Tuesday, September 7, 2010

CTDN: Press Conference TODAY 9/7, 1:00pm @ State House; MA Interfaith Leaders Statement/Pledge Against Anti-Muslim Bigotry,

 Welcome To The Chuck Turner Daylight Network:
The Antidote For The Apathetic
 
 
Jewish Alliance for Law & Social Action
Dear All,

JALSA is deeply concerned about the continuing escalation of rhetoric and violence against Muslim centers of worship around the country.  Arson, physical attacks, and hate graffiti cannot be explained by concerns about the feelings of families of Ground Zero victims.  Right wing political and media figures are drumming up the level of rhetoric for their own ends.  This is dangerously disrespectful of American traditions of freedom of religious worship, a constitutional liberty that has provided the Jewish community great protection.
In This Issue
Jonathan Sarna, Special Guest, Sept. 28, Does our American Jewish Experience teach us anything about the current wave of anti-Muslim violence
Interfaith Statement on Bigotry - September 7
Interfaith Press Conference Today, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 1:00 State House
JALSA August Statement on Anti-Muslim Bigotry: Give Bigotry No Sanction
Special Guest:   Jonathan D. Sarna
   Does our American Jewish experience teach
   us anything about the current wave of
   anti-Islamic bigotry?

 
   Special Guest:   Jonathan D. Sarna
   Joseph H. and Belle R. Braun Professor of American
   Jewish History, Brandeis University
 
   Tuesday, September 28, 12 noon
JALSA Office, 18 Tremont Street, Suite 320, Boston
(CLSA will be on varied dates in September since all Fridays involve holidays)
 
Arson in Tennessee; Stabbings in New York.  Rallies and pickets against Houses of Worship.   Is this wave of rhetoric and violence against Muslims a sudden departure from a usually religiously tolerant American public?  Is the bigotry and violence a new phenomenon in the American religious experience?   Or have we walked this path before?  What have we learned? Does it provide any guidance on how we should deal with Park51 and American Muslim leadership?
 
JALSA is delighted to have an opportunity to talk to distinguished American historian Jonathan Sarna to see what lessons we can learn from our own American Jewish history and from the history of American religion.  
Dr. Sarna is the author of numerous books and essays on secular and religious history and a frequent contributor to many  periodicals and journals on issues in contemporary religious life.  He also serves as the Chief Historian, National Museum of American Jewish History (Philadelphia, PA), and the Chair, Academic Advisory & Editorial Board, American Jewish Archives (Cincinnati, OH).  It is always a delight to speak with Jonathan whose presentations provide light on contemporary thorny issues and prove that history is anything but dull.  We've enjoyed many past discussions with him on difficult church-state dilemmas and look forward to his insights on the current NY controversy and the widespread intolerance.

RSVP. jalsaoffice@gmail.com
Special Interfaith Press Conference Today
Tuesday, September 7, 1 p.m.
Meeting at the statue of Mary Dyer - Quaker religious leader
Front of the State House
to Announce a Statement of Response to the recent Anti-Muslim Bigotry
Interfaith Statement Calling for an End to Current Wave of Fear and Bigotry Against Islam
JALSA invites you to consider signing "'To Bigotry No Sanction, to Persecution No Assistance': A Call to Citizens, Elected Officials, Journalists and Religious Communities to End the Current Wave of Fear and Bigotry Against Islam" a statement of Massachusetts Interfaith Leaders.
 
To Bigotry No Sanction, to Persecution No Assistance  
A Call to Citizens, Elected Officials, Journalists and Religious Communities to End the Current Wave of Fear and Bigotry Against Islam
- Massachusetts Interfaith Leaders (September 7, 2010)
 
Massachusetts knows too well the painful and dangerous effects of religious bigotry, persecution, and intolerance.  American Indians, so-called witches, Quakers, Baptists, Jews, Roman Catholics, and others have borne the brunt of fears that bear no connection to reality.  Such a danger looms again.  We must not succumb.
 
Standing on the Statehouse grounds at the statue of Mary Dyer - Quaker, heroine of religious freedom, and martyr to religious intolerance - we call upon citizens, elected officials, journalists, and religious communities to pause, take stock, search our collective heart and soul, and here and now to resolve to end the surge of hatred and fear against Islam and Muslim Americans.
 
