As part of her apology, Harris-Perry tweeted “As black child born into large white Mormon family I feel familiarity w/ Romney family pic & never meant to suggest otherwise,” apparently as a way to crystallize her positive intent for the segment. On MSNBC’s website, she explained “The intent of featuring the photo was to celebrate it— I often speak to the issue of the increasingly diverse American family. Whatever the intent, the segment proceeded in an unexpected way that was offensive.”
Those howling for Melissa Harris-Perry’s head might be inclined to see this as a
“My American story is both the story of enslaved ancestors, sold on the street corner of Richmond, Virginia, on my father’s side, and of a persecuted religious minority in the American West on my mother’s side,” she concluded.
In a guest shot on TRMS earlier that year, she also used her Mormon history as a sort of defense for Anthony Weiner. Responding to Maddow’s assertion that consenting adults “have a right to be icky,” Harris-Perry agreed. “I am descended from Mormon ancestors. And I had Mormon ancestors who were imprisoned for consensual bigamy. And, you know, I‘ve always had a lot of anxiety about that because—you know, my sense is if people are adults making a choice to be in complicated marriages, you know, what does the state have to say about that?”
Watch clips of both segments below, via MSNBC:
That’s
In an interview with NPR pegged to the start of her new show, Harris-Perry again spoke about her Mormon ancestors with pride, telling David Folkenflik that “my people were Mormon pioneers,” and that “Mormon people are not elitists! Mormon people were ejected because of their identity.”
But for someone who is usually adept at identifying and calling out racism, Harris-Perry seems to have a gargantuan blind spot for the Mormons’ history of racially discriminatory policy and doctrine. Just this month, the church offered an explanation, but not an apology. for failing to grant black people equality in the church until 1978.
It’s an issue that the media seems to have agreed to ignore, as it didn’t come up much during Mitt Romney’s presidential campaigns, nor is it ever raised with Mormon Democrats like Harry Reid, but the decision to allow black men into the Mormon priesthood in 1978 isn’t treated by the church as a change, or a reversal. It is seen as a “revelation,” that the exclusion was part of God’s plan, as was the eventual inclusion.
When it came to Mitt Romney, Harris-Perry
Earlier this year, though, Harris-Perry did bring up the policy on her own. During a talk about school segregation, she volunteered that “My mom, who went to Brigham Young University, likes to say that the Mormon Church changed its mind about black folks and having souls when the football team started to lose.”
Watch clips of both segments below, via MSNBC:
Harris-Perry’s feeling of connection to the Mormon Church is clearly more than a matter of convenience, as her current critics might surmise. Although it is unlikely and unwelcome to happen, it would be supremely ironic if Melissa Harris-Perry, who has been such a staunch Mormon apologist,
Hopefully, and probably, Melissa Harris-Perry’s show will go on, and if it does, she ought to devote a few segments to examining why it is that she can so eloquently and thoroughly expose racism almost everywhere, yet seems blind (or at least mute) to its existence in her ancestral church.