Two new racial-justice themed stained-glass windows

Two new racial-justice themed stained-glass windows have been unveiled at the Washington National Cathedral.  

The Washington National Cathedral was filled with people and purpose as leaders of the Episcopal Church unveiled two stained glass windows, created by world-renowned artist Kerry James Marshall, on Sept. 23, 2023.

The reimagined windows, titled “Now and Forever,” marked a new chapter in the Cathedral’s historical legacy of art and architecture that replaced previous stone tablets that paid tribute to Confederate Generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson. 

“The church in general, across all faiths and this National Cathedral in particular, exists as a symbolic representation of humankind’s aspirations toward perfection, and a desire to keep the promise of redemption when we offend and fall short of the impossible,” said Marshall during the dedication.

Artist Kerry James Marshall and poet Elizabeth Alexander

Artist Kerry James Marshall and poet Elizabeth Alexander attended the dedication of the artist’s racial-justice themed stained-glass windows and the poet’s piece “American Song” being carved into the limestone at the Washington National Cathedral on Sept. 23.  

The dedication also celebrated Elizabeth Alexander’s poem “America’s Song,” which will be hand-carved into limestone tablets over the next nine months.

“I am forever honored to have been invited to offer these words to live alongside Kerry James Marshall’s magnificent stained glass windows, making space for feeling and reflection on our multivocal history as we try to move forward into a more just and beautiful future,’ said Alexander, during the event.

The new windows and poem are reminders of the Cathedral’s mission of inclusivity. 

“This is a House of Prayer for all of God’s children and a House of Prayer for all of God’s People,” the Rev. Canon Rosemarie Logan Duncan, who works to put together all of the services at the national cathedral, said.

The Rev. Randolph Marshall Hollerith, dean of the Washington National Cathedral, said the new windows and poem “marks a significant moment in the Cathedral’s history.”

 

“Windows that celebrated division are being replaced by windows extolling the pursuit of justice,” Hollerith said.

The newly designed windows replace windows that contained two depictions of the Confederate battle flag; those windows were removed in 2017

The windows, according to a press release, “capture both darkness and light, both the pain of yesterday and the promise of tomorrow, as well as the quiet and exemplary dignity of the African American struggle for justice and equality and the indelible and progressive impact it has had on American society.”  

The Cathedral’s commissioning is Marshall’s first time working with stained glass as a medium. The artist weighed in on the significance of the work.

“Today’s event has been organized to highlight one instance where a change of symbolism is meant to repair a breach of America’s creation promise of liberty and justice for all, and to reinforce those ideals and aspirations embodied in the Cathedral’s structure and its mission to remind us that we can be better, and do better, than we did yesterday, today,” he said.

The windows will be one of only three permanent public exhibitions of Marshall’s art in the United States. 

The people who showed up were so respectful and it brings tears to my eyes because I see my wife over there crying,” Marshall told the Informer. He was also joined by his sisters, brother, and other family members including his aunt from Birmingham, Alabama. 

The newly installed racial justice windows will remain a permanent part of the Cathedral’s world-renowned sacred iconography. 

“The addition of these windows and the powerful words that accompany them allows us to tell a truer story of America, a story that confronts our past and invites all of us into a more inclusive and hopeful future,” Hollerith said.

The service concluded with all present singing the “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” also known as the Black National Anthem. 

Following the service, the Rev. Canon Michele V. Hagans said, “This is just the beginning that should represent how we are to move forward and fill this breach.”

“As we come into this space,” Hagans continued,  “it should be a symbol that should inspire us and give us hope.”

 

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