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A church in North Thetford is getting new life as a community center for people of color

Three people standing in a large room lit by sun from the windows. There's a half-colored in "tool drive" sign. One is a kid, with markers spread out on the floor beneath her. The other two is a white woman with gray hair and a Black woman wearing a n95 mask. They're in the midst of conversation.
Lexi Krupp
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开云体育
Like so many Vermont churches, the congregation at the United Church of Thetford has been shrinking for decades. So they decided to donate their building to a group that could make more use of it. Now, it's run by the Northeast Farmers of Color Land Trust.

The church in North Thetford is bigger than you鈥檇 expect. There鈥檚 a large hall with a stage. Two kitchens. Two grand pianos. A pipe organ. A bell tower. And, of course, the sanctuary. It has curved wooden pews and tall, stained glass windows.

Kenya Lazuli is now in charge of all this space. "I still come in here, and I'm like, 鈥榃hat, we get to use this, whenever we want?鈥�" she said, as she walked through the sanctuary.

Lazuli is from Corinth and works for , which took ownership of the building at the beginning of the year.

She鈥檚 converting a sunny meeting room into a library, a basement room into a tool lending library. She plans to renovate the 1950s-era kitchen into a commercial-grade space. She found a popcorn machine on Craigslist for an upcoming movie night.

A room with wood floors and colorful couches, and a large potted plant and sunlight streaming in
Lexi Krupp
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开云体育
Publishers like AK Press and Beacon Press donated books surrounding themes of liberation to the community center's library. The hibiscus tree is a gift from the church organist.
Two side by side images. On the left - looking at a church sanctuary from overhead. On the right-- a hall with a hard tiled floor and stage with five long folding tables set up.
Lexi Krupp
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开云体育
For much of the 20th century, the church hosted events that drew crowds of hundreds of people. That changed when nearby stores and mills closed, the interstate went in, and many younger generations stopped attending services.

Despite these changes, Lazuli said the church already has most everything they could need.

"It has all the chairs and tables even," she said. "All the bathrooms you need, it鈥檚 accessible for mobility devices. It鈥檚 set up already to be a community center."

The community center she's building is still in its infancy. It doesn鈥檛 yet have a name, and they had their first public events this month 鈥� an open house and a tool drive. The vision for this space is clear, though.

"There are lots of places to gather that white-led organizations either own or run that don't feel safe or welcoming to communities of color," Lazuli said.

"The whole point of this place is to be welcoming to communities of color, and anyone else who needs a space to gather or wants to have an event or anything."

Lexi Krupp
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开云体育
The building in North Thetford is the start of a much bigger effort called the Every Town project. Its goal is to secure permanent land access and stewardship for people of color in every town in Vermont.

For much of its history, the church has been a place for community gatherings. Throughout the 20th century, it hosted classes, , , and hymn festivals that drew crowds of over four people. Part of the appeal was where it鈥檚 located.

"There was a store in town, sawmill in town, all that kind of stuff. So people drove by it, and saw it, and went to it," said Brigid Farrell, a retired principal from Norwich and the part-time pastor of the church.

Farrell says over the years, the community changed. The mills closed. I-91 went in. A bridge to New Hampshire came out. And younger generations stopped going to church as much.

鈥淚t was like, 鈥榃ell, what is God calling us to do?' Once we got to that point, it really wasn't a hard decision to get rid of the building.鈥�
Pastor Brigid Farrell

When Farrell came to the United Church of Thetford five years ago, it was no longer a bustling place. About 30 people regularly attended services, and they wanted to make a change.

The church had enough money to maintain the building, but after lots of deliberation, they decided that wasn鈥檛 what they really cared about.

鈥淚t was like, 鈥榃ell, what is God calling us to do?鈥欌� said Farrell. 鈥淥nce we got to that point, it really wasn't a hard decision to get rid of the building.鈥�

What they wanted was to have the building serve the community. It couldn't be converted to housing units, and they didn't want to sell it 鈥� it's worth about $150,000. So they started looking for a new owner. They reached out to arts organizations and posted messages on a town listserv. That鈥檚 how, eventually, they connected with Lazuli, who pitched using the building as a community center.

鈥淏ecause this space is here and not being used, it's like finding a secret treasure,鈥� she said. 鈥淲e just need to open it up.鈥�

An older man is smiling at the camera. He's setting down a power tool and a long extension cord on a table with other tools.
Lexi Krupp
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开云体育
The community center held a tool drive earlier this month. One church member stopped in after a Sunday service. He figures he can always borrow the tools from the center if he needs to use them again.

For her, the church is the start of a much bigger project she dreamed up years ago: For to designate a piece of healthy land for stewardship by people of color.

Lazuli does not expect to reach this goal in her lifetime, but she says the effort feels essential.

鈥淭his project is based in reparations, and beginning 鈥� just beginning, scratching the surface 鈥� of a way to repair for past harm that has been perpetrated against people of color, specifically Black and Indigenous people in this country, but also in the state,鈥� she said. 鈥淭his state is my context. So that鈥檚 why this project is happening here. But there鈥檚 a lot here.鈥�

The church in North Thetford is their first land donation. Lazuli did not originally expect the project to include a church, but she says it makes sense that their first piece of land is for everyone.

As for the congregation, they鈥檒l keep meeting in the sanctuary once a week. They鈥檙e looking forward to see the building used for more than a couple hours on Sundays.

A shot of a large white church in winter seen from the road.
Lexi Krupp
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开云体育
When church members looked into repurposing the building, they learned it couldn't be converted into housing units 鈥�  there's not enough sewage capacity and it sits on a floodplain. They were told it鈥檚 worth about $150,000.

Lexi Krupp is a corps member for , a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on under-covered issues and regions.

Lexi covers science and health stories for 开云体育. Email Lexi.

Have questions, comments or tips? Send us a message.

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