Addressing the matter of religious liberty, President George Washington in 1790 wrote to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport, Rhode Island, confirming that ours is "a Government which to bigotry gives no sanction, to persecution no assistance."
 
Thomas Jefferson said of religious freedom that it was "among the most inestimable of our blessings;" (Virginia's Statute for Religious Freedom).
 
Katherine Lee Bates called upon the Author of the Universe to confirm this nation's soul "in self-control," and our "liberty in law" (America The Beautiful).
 
The current anti-Islamic climate is an attack not only on Muslim Americans, but also on one of this nation's most basic principles.  There is no small irony in that we are being urged to sacrifice these principles in the name of "patriotism" and "national identity."
 
If today's controversy were focused solely on the proposed Islamic center and mosque in Manhattan, that would be distressing enough.  It is not.  There are some ten or twelve proposed Islamic centers and mosques across the nation, and all have met with vitriol and resistance.
 
As people of faith and principle we cannot remain silent in the midst of the fear-filled suspicion and vilification of the Islamic community that is sweeping the nation. Whether in the Jewish, Muslim, Christian or other traditions, we share a sacred calling: to welcome strangers rather than fear them; to seek to recognize the presence of the divine in all whom we meet, and to be instruments of love and reconciliation for all with whom we interact.
 
Thus, with deep compassion for the families of the victims of 9/11 and for the enduring pain of all Americans, and with urgency and deep concern for this nation and for its people, we the undersigned declare the following:
 
AN INTERFAITH PLEDGE
 
WE CONDEMN all terrorists and all terrorist acts, whether committed in the name of Islam, Judaism, Christianity, or any other religion or creed;
 
WE KNOW that the terrorists who committed the heinous crimes of 9/11 were extremists who called themselves Muslim; in no way did they represent the vast majority of Muslims in this country or in the world;
 
WE AFFIRM that Islam, present in America even before the official establishment of this nation, is an integral and vital part of the American interfaith mosaic, and that Muslims contribute great value to both our interfaith endeavors and our civil society;
 
WE ARE PAINED that enmity against Muslim Americans is disfiguring our national soul, is life-threatening to Muslims, and bears the potential of turning good-hearted people against their neighbors;
 
WE RESPECT the Constitutional and human rights of members of all religious groups to practice their faith, including the equal right to build places of worship and gather together unimpaired by the influence of favoritism, bigotry, or discrimination; and
 
WE CONDEMN --both in general and in the particular context of attacks on the Park 51 Project-the cynical use of misinformation and fear-mongering by various politicians, commentators, and media outlets to stir up anti-Muslim prejudice for political or other ends;
 
WE APPLAUD all efforts to build meaningful, honest, and enduring inter-religious and inter-cultural relationships; and
 
WE DENOUNCE the use of innuendo, stereotype, or misinformation that promotes fear, distrust, or hatred of Muslims, Jews, Christians, or any other religious or ethnic group;
 
WE CALL upon this great nation whose soul is tempered by law, to reaffirm the deeply held values of diversity and pluralism as intrinsic to our national character and to stand firm upon the First Amendment and its beautiful, unequivocal guarantee of civil liberties and freedom of religion.
 
THEREFORE, we the undersigned pledge the following:
 
WE PLEDGE to confront instances of bigotry against any religious or ethnic group whenever and wherever we find them, and call upon all those who disparage entire groups on account of the acts of a few to look deeply within themselves, and to stop; and
 
WE PLEDGE to work actively to break down barriers amongst the various communities of belief in our city -and beyond -and to replace those barriers with mutual respect, understanding, and an outstretched hand.
  
To Sign the Statement, Click here  
 
You can also share it with friends and colleagues. 

Statement can be signed at
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/tobigotrynosanction/
See JALSA Website
Over the last two months, as the rhetoric has escalated, JALSA has identified several articles for your attention.   See JALSA website   http://jewishalliance.org    for a variety of comments on the proposed community center and response.
Sincerely,
 

Sheila Decter, Executive Director
Jewish Alliance for Law & Social Action
JALSA Statement on Proposed Islamic Community Center in Lower Manhattan

Give Bigotry No Sanction 
August 24, 2010

The continuing attacks on building a mosque and community center near, but not at, Ground Zero, should be of grave concern to all Americans.
Rather than subsiding, the debate has become even more inflamed. The hot rhetoric is an affront to cherished American values of religious free-
dom and tolerance of diversity.

