Faith

Charging for Church? Harlem‘s ’Gospel Tourism’ Boom Sparks Controversy

NEW YORK (The Blaze/AP) — The stern warning issued from the pulpit was directed at the tourists – most of whom had arrived late — a sea of white faces with guidebooks in hand. They outnumbered the congregation itself: a handful of elderly black men and women wearing suits and dresses and old-fashioned pillbox hats.

“We’re hoping that you will remain in place during the preaching of the Gospel,” a church member said over the microphone at this Harlem church on a recent Sunday morning. “But if you have to go, go now. Go before the preacher stands to preach.”

Harlem Church Tourism Is on the Rise

Tourists, right, attending a church service watch as members of the clergy file in at the Mother AME Zion Church in New York, Sunday, Feb. 26, 2012. The New York City’s Harlem churches have become popular tourist attractions for visitors from all over the world who want to listen to soulful gospel music at a black church service. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

No one left then. But halfway through the sermon, a group of French girls made their way toward the velvet ropes that blocked the exit. An usher shook his head firmly, but they ignored him and walked out.

The clash between tourists and congregants plays out every Sunday at Mother African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, the oldest black church in New York state. It’s one of many Harlem churches that have become tourist attractions for visitors from all over the world who want to listen to soulful gospel music at a black church service. With a record number of tourists descending upon New York City last year, the crowds of foreigners are becoming a source of irritation among faithful churchgoers.

To preserve the sanctity of the service, pastors struggle to enforce strict rules of conduct. But the reality is that these visitors are often filling church pews that would otherwise remain empty – and filling the collection basket with precious dollar bills.

“Our building is in need of repair,” church member Paul Henderson said after the service. “We need assistance. They’re helping to sustain us.”

The rules are simple enough: No photography, no flip-flops, no exiting during the sermon. They are printed on pamphlets and multilingual signs and announced at the start of every service. But they are often ignored. Ushers roamed the pews like security guards, stopping more than one person from filming on digital cameras.

Harlem Church Tourism Is on the Rise

“I understand that you’re visiting and you want to have a memory of it,” said Carlos Smith-Ramsay, who joined the church several years ago. “But when we ask you to stop and you continue to do so after the fact, that’s disrespectful.”

Some pastors quietly manage the crowds by requiring a written confirmation of guests from tour operators, refusing walk-in visitors. Some churches provide assigned seating for tourists, while others demand a list specifying which countries the tourists are from and whether they speak English.

And still more forbid the tour companies from advertising which churches are on the tour in hopes of curbing the number of unwanted visitors.

Below, see testimonials about Harlem Heritage, a New York City group that provides walking tours:

The Rev. Gregory Robeson Smith, Mother AME Zion’s pastor, refuses to work with tour operators. He doesn’t even like to use the word “tourist,“ preferring instead to call them part of his ”international congregation.” And he won’t turn anyone away.

“I refuse to commercialize the church worship experience,” he said. “You don’t pay people to experience the Lord, to come and pray. I think that’s unconscionable.”

Yet the tourists’ presence is undeniable. At Mother AME Zion, there were nearly 200 of them, overwhelming the congregation by at least 5 to 1.

“They want to see what they’ve seen on television,” said Larcelia Kebe, president of Harlem Your Way! Tours Unlimited. “They want to see what they’ve seen in the movies.”

Harlem Church Tourism Is on the Rise

A screen shot from the Harlem Spirituals web site

The gospel tour industry has exploded since it was born in the early 1980s. On a busy summer Sunday, Harlem Spirituals, one of the oldest and largest tour operators, might run 15 full buses, said Erika Elisabeth, a company vice president.

Ticket prices but can cost up to $55. Most churches get a cut of the profit. Others, like Mother AME Zion, make money by encouraging visitors to drop a suggested donation into the collection basket.

“Some of the tour operators really have made this whole thing about money,” Kebe said. “It’s created a problem. Because many of them are getting a lot of money from the tourists in order to get into a church. And there may be people in the church who are making a little money on the side.”

Harlem Church Tourism Is on the Rise

During his sermon, Smith appealed to the congregation to help pay for repairs to the church’s aging organ.

“We’ve got about $1,200 worth of work that needs to be done,” he said. “I need 12 people to give me $100.”

Without the tourists’ wallets, the organ might never get fixed. Mother AME Zion’s congregation is dying off, and there are very few young people left to fill the generation gap.

Harlem Church Tourism Is on the Rise

Abyssinian Baptist Church (Image Credit: Flickr -- DennisInAmsterdam)

That’s not the case everywhere. Just around the corner is the thriving Abyssinian Baptist Church, arguably the neighborhood’s most popular tourist magnet, where visitors are often turned away because the pews are too full.

Celeste Lejeune, 16, from Paris, didn‘t know anything about Mother AME Zion’s history as a stop on the Underground Railroad, or that its congregants once included Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman.

“I would like to just hear voices of people who live in Harlem, and see the atmosphere,” she said. “We don’t have music like this in France.”

That is precisely the sort of outlook that disheartens the congregation, who would like to believe the tourists have come to listen to the word of God, to be transformed by the power of Scripture.

“Within this site that’s meant to be sacred, you have, maybe to some of the members, this invasion of the secular and profane,” said Margarita Simon Guillory, an assistant professor of religion at the University of Rochester in Rochester, N.Y. “You’re going to have a certain amount of tension in that space.”

