Spring 2012

Working Locally,  Thinking Globally

    Southern California Committee      

  for a Parliament of the World's Religions

 

Don't miss this event in April sponsored by Interfaith Ambassadors for a Parliament of the World's Religions....for more info check out ou Facebook page by clicking:  IAPWR 

 

" 

 

News of SCCPWR

 

 

Los Angeles, September 1, 2011: Members of the six year-old Southern California Committee for a Parliament of the World’s Religions (SCCPWR) are pleased to announce that, as a result of the growing interfaith movement in Southern California, they will be forming an umbrella organization which individual interfaith groups in the community will soon be invited to join.

 

Each organization that joins the umbrella group will preserve its present character and mandate and, at the same time, be able to enjoy the support of other like-minded groups across the width and breadth of Southern California.. The aim of the newly configured SCCPWR organization is to magnify the effect of the interfaith movement exponentially and also offer each local organization an opportunity to be connected to the global Parliament organization (www.CPWR.org) with its representation in over 85 countries worldwide. In addition, news about the activities and achievements of each organization that affiliates with SCCPWR will be circulated to the global interfaith community through the Parliament website and dedicated social media group called PeaceNext. (The global Parliament convenes the largest interfaith gathering in the world once every five years. The last conference was held in Melbourne, Australia in 2009 and the next conference will convene in Brussels, Belgium in 2014.)

 

Currently there are two groups operating under the SCCPWR umbrella banner: Interfaith Ambassadors for a Parliament of the World’s Religions (IAPWR) and the Westside Interfaith Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions (WICPWR).

 

Applications to join SCCPWR will become available in January 2012.

 

For further information, please contact IAPWR representatives:

 

Joseph Prabhu, Co- Chair jprabhu@calstatela.edu or

Ruth Broyde Sharone, Co-Chair, rabsharone@aol.com

 

WICPWR representatives:

Renee DePalma, Co-Chair sccpwrbuddhist@gmail.com or

Laura Ava-Tesimale, Laura.Ava.1@gmail.com

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

Ruth Broyde Sharone welcomes Archbishop Jose Gomez to Los Angeles on behalf of SCCPWR.At left is Father Alexei Smith, the Catholic interfaith liaison


SCCWR Youth Honored at South Coast Interfaith Council Awards Banquet  

 

Jasmine Hailey (right), the new chair of the SCCPWR youth committee, receives an award from Rini Ghosh of the South Coast Interfaith Council at the Annual Awards Banquet which took place at the Church of the Latter Day Saints in Long Beach on November 14. Jasmine is a college student who attended the Parliament of the World's Religion in Melbourne, Australia, in 2009.


 Doris Davis, SCCPWR Advisor Board Member, Joins Nation-wide Walk for the Empowerment of Women

Doris Davis, an interfaith minister and member of the SCCPWR advisory, prepares for a 7-month, 2,700-mile walk across the United States sponsored bySole2soulwalk.com  (see  http://www.women-walk-the-land.com/. ) The goal of Soul walk is to foster "understanding that women’s participation, contribution and full partnership with men is essential in shaping the decisions that affect our future together." Doris' personal goal is sharing the PeaceWalker Proclamation and Personal Pledge, which she helped develop with the Culver City Area Interfaith Alliance.


 
  •    

Above: Dr. Anthony Manousos, member of the SCCPRW board, carrying banner for the Sept 12 "Interfaith Walk for Freedom and Peace" that took place in Pomona and Claremont, CA.

SCCPWR began its fall program by participating in a Walk for Friendship and Peace, which took place on Sept 12, 2010, in Claremont, CA, and was sponsored by the Interfaith Working Group for Middle East Peace.

Over 500 people from the Inland Valley took part, including 16 members of the SCCPWR Board. The walk started about 5:30 p.m. at Temple Beth Israel, with stops at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Claremont, City of Knowledge School in Pomona and the Islamic Center of Claremont in Pomona where marchers enjoyed a delicious meal prepared by the Muslim community. 

SCCPWR Board member Rev Jan Chase, minister of the Pomona Unity Church, was one of the organizers. This walk is part of a series of events called "11 Days of Global Unity" (see http://www.unityofpomona.org/).

The goal of this ambitious program is to bring together people of diverse faiths and to demonstrate the community's commitment to religious freedom and pluralism.