We at the Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action recall and support the "enlarged and liberal policy" that President George Washington enunciated in his August 21, 1790, letter to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island. Writing prior to ratification of the Bill of Rights, President Washington declared:  "It is now no more that toleration is spoken of as if it was by the indulgence of one class of people, that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights."  "[T]he Governmnt. of the United
States," he continued, "gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance[.]"

Slavery, preeminently among other sins, made Washington's statement more an ideal than fact.  But America at its best progresses toward that ideal; the opposition to the Islamic center is a step backward. That we have not fully embraced Washington's message in over two hundred years is profoundly disturbing.

As members of a minor-
ity community that has experienced both discrimination and the benefits of President Washington's liberal policy, we are saddened by the repeated mischaracterizations of the Park51 project.  It is a multi-story community center containing a prayer space in an old Burlington Coat Factory two blocks away from Ground Zero, which will not be viewable from that site.  The imam involved has been chosen by both the Bush and Obama administrations as an emissary to express American goodwill toward the Muslim world.  If there are reasonable planning or land-use objections to the project, none has been identified.  And much of the opposition surely has been unreasonable.

For example, former House Speaker, and possible future Republi-
can presidential candidate, Newt Gingrich likened the project to "Nazis . . . put[ting] up a sign next to the Holocaust museum in Washington" or "the Japanese putting up a site next to Pearl Harbor"
To Sarah Palin, it is "equivalent to bldg. Serbian Orthodox Church @ Srebrenica killing fields where Muslims were slaughtered."  And Abra-
ham Foxman, of the ADL,
while acknowledging the First Amendment right of people to go forward with the project, suggests that "positions that others would categorize as irrational or bigoted" are the entitlement of those who lost family members on September 11.

We don't know how many such family members actually oppose the proposed Islamic com-
munity center, although we do know that some support it.  And while we understand that some may still be so trauma-
tized as to be unable to distinguish the evil perpetrators from innocent American Muslims, we believe that neither bigotry nor irrationality forms a legitimate basis for public policy. And we reject those who, like Gingrich and Palin, would tar all Muslims with guilt for September 11.

As President George W. Bush said, just days after September 11:  "America counts millions of Muslims amongst our citizens, and Muslims make an incredibly valuable contribution to our country.  Muslims are doctors, lawyers, law professors, members of the military, entrepre-
neurs, shopkeepers, moms and dads. And they need to be treated with respect. In our anger and emotion, our fellow Americans must treat each other with respect."

Nor should we forget that dozens of innocent Muslims died at the World Trade Center on Sept. 11th.  Indeed, Muslims constitute the vast majority of the victims of Islamist terrorism. If we fail to recognize the difference between the Islamists and the vast majority of Muslims, then we concede to the Islamists that our conflict is with all Muslims, not just the Islamist minority.  This may be in their interest; it is not in ours.

As Americans and as Jews, we remain committed to the bed rock principles of freedom, justice, and equality, and, in this case, particularly to our First Amendment right to religious freedom.  We cannot stand silent in the face of efforts to hound and coerce the organi-
zers of the mosque and community center into foregoing a dream that pre-dates 9/11.  We ask our fellow citizens to turn their backs on those who would cynically foment and exploit mindless bigotry, and join with Mayor Bloomberg and other New Yorkers in welcoming this hopeful project.
 
Sheila Decter
          Executive Director
Andrew Fischer
          President
David Guberman
          Past President
Joel Eigerman
          Chair, CLSA
 
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--  THE END --

OR, IS IT JUST THE BEGINNING?  YOU DECIDE!

( Stay tuned, as the struggle continues. )  

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Chuck Turner, District 7 Boston City Councillor

City Hall Office--(617) 635-3510  /  District Office--(617) 427-8100

 

Chuck.Turner@cityofboston.gov             Angela.Yarde@cityofboston.gov                  Phillip.Reason@cityofboston.gov      

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ROXBURY:                   WARD 8, Pcts 3-4, 7;           WARD 9, Pcts 3-5;          WARD 11, Pcts 1-3, 5;     WARD  12, Pcts 1-9

DORCHESTER:            Ward 7, Pct 10;                    Ward 8, Pcts 5-6;             Ward 13, Pcts 1-2, 4-5

SOUTH END:                Ward 4, Pct 4;                      Ward 9, Pct 2

FENWAY:                     Ward 4, Pcts 5, 8-9 

 


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