Graylan Hagler

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Rev. Graylan Hagler (born on March 1, 1954) Born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, Rev. Graylan Hagler attended public schools in Baltimore and received a Bachelor’s Degree in Religion from Oberlin College, Ohio, in 1976. Three years later, he graduated from The Chicago Theological Seminary with a Master’s Degree in Divinity. On February 3rd., 1980 Reverend Hagler was ordained into the United Church of Christ (UCC). In 1981, Reverend Hagler was also recognized with full standing in The Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). Rev. Hagler is presently the Senior Minister, Plymouth Congregational United Church of Christ, Washington, D.C. and National President, Ministers for Racial, Social and Economic Justice (MRSEJ)

[edit] Ministry

In 1980, he founded a congregation in Boston, Massachusetts, and in 1991 ran for Mayor of that city. During his 12 years as a pastor in Boston, a racially charged setting, Reverend Hagler’s work was one of empowerment and opposition to racism. He campaigned to protect citizens from unconstitutional and illegal police practices and to safeguard democratic participation in the selection and election of political leadership. He also led the Free South Africa Movement to force divestiture of dollars from the support of the apartheid system.

In 1992, Reverend Hagler moved to Washington, D.C., where today he is the Senior Minister of Plymouth Congregational United Church of Christ and continues to preach and organize. He has fought the proliferation of liquor stores in the Black community and has insisted on community participation in development issues. In 1993 he opposed the Exxon Corporation's plans to build a ‘super gas station’ in the neighborhood where he lives and where his Church is located. In 2003, Reverend Hagler broke ground on that same Exxon site after acquiring the property. Instead of a ‘super station,’ 69 units of subsidized apartments for the elderly opened in February 2005. Reverend Hagler worked to preserve the only publicly funded hospital in the District of Columbia, organized a successful effort to oppose the death penalty from being instituted by Congress on the District, and continues the fight against public school vouchers, which he sees as a plan to divert funds from public education to private schools.

Reverend Hagler is on the Steering and Administrative Committee of United for Peace and Justice, a national coalition working to oppose aspects of U.S. foreign policy that the group believes contribute to war and aggression. Reverend Hagler is the Development Director of the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America (NACA), the largest neighborhood stabilization organization in the United States, which helps working class people become homeowners. Reverend Hagler is chaplain to Local 25, Washington, D.C. of the Hotel Employees, Restaurant Employees/UNITE. He believes in the dignity and worth of workers and continually strives to support that principle.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.bcpl2007.org/rev-graylan-hagler Black Church & Public Life Symposium - Rev. Graylan Hagler