Dr. Anthony Manousos, SCCPWR Board member, spoke at the Pomona Unity Church about the importance of interfaith work in helping to deal with religious conflicts.

"Conflicts are an opportunity to put into practice our religious teachings and convictions," noted Dr Manousos. "Look at how the interfaith community has rallied together to respond to the conflict over opposition to the mosque in lower Manhattan. Or plans to build a mosque in Temecula. Or the threat to burn the Quran. Each of these challenges has brought us closer together and strengthened our bonds of friendship and trust."  (See http://laquaker.blogspot.com/2010/09/coming-to-unity-through-harmony-dealing.html)

According to the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, Karen Sapio, pastor at Claremont Presbyterian Church, said the gathering sent a clear message.

"This is really great," Sapio said. "It's the community wanting to show their unity."

"We live in a time when the differences among people are strong," said Rabbi Jonathan Kupetz of Temple Beth Israel in Pomona.

"We all have opinions. It's not about this mosque here or that mosque over there. It's important that we be able to build relationships with each other."

For a youtube slideshow of this event by SCCPWR Board member Renee De Palma, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlqr_I1LWYM

The SCCPWR Board is currently planning its program for the upcoming year. Plans are under consideration for an Interfaith Arts Festival and an interfaith conference in conjunction with the Claremont School of Theology. Information will be posted on this page as our plans develop.

Greetings of peace from the SCCPWR board:

 

 

 

 

Left to right: Elliot Rothman (mayor of Pomona). SCCPWR Board members: Ruth Broyde-Sharone, Linda Groff, Anthony Manousos, Swami Atmatattwananda (Shiva), and Gene Rothman. 

 

  Rev Jan Chase and Dr. Anthony Manousos

Renee De Palma and Zach Perlman

Noor Malika Chishti and Debrah Friedland-van Zyl

 

Simran, Ruth Sharone, Janet Bregar, and Thomas Hedberg


 

   

 Members of SCCPWR at their annual retreat in January 2010.

 

  

 AMERICAN VEDA event at the Vedanta Society

by Ruth Sharone
 
It was an afternoon of perfect synchronicity, which I will soon explain.  On December 5, 2010, Phil Goldberg, an interfaith minister, meditation teacher, and author of 19 books, introduced his latest book, AMERICAN VEDA, to an interfaith audience at an event co-sponsored by the Vedanta Society of Hollywood and our group, the SCCPWR. 
 
The subtitle of Phil's book: From Emerson and the Beatles to Yoga and Meditation How Indian Spirituality Changed the West underscores how profoundly Indian spirituality and philosophy have influenced our American way of life.  In his talk to the rapt audience, Phil singled out one of the most important Indian personalities to have visited America, Hindu Swami Vivekananda.  The Swami was invited to the United States by the Vedanta Society in 1893 to address the very first Parliament of the World's Religions, held in Chicago.  It marked the first time in history that religious leaders from the East and the West met to dialogue together and seek ways to bring harmony and peace to the world.
 
Thus one of the leading Vedantic religious figures at the turn of the 20th century, a "star" at the first Parliament, was brought back to life for the interfaith crowd at the Vedanta Society in Hollywood 117 years later, at an event co-sponsored by the Southern California Committee for a Parliament of the World's Religions, which promotes the global work of the modern-day Parliament and interfaith engagement in the LA area and beyond. A perfect synchronicity, wouldn't you agree?
 
AMERICAN VEDA, published by Doubleday and named one of the 10 best books on religion in 2010 by the Huffington Post, is a great read with marvelous anecdotes, fascinating historical accounts, rare archival photos, and cogent commentaries on the influence of Indian spirituality in our daily lives.  Who has not heard of Yoga or Meditation? Karma or Darma? Shakti or Nirvanna? These words and the concepts they embrace have entered our vernacular and our psyches forever.  We owe India and her teachers a great debt.
 
And thanks to you, Phil Goldberg, for laboring five long years to write AMERICAN VEDA, a wonderful book for the holidays, to enjoy throughout 2011, and for many years to come.
 
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.


Welcome Peace Cities!


