville Theological School in Chicago and
prepared for the Unitarian pulpit. In between classes and
a student pastorate in downstate Illinois, Homer and several
classmates managed to shake up the staid seminary by trying
to unionize the several Negroes on staff, picketing the British
Embassy in support of Gandhi's "Quit India" campaign,
and devoting a chapel service to the plight of a young Chinese-America
who refused to be drafted into the army.
In 1942 Homer began attending
meetings of the Fellowship of Reconciliation at the University
of Chicago whose organizers included George Houser, James
Farmer, and Bayard Rustin. Although primarily a pacifist organization,
the FOR cell focused on racism in the local community, especially
housing discrimination and segregated restaurants and lunch
counters. Out of these meetings was born CORE, the Congress
on Racial Equality, which introduced Gandhian techniques of
nonviolence to the United States. In 1943 Homer helped organize
the first civil rights sit- in and participated in the first
Freedom Ride in the Border States and South in 1947. In Nashville,
Homer and Nathan Wright, a young Negro social worker from
Cincinnati, boarded a midnight train traveling to Louisville
and sat together in the whites only section. "He's your prisoner,
isn't he?" the conductor commented, assuming Homer to be a
sheriff. "No, he's not," Homer replied evenly. "Why, then
what's he doing here?" the trainman inquired incredulously.
Homer explained that they were traveling together and had
a right to sit wherever they wanted. The conductor said it
was impossible. But Homer and Nathan would not move and, to
their relief, the journey proceeded without incident.
After graduating from Meadville,
Homer accepted the pulpit of the Unitarian Church in Lawrence,
Kansas. Despite being the site of abolitionist crusader John
Brown's "Free Kansas" movement, Lawrence was violently anti-Negro
and anti-labor. Black people were not allowed to sing in the
University of Kansas choir because "their voices are different,"
the university football team would not accept black players,
and the local hotel refused to serve Negroes, even at a private
breakfast for the ministerial council. Homer spoke out against
racism and war, especially the strategic bombing of civilians
by both sides and other atrocities.
Jack
with Adalai Stevenson
In Miami, meanwhile, Homer's
father was dying of heart disease and Homer went to Florida
to be with him in his final days. Alex had worked his way
up from poverty and the burden of providing for eight younger
siblings to become a successful graphic artist. However, he
had felt the sting of injustice and anti-Semitism when he
quit a Rochester newspaper for which he drew political cartoons
rather than submit to censorship. At his bedside, Homer promised
his father that he would always fight against war, racial
intolerance, and economic injustice.
Returning to Chicago from Lawrence,
Homer accepted the position as executive secretary of the
Chicago Council Against Racial and Religious Discrimination
and for nearly five years worked tirelessly for racial justice,
not only for Negroes but also for Mexican-Americans, Japanese-Americans
(resettling in the Midwest from relocation camps), and other
minorities. The civil rights struggle during this period centered
around desegregating public housing for thousands of returning
black veterans and their families. Warning prophetically that
"Chicago was heading for a race riot," Homer worked tirelessly
to prevent the outbreak of violence in the city's housing
projects and the removal of restrictive covenants. In one
riot known as the Airport Homes Incident, Homer's car was
overturned and looted by a mob of local whites. During this
period, he worked with other progressive leaders, including
Mayor Kelly, Elizabeth Wood (secretary of the Chicago Housing
Council), Congressman Dawson, Rev. Preston Bradley (pastor
of the All Soul's Unitarian Church, the largest in America),
and Thurgood Marshall (legal counsel for the NAACP).
In
1948, Homer accepted a call to the Unitarian Church of Evanston
and his family, now including two small children, moved to
the North Shore. Staunchly conservative, Evanston was the
home of the Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), Northwestern
University, and, in 1954, the international assembly of the
World Council of Churches (which Homer attended as a journalist
since Unitarians were barred from membership). In 1952 and
1956 the city voted overwhelmingly for Dwight D. Eisenhower
over native son Adlai Stevenson, the Governor of Illinois
and a fellow Unitarian, whom Homer worked with on many occasions.
During the height of the McCarthy era, the Norman Vincent
Peale years, and the Ozzie and Harriet reign on television,
the Unitarian Church, under Homer's auspices, became a cauldron
for innovative ideas and social change. From his pulpit, in
Chicago area committees, and with the local ministers' association,
Homer waged a steady campaign to desegregate the Evanston
and the North Shore (including Northwestern, the local hospital,
and the YMCA) and introduce revolutionary ideas of freedom
and independence for Africans and Asians. During his tenure
church membership rose from 175 to 600, and so many people
came that Homer had to hold two services on Sunday mornings
until a new sanctuary could be built.
In 1952 Homer made the first
of three trips to Africa, visiting South Africa and tracing
the roots of Gandhian nonviolence and meeting African freedom
fighters. His subsequent books, The Wit and Wisdom of Gandhi
and The Gandhi Reader, helped introduce a generation
of Americans to the father of nonviolence, including a young
Alabama preacher, Martin Luther King. In then French Equatorial
Africa, Homer visited Dr. Albert Schweitzer and was instrumental
in helping to convince him to speak out against nuclear testing.
