This content was created by Craig Dietrich. The last update was by Will Luers.
The Father Divine ProjectMain Menu"Inside the Kingdom": The Evolution of the Peace Mission"A Greater Picture of ME": The Peace Mission ArchiveSince the late 1930s, Father Divine and his followers oversaw the documentation of the Peace Mission's own history and public pronouncements in a weekly newspaper, with wire and tape recordings, film and photography."I Know You Are God": A Database Documentary by Will LuersAbout The Father Divine ProjectWill Luers2f0376b300f2ff7145f4f5c8f06d3ab51e0c730dLeonard Norman Primianob55769156974a9bf4a4c74973f47ef4191206d21
Mother Divine (part 2)
1-001-11-30T00:00:00-07:52Craig Dietrich2d66800a3e5a1eaee3a9ca2f91f391c8a6893490105The second part of an interview with Mother Divine held in June, 1997. She talks about the significance of Father Divines dark complexion.plain2011-05-10T13:12:12-07:00wluers@gmail.comCritical CommonsWill Luers2f0376b300f2ff7145f4f5c8f06d3ab51e0c730d
Father Divine founded the Peace Mission, an interracial and celibate community, in Harlem in the 1919 as a response to the racism, as well as spiritual and economic poverty, that had followed African Americans since the Civil War.
Central to Father Divines popularity and his growing community of followers was his economic success during the era of the Great Depression. The weekly Holy Communion Banquet Service, a ritual feast with lavish multi-course meals, singing, dancing, and spirited sermons, must have appeared miraculous in contrast to the surrounding poverty.
Through a communal economic plan, Father Divine and his followers had amassed great wealth by the 1940s. They owned income-producing real estate and businesses in cities such as New York, Los Angeles, and Philadelphia, as well as in rural communities along the Hudson River. This economic power enabled the Peace Mission to confront racism. Peace Mission co-workers were employed in collectively owned hotels, shops, garages, domestic services, farms and cafeterias. These businesses served members of all races and religions without question, offering African Americans quality accommodations and services several decades before the American Civil Rights Movement.