Via Hidden City blog, I’ve learned of a new podcast called Found in Philadelphia. It’s only one episode long so far but it’s a good one: a look at the Germantown Protest of 1688. This was the letter written by four Dutch and German Quakers protesting slaveholding — in particular, slaveholding as practiced by leading Philadelphia Friends. The language and diction is a bit awkward (English not being their first language) but many of their arguments are surprisingly modern. The next time some tiresome bot on Twitter or Facebook friend-of-a-friend starts whining about how times were different in the past and how were people to know slavery was so bad, just show them this letter. Clear-eyed people knew and spoke up.
Host Lori Aument interviews two people known to Friends Journal readers: Katharine Gerbner, author of September’s Slavery in the Quaker World; and Mary Crauderueff, who last wrote for us in November 2017. I’m a big fan of uncovering the stories of the 1688 protest, especially the dismissal it received from Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. My review of Gerbner’s book will appear in the January books section of FJ.