Can Our Souls Die While Our Bodies Are Still Alive?

On a freezing winter night in 1856, an enslaved Black woman prayed over her sleeping children holding  a butcher knife. Minutes later, her youngest child was dead and the others would nearly so.

Why would she do this to her own children?

White people claimed she was a murderer, but Black scholars understood that Garner had been experiencing a type of death that went far beyond the loss of physical life itself: “soul murder.”

"Soul murder” happens when someone’s ability to enjoy life is destroyed by another person.

Garner, who’d experienced rape, brutality, and deprivation as an enslaved woman, was determined that her children would NEVER experience the same. So when she and her children were discovered by their captor at their first stop on the Underground Railroad, she took matters into her own hands.

The white terrorism inherent in enslavement, and the injustices that continue to occur against Black people, can cause violent, self-destructive, desperate actions, just as Garner’s case demonstrated. With racism, more than our bodies suffer – our very souls can be killed.

Even when our bodies are under physical attack, we must remember to nourish our souls. During enslavement, our people found ways to protect our souls such as food, music, dancing, and community.

Will you make a commitment to do one kind thing for yourself, to nourish your soul, today?