“He Lifted People Up”

by Melinda Tuhus | April 2, 2008 5:22 PM | | Comments (4)

mattie.jpgThat’s what Mattie Hatcher Long (pictured) and others said about the Rev. Dr. Curtis Cofield at his jam-packed funeral.

Cofield, a pioneer in helping the homeless and people with AIDS, was getting ready to attend an out-of-town conference of Baptist ministers’ wives with his wife of 60 years, Elsie Watson Cofield, when he fell down the stairs in his home and died from his injuries.

backs%20to%20camera.jpgThat says a lot about the man who was memorialized in a three-and-a-half hour service on Wednesday at the church he built — Immanuel Baptist on Chapel Street — and whose parishioners he served for more than 30 years.

I met the Cofields in the early 1990s, when, as a reporter, I covered some of the controversies erupting in the local AIDS community and the founding by Elsie Cofield of AIDS Interfaith Network (AIN). Her husband had been among the first members of the black clergy to minister to people with AIDS, who were considered untouchables in the 1980s. Taking a break from full-time journalism in the mid-1990s, I served on the board of AIN for six years and worked closely with Mrs. C, as we all called her. My impression of the couple is that they were both shining lights in the New Haven community and beyond, and each generously illuminated the other, increasing the light they shed on the seemingly intractable problems of hunger, homelessness, and AIDS. It was a true and loving partnership . Given their vitality, energy and drive, I’m sure we all expected that partnership to continue for years to come.

casket.jpgSpeakers at the funeral commented on that 60-year partnership - some with humor, as when Bishop Theodore Brooks said he learned to keep his wife by his side after observing that Rev. Cofield was always seen with Elsie. Curtis apparently said that guaranteed that their path would be one of righteousness.

Then Janie Charles Holmes, president of the International Association of Ministers’ Wives and Ministers’ Widows, spoke. It was to the group’s conference that the Cofields were headed when the accident occurred.

“We know how much Dr. Cofield loved his wife,” Holmes said, “for he was an honorary member of our association. There was not a conference, not a convention, that he wasn’t there to pay tribute to his wife, and to give me words of encouragement. I would not leave his presence without him saying, ‘Janie, look after Elsie.’” She promised that she, personally, and the association, would be there to support her. Click here for more of her tribute.

elsie.jpgFor her part, Elsie (pictured sitting between her son and daughter), though devastated by the sudden loss of her life partner, managed to write a touching poetic tribute that appeared in the funeral’s program. After the service, she leaned heavily for support on her son, Curtis.

The Rev. Samuel Ross-Lee, who succeeded Cofield in the pulpit of Immanuel Baptist, said, “I knew Dr. Cofield before I met him. He and Sister Cofield were my teachers’ teachers, my mentors’ mentors.” He said many of those students now lead major Baptist churches all over the country.

ross-lee.jpgRoss-Lee (pictured after the service) reminisced about the construction of the current imposing edifice and how it didn’t sit well with some New Haveners that a black man should be so uppity to think he could accomplish such a lofty goal back in the 1960s. “Every time his critics threw a brick at him to block his vision or halt his progress, he caught it and used it to build the building.”

Ross-Lee demonstrated his impressive preaching style with a litany in honor of Rev. Cofield that began, “He lived with dignity,” and ended, “he died in dignity, and now he lives in eternity.” Click here to listen to it all.

Good works and good words were Cofield’s legacy. Mattie Hatcher Long (pictured above), a retired music educator from Hamden, was one of the many hundreds who came to pay their respects. She noted all the institutions the couple had started - a soup kitchen, a homeless shelter, and AIDS Interfaith Network. She said of Elsie and Curtis, “They were made for this community. We have lost a person who cannot be replaced. Even after retirement, he was still serving churches as interims (interim minister). And I think he had planned to serve a church in Hamden in April…this month.” Rev. Cofield had just turned 82.







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Comments

Posted by: The Rev. Mr. Samuel T. Ross-Lee | April 3, 2008 4:51 PM

The Pastor, Officers and Members of the Immanuel Missionary Baptist Church, wish to express our sincerest gratitude to the greater New Haven Community for your expressions of sympathy and concern for the Cofield family and the many members of Immanuel whom Dr. Cofield sheparded during his 34 year tenure as Pastor at Immanuel, and who are grief-stricken by his unexpected demise.

To the 100's who attended one or both of the services for Dr. Cofield on Tuesday and/or Wednesday, we thank you for the way in which you cooperated with our staff and helped to give both services the dignity that they deserved.

Thank you, again, for the cards, letters and other expressions of sympathy that you sent. And please don't forget about making donations to AIDS INTERFAITH NETWORK in memory of Dr. Cofield.

Rev. Samuel T. Ross-Lee, Pastor
Immanuel Missionary Baptist Church
New Haven, CT

Posted by: jean evans simmons | April 5, 2008 6:35 PM

To Mrs. Cofield and family, Rev. Dr. Cofield will be greatly missed by all. As a couple, you both attended many of our family functions (weddings, picnics (at Uncle Percy Smith's house in Milf) and many other occasions and we proudly accepted his moniker...Cousin. God bless you and your family. Just to give you a visual, I am the daughter of Rose Evans. You will always be part of our family.

Posted by: James "Jimmy" Rogers, Jr. | April 6, 2008 12:35 AM

Mrs. Cofield, Curtissa, Bonnie and Curtis, III I am a playmate from Enfield, NC who now lives in Charlotte. Renee and I were classmates in kindergarten. I remember when Mrs. Cofield was carrying Curtis, III back in the day, Dr. Cofield's wonderful parents and of course, his maternal grandmother who would visit from New York. Please know that you started a great work and leave a lasting legacy in public service to God's Glory. Thank you, New Haven for showing our nation it can be done.

Posted by: Rev. Dr. Michael D. Blackwell | April 23, 2008 6:34 PM

My condolences to Mrs. Cofield and family for the passing of the Rev. Dr. Curtis Cofield II. As a student at Yale Divinity School and an associate minister at Immanuel Baptist Church, I was ordained by Cofield in November of 1982. I was around when the soup kitchen first got underway, and I remember having serious talks with Pastor Cofield as well as hearty laughs with him. Although I have been away from Connecticut for nearly 25 years, I remember my few years at Immanuel and in the Cofields' company quite fondly. May his spirit live on in the New Haven community and beyond! Peace.

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