Dear Friends,

The Partner Cities Network of the Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions is pleased to announce the launch of Peace Cities.  The launch is being held in conjunction with the United Nations International Day of Peace on September 21, 2010.  Peace Cities is a city-to-city interfaith networking opportunity for self-organized grassroots interfaith groups, made available through the Council's very own social networking site PeaceNext.org.  Over 70 international cities are being awarded this designation in recognition of the outstanding organizing efforts of their local interfaith communities. 

Because of your city's' partnership with the Council for a Parliament of the World's Religions, your city is being designated as a Peace City.  An official press release for your city will be sent to you during the week-long celebration of events occurring around the UN International Day of Peace.  We invite you to share this good news with all your constituents and especially those who attended your local Parliament of Religions-related events in the last few years. 

Many designated cities have had long-standing partnerships with the Council and the Partner Cities Network is pleased to honor them with this special designation.  Cities that have earned the designation of "Peace City" will be able to post news about local interfaith events and to share resources with other Peace Cities through
PeaceNext.org.  Peace Cities are eligible to apply to join the Partner Cities Network. 

We greatly look forward to providing this networking opportunity in effort to connect, share, and learn from one another and the communities to which we belong.  

We are confident that your participation and contributions will help make PeaceNext.org the central online community for Peace Cities and Partner Cities to join forces in progressing the global interfaith movement.

Please contact us for more information on these global initiatives which serve to connect the communities around the globe. 

Sincerely,


Zabrina Santiago
Deputy Director & Partner Cities Director
Council for a Parliament of the World's Religions
zabrina@parliamentofreligions.org





PeaceWeek: 
Register Today!

The launch of Peace Cities coincides with PeaceWeek, a global telesummit for building a culture of peace.  A co-production of The Shift Network and The Peace Alliance, Peaceweek is being held in conjunction with the UN International Day of Peace today, Tuesday September 21, 2010.  The Partner Cities Network is proud to be a lead sponsor of PeaceWeek. 

All are invited to join the PeaceWeek global conversations.  Please do so by sharing this news with others and by visiting
www.peaceweek.info. Registrants will be able to participate for free in an unlimited number of live discussions and receive free access to the full library of event recordings.

A feature of PeaceWeek is the  “Million Minutes for Peace” campaign of the Odyssey Network.  Our goal is to collect one million pledges to pray for peace for one minute at noon on the UN International Day of Peace.  Please watch the 60-second video, and join us by pledging your prayer for peace.  To view the video in Spanish click here.



Tweet for PeaceWeek!
Help us reach our goal of generating 1 million tweets for PeaceWeek. To view existing Peace tweets or post your own
click here.


 

 

 NEWS ITEM From Interfaith Group in Mexico

Members of the Los Angeles area IAPWR plan to attend this event and give a presentation. Stay tuned for more info.

 

ALL OF US UNDER THE SAME HEAVEN
“TODOS BAJO EL MISMO CIELO”
 
The Carpe Diem Interfe Foundation, A,C, would like to invite your community to participate in the activities programmed for a major event: “Universal Multicultural Dialogue 2012”
 to be held from August 29th to September 2nd, 2012, in the city of Guadalajara in Jalisco, Mexico.
 
The objective of this event is to join together in a National and International Forum and to present topics of common interest that allow the promulgation of peace and equality among all peoples. In so doing we can support one other to collectively make our world a better place.
 
Overview of the Universal Multicultural Dialogue 2012
 
Following is the range of topics that will be included in the list of activities that will take place during the 5 days of the conference:
 
1. Faith, Globalization and Interculturality.
2. CulturaI Identity and Migration.
3. Planet Emergency and Respect for Life:
      a) Ecology.
      b) Human Rights.
      c) Childhood.
      d) Youth.
      e) Wisdom of the Elders.
4. Where are we heading? Where do we want to head to? A New World is Possible!
5.   Earth and Humanity.
6.   Women´s role today.
7.   Heritage from the Ancient Cultures
8.   Building peace through Hope, Harmony and Solidarity
9.   Science, Technology and Religion.
10. Spirituality without religion
 
 
 From the subjects the actual program of events will be developed to include the following:
         a) Opening
         b) Main Conferences.
         c) Simultaneous Conferences.
         d) Dialogue tables.
         e) Panels
         f) Teleconferences.
         g) Blessing Ceremonies.
         g) Artistic and Cultural Expressions: Movies, Cuisine, Rituals and Traditions, Sacred Dances, Sacred Art, Concerts, Theatre, etc..
         h) Public Events ( Squares, public venues, etc.).
         e) Closing Event.
 