Schweitzer's condemnation of atomic and hydrogen testing in
his acceptance speech for the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo electrified
the world. In New Delhi, India, and Bandung, Indonesia, site
of the nonaligned conference of 1955, Homer met Prime Minister
Nehru who was also to become an ally in the campaign to end
nuclear testing, along with Albert Einstein, Bertrand Russell,
and other great humanitarians.
Jack
with Nehru in India
Following the Montgomery bus
boycott in 1955, Homer went to Alabama and met Dr. King for
the first time. It began a relationship that would continue
through many protest campaigns, a visit to Ghana in 1957 to
participate in independence celebrations, and the Selma March.
Following King's assassination in Memphis a decade later,
Coretta Scott King asked Homer to accompany her husband's
body back to Atlanta. On the civil liberties front, Homer
preached his most famous sermon, "Is McCarthy a Concealed
Communist?" at the Community Church of New York in 1953 where
he served as summer minister.
In 1959 Homer resigned from
the Evanston Unitarian Church at the height of his popularity
and moved to New York. He served as associate director of
the American Committee on Africa for a year with George Houser,
his old FOR colleague. But with the escalation of the Cold
War, he soon accepted the post as executive director of the
National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy. With Norman
Cousins, Norman Thomas, and other veteran peace leaders, he
orchestrated the national campaign against nuclear testing
as President Kennedy and Chairman Khrushchev unleashed a new
round of atmospheric explosions. The turning point in SANE's
campaign to win over public opinion was a public relations
campaign featuring Dr. Benjamin Spock. Though he had resolutely
resisted all previous entreaties to speak out, America's beloved
baby doctor finally yielded to Homer's persuasion and agreed
to appear in a series of advertisements entitled "Dr. Spock
Is Worried." Along with Cousins's behind-the-scenes shuttle
diplomacy between JFK and the Russian leader, the partial
test-ban treaty of 1963the first step in reversing the
nuclear proliferation since the dawn of the atomic agewas
concluded. Three months later, Kennedy died in a hail of bullets
in Dallas.
In 1965 Homer moved to Boston
to become director of the Social Responsibility Department
of the Unitarian Universalist Association during an era marked
by unparalleled interfaith cooperation and internal denominational
conflict. Under the helm of President Dana McLean Greeley
and Homer, the UUA assumed leadership on a wide variety of
civil rights and peace issues. However, the rise of the black
power movement following King's assassination split the denomination
into bitter factions. As one who had devoted and risked his
life for racial justice, Homer suddenly found himself under
attack by black militants.
The
First World Conference for Religion and Peace (WCRP
I) Meeting in Kyoto, 1970
As the UUA closed ranks, a new
conservative administration took power and Homer was fired.
Homer returned to the international stage and accepted the
position of Secretary-General of the newly founded World Conference
on Religion and Peace (WCRP) in New York. In this role, he
brought together leaders of the world's faiths to speak out
on war and peace and social issues, carrying on the dream
of the World Parliament of Religion that met in Chicago in
1893. Once again, Homer found himself working the corridors
of the United Nations, where he lobbied delegates on arms
control and religious freedom, ghost wrote speeches for Security
Council members, and founded the NGO Committee on Disarmament.
On one occasion, he found himself in charge of a boatload
of Vietnamese refugees who had been rescued by a WCRP-chartered
vessel but could not find port. Following his divorce in the
early 1970s, Homer married Ingebord Belk, a German Quaker
who had worked for Amnesty International and UNICEF.
Mohandas
Gandhi, whose teachings on love and nonviolence Homer
considered to be the 20th Century's greatest achievement
In 1984 Homer received the Niwano
Peace Prize from Rissho Kosei-Kai, a Buddhist sect in Japan.
RKK founder Nikkyo Niwano, Rev. Dana Greeley, and Homer (occasionally
joined by centenarian Rev. Imaoka, the minister of the Unitarian
Church of Tokyo) had formed an alliance of religious liberals
in America and Japan and served as the pillar of the WCRP.
Homer's lifelong support of religious and racial tolerance
was hailed in a series of special lectures he gave in Japan.
For several years in his late
sixties Homer served as minister of the North Shore Unitarian
Fellowship in Winnetka, just north of Evanston. In the late
1980s, he moved to Swarthmore, Pennsylvania to work on his
autobiography, be near his collected papers at the Swarthmore
College Peace Collection, and spend more time with his children
and grandchildren. However, pressing social issues prevented
Homer from taking up his pen for an extended writing project.
Into his mid-seventies, he lent his indomitable energy to
local civil rights projects in Chester, the continuing campaign
against apartheid in South Africa (including being arrested
at the embassy in Washington), and efforts to prevent the
war in the Persian Gulf.
Upon returning
from a trip, Homer was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. Though
his condition was untreatable, he attempted to control the symptoms
with a macrobiotic dietary approach, as had Dana Greeley, who
had died from colon cancer a few years earlier. On August 5,
1993, Homer passed away quietly at home with his children, Alex
and Lucy; step-daughter, Renate; and Ingebord, by his side.
Memorial services were held at the United Nations, Swarthmore,
and Evanston, and in Boston the Unitarian Universalist Association
established the Homer A. Jack Office of International Affairs
in honor of his contributions to peace and freedom.