Monday, February 29, 2016

At The Holy House Of Coltrane, A 'Jerusalem' Of Jazz Faces Eviction

Eric Westervelt
Updated February 28, 20168:05 PM ET
Published February 28, 20165:18 PM ET

The Fillmore District of San Francisco was once known as the "Harlem of the West" for its rich African-American culture and jazz roots. This week, the neighborhood's beloved Saint John Coltrane African Orthodox Church may be forced to find a new home.

"The church is almost like going to Jerusalem or going to Mecca, so people pilgrim here from all over the globe," says Archbishop Franzo Wayne King Sr., who co-founded the church of John Coltrane devotees in 1969.


The church went up as a way to worship the spiritual quality of Coltrane's music, through what King calls the holy trinity of melody, harmony and rhythm.

"From the very beginning of the church, we wanted everybody to know about this evolved, transcendent being that came in this time and this age with a new testament message that wasn't about division, and as Coltrane would say, 'living clean and doing right,' " King says.

The city of San Francisco has told the congregation to vacate their small storefront building on Fillmore Street by Wednesday. But Archbishop King is trying to get the courts to stop the eviction and give his church time to settle charges of unpaid rent.


He says gentrification has played a role pushing them and others out of the area. "I think it's about profit mainly," King says.

read more: http://news360.com/digestarticle/bf1I7V3Kt0qg1_H-_riY4g

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