 
 
 
Fundación Carpe Diem Interfé, A.C.
Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico

Guadalajara Intergroup Group Publishes Online Interfaith Magazine

 

-->
Aither - La Revista

Aither - La Revista

Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, one of three cities bidding to host the 2014 Parliament of the World’s Religions, recently published an online magazine featuring interfaith articles.

AITHER – LA REVISTA, features an entire issue dedicated to the question “Why Guadalajara?” and highlights the recent visit of the site selection team from the Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions.

Click here to view the magazine

 

********

 

The Parliament Newsletter
Egyptian Muslims holding vigil during Coptic Christians' Christmas Eve Mass
Thousands of Egyptian Muslims Serve as Human Shields to Protect Coptic Christians

Muslims turned up in droves for the Coptic Christmas mass Thursday night, offering their bodies, and lives, as “shields” to Egypt’s threatened Christian community

Egypt’s majority Muslim population stuck to its word last Thursday night. What had been a promise of solidarity to the weary Coptic community, was honoured, when thousands of Muslims showed up at Coptic Christmas eve mass services in churches around the country and at candle light vigils held outside.
  Imam Abdul Malik Mujahid Coptic Christians Are Neighbors

"This is where the interfaith movement must continue to strengthen itself to connect neighbor with neighbor as individuals, not as objects of some distant foreign policy."

Council Chair Imam Abdul Malik Mujahid reflects on the recent violence in Egypt in the
Huffington Post.

Read More...
 
 

From the well-known to the unknown, Muslims had offered their bodies as “human shields” for the evening mass, making a pledge to collectively fight the threat of Islamic militants and towards an Egypt free from sectarian strife.

“We either live together, or we die together,” was the sloganeering genius of Mohamed El-Sawy, a Muslim arts tycoon whose cultural centre distributed flyers at churches in Cairo Thursday night, and who has been credited with first floating the “human shield” idea.

Among those shields were movie stars Adel Imam and Yousra, popular Muslim televangelist and preacher Amr Khaled, the two sons of President Hosni Mubarak, and thousands of citizens who have said they consider the attack one on Egypt as a whole.

“This is not about us and them,” said Dalia Mustafa, a student who attended mass at Virgin Mary Church on Maraashly Street. “We are one. This was an attack on Egypt as a whole, and I am standing with the Copts because the only way things will change in this country is if we come together.”

Click here to read the full article from Ahram Online.


Vigil after shooting in Arizona
 
Finding Solace After Arizona Shooting

By
Rabbi Brad Hirschfield

Violence like the weekend shooting in Arizona is scary. Random violence, like the death of 9-year-old Christina-Taylor Green who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time this weekend is particularly terrifying.

In the face of such terror, we seek reasons and explanations. We want to know who and what is to blame, hoping that if we could figure that out and make it go away, we would be free of such horrors as the mass murder that occurred in a Tucson shopping center just 48 hours ago."

Click here to read the full article.
 



World Interfaith Harmony Week

The first week of February is the official United Nations World Interfaith Harmony Week.

Start a dialogue, host a breakfast, or attend an event near you.

Click here to learn more.
  Support This Vital Work
 

Now, more than ever, we need people of faith to come together for a more peaceful world. Please consider giving to help us continue this crucial work.

Donate: Support Our Work
 


Latest from State of Formation State of Formation
 
 
Hannah Kardon
Lament for Tucson
by Hannah Kardon
This past weekend I’m sure many private hours and religious services were spent mourning the recent deaths in Arizona, and praying...
Read More...
 
 
Sara Staley
When Trickle Down Doesn't Work: Evangelicals and Interfaith Dialogue
by Sara Staley
It was an unassuming debate, the kind that takes place before...
Read More...
 
 
James Croft
Reasonful Meditation, or “I Suck at Breathing!”
by James Croft
First it’s the sound of my breath entering my nose, a slight whistle created by my stuffed-up nostrils. Then it’s...
Read More...
 
 
Joshua Eaton
Behold the Lady: Lady Gaga and God-Sacrifice
by Joshua Eaton
Lady Gaga's performance at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards began with her sprawled out center-stage singing...
Read More...
 