Longtime congregation member Dabney Montgomery, 88, a Tuskegee Airman during World War II and a civil rights activist, believes the tourists walk away richer for the experience.

“In listening to the Gospel, they get something out that they didn’t expect,” he said. “The word of God.”

Harlem Church Tourism Is on the Rise

But most of them are there to see a show — and a show they got. The pastor gave a dramatic sermon filled with historical and political overtones, his voice slowing to a low growl and then rising back up, cracking with the effort. The choir sang hymn after joyful hymn as the congregation clapped in time with the music. One woman gave a beautiful soprano solo.

If nothing else, the tourists got to step back in time for an hour or two. A time when ladies wore dresses and stockings to church and ushers with immaculate white gloves guided people to their seats. A time when the church was the center of social life, the place to see and be seen.

At least with the tourists around, the place feels a little less empty on Sunday mornings.

“They’re not tourists,” Smith said. “They’re people of faith. In Christ, there is no East, no West.”

Comments (21)

  • VicksVaporub
    Posted on March 10, 2012 at 3:03pm

    Why dont they just open a Sister Act tourist theater with staged church services every two hours and charge admission.

    Report Post » VicksVaporub  
  • gogol
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 11:20pm

    Sell tickets if that will help. It’s going to a good cause. God bless you.

    Report Post » gogol  
  • spirited
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 5:44pm

    When better to visit church, than on Sunday –during a service?
    As long as people do not interfere …. and are respectful… what’s the problem? Is it not the Lord’s house?

    In Italy (for example), going in and out of churches is the ‘norm’. It’s actually quite a cultural experience; as well as historical, architectural, art and religious — especially on weekdays. It is however imperative that visitors are respectful.

    If lucky (really), a high-mass with crunched standing room only.

    >Perhaps the Harlem church is concerned that terrorists will enter as tourists; and, rightfully so!

    Report Post » spirited  
  • martinob
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 1:27pm

    God answers our prayers in ways that we may not always understand. I would rather see a church full. Full of people, full of praise. What if these “visitors” leave with a longing for more? The church grows. That is a wonderful thing.

    Report Post »  
  • commonsenseguy
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 9:14am

    i thought eric holder and obama said it was racist to ask what country someone was from,if a white church did this the left wing regime would be all up in their racist rants,but let blacks do it and it is okay, i have to agree with the church though,because if you are their for a show and not the message then you should not be there,but after years of churches getting money from the tourist and the income going to help the church it is hard to turn them away,as usual though,someone has a problem with the way the system works and now has to complain.if your member‘s can’t sustain the church you either close the doors or take the tourist money,not really that hard to figure out which way to go, i wish all churches well,because with the left and the atheist starting christianity wars and the economy really going down hill fast,it will be harder and harder to keep small churches open and even some big churches will have a hard time.

    Report Post »  
  • IndyGuy
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 9:05am

    Spread the word…There’s wealth redistribution going on in Harlem…

    Report Post » IndyGuy  
    • pamela kay
      Posted on March 9, 2012 at 5:40pm

      INDYGUY; LOL! Why would someone be dumb enough to pay the 55 dollars when they can get on you tube to hear and see it is beyond me. Shame on the churches for making profit from this.

      Report Post » pamela kay  
    • DeGrambo
      Posted on March 9, 2012 at 7:08pm

      And I thought it was Jesus said “I give you freely” ; I guess it’s free after you pay?

      Report Post »  
  • yanki161
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 9:01am

    Their problem is not unlike St. Patrick’s cathedral in NYC. I once tried to attend Mass there, ignoring the throngs of tourists that were walking around, then I was assaulted by a homeless mental woman.

    Report Post » yanki161  
  • kitchenjoe
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 8:50am

    I commend those who refuse to sell their soul for a buck, here and around the world. It is not about the ‘show’, it is about Him. I have often wondered what Jesus would do were He to be physically present at our ‘services’. I often wonder if He would even be welcome, it might be a distraction.

    Report Post » kitchenjoe  
    • ChildofJesus
      Posted on March 9, 2012 at 9:36am

      Reminds me of that song “My Jesus” I know and I wonder the same.

      Report Post »  
  • Gonzo
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 8:49am

    Every church in America has tourists on Easter.

    Report Post » Gonzo  
    • pennswoods
      Posted on March 9, 2012 at 11:05am

      That’s true. But the “natives” still attend church every Sunday.

      Report Post »  
  • kapu
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 8:46am

    *blink, blink* OOOOOOOOOOOKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK…..WOW……….

    Report Post » kapu  
  • SoupSandwich
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 8:40am

    So weird that a black community in Harlem would make money on Euro Krackers, to fix what their community cannot, then usher them out before it gets dark and the thuggies wake up. Renting the Blues Bros and going to a church of your choice is not an option? What does the BLT say about evil Krackers and white devils taking tours of black churches…where is Russel Simmons? The other 0, she too busy with her floundering tv shows, why does it always come back to the honkey to prop up the black community? Where is Pdiddly and Vanny Jones?

    Report Post »  
  • hauschild
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 8:34am

    Losers.

    Report Post »  
  • cwrink
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 8:26am

    Could I make a suggestion? Make DVD‘s or CD’s of the choir and sell them right outside the door….Don’t blame you . That is very distracting for serious Christians and ministers. With the message of Christ in the music maybe someones heart will be touched.

    Report Post »  
  • lukerw
    Posted on March 9, 2012 at 8:23am

    Zoo!

    Report Post » lukerw  

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