 
Neil Krishan Aggarwal
Who Owns Yoga? Cultural Ownership in an Age of Globalization
by Neil Krishan Aggarwal
A recent New York Times article has ignited controversy not just in...
Read More...
 

Council Updates
  • The Council is exploring a social cohesion project, conceived to address the urgency of the growing immigrant diversity in Europe and elsewhere. This coming week, Rev. Dirk Ficca, the Council's Executive Director, will be meeting with stakeholders in Malmo, Sweden; Antwerp, Belgium; and Frankfurt, Germany.
     
  • Trustee Dr. Leo D. Lefebure has recently lectured at the Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences in Hanoi, Vietnam; the Chinese University of Hong Kong; and the 2010 International Symposium of the Istanbul Foundation for Science and Culture in Istanbul, Turkey. His recently pubished book "The Path of Wisdom: A Christian Commentary on the Dhammapada", co-authored with Peter Feldmeier, offers a new translation of the Dhammapada (a collection of sayings of the Buddha), plus an explanation of the Buddhist context and a response from the Christian tradition.
     
Did you like this newsletter?
Like Egyptian Muslims Protect Christian Neighbors on Facebook   Comment on this newsletter on Facebook

 

VISIT US ON:

  peacenext   facebook   twitter   youtube  

Council for a Parliament of the World's Religions
70 East Lake Street, Suite 205
Chicago, Illinois 60601 USA
Tel: + 1 312.629.2990
Fax: + 1 312.629.2991
info@parliamentofreligions.org

Forward this email to a friend | Unsubscribe from all CPWR emails | Update your subscription preferences

 

 

 

 

 
http://parliamentofreligions.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=3de1428f8d&e=de2da8dadc
http://parliamentofreligions.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=6f208b857a&e=de2da8dadc
State of Formation
A New Forum of Emerging Leaders

Current discourse on religion and ethics is primarily defined by established leaders—ministers, rabbis, academics and journalists. There is an entire population of important stakeholders without a platform: the up-and-comers.

To remedy this, the Journal of Inter-Religious Dialogue, Hebrew College, Andover Newton Theological School, and the Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions have joined forces to create
State of Formation, a forum for up-and-coming religious thinkers to draw upon the learning that is occurring in their academic and community work, reflect on the pressing questions of a religiously pluralistic society, and challenge existing religious assumptions.

State of Formation is a community conversation between leaders in formation. Together, a cohort of seminarians, rabbinical students, graduate students, activists and the like—the future religious and moral leaders of tomorrow—are working to redefine the ethical discourse today.

Writers for State of Formation will demonstrate candor and respect, and State of Formation’s content will reflect the diversity of budding religious and ethical leadership in America and the particular learning that only occurs in religious and philosophical education. Above all, its contributors will address the pressing ethical issues of our pluralistic world.

The Council is excited to be a part of this cutting-edge work.  Below you will find a small sample of the conversations that are happening on State of Formation.  Over the coming weeks, you'll be able to meet these scholars and engage their work more directly on
PeaceNext.org
.

Click here to visit State of Formation.


Zahid Shahab AhmedMuslim-Christian Relations in Pakistan
by Zahid Shahab Ahmed

While growing up in Lala Musa (Gujrat, Punjab) and Islamabad in Pakistan, I  witnessed Christians as domestic workers in my home and neighborhood. This job is considered to be one of the lowest forms of work and includes cleaning, washing and cooking. In my youth, due to lack of exposure, I had a feeling that all Christians were economically disadvantaged. But similar to most of the kids my age, I never bothered to think of the reasons behind their economic marginalization.
Read More...
  Honna EichlerHarry Potter and Religious Pluralism
by Honna Eichler

Inspired by Julie Clawson’s Sojourners post, Harry Potter and Social Justice, and still captivated by the recent movie release (which, yes, I did see at 12:01am), I sit here to write what this story has to offer our conversations. Essentially, it is a story portraying the power of self-actualized love against the evil sprung from self-obsession.
Read More...

Karen Leslie HernandezI’m Wondering If I Might Sit and Listen To You For a While…?
by Karen Leslie Hernandez

Last week, as I was driving from Georgetown, Texas to the Dallas/Ft. Worth airport, I noted that I would drive through Waco. As many know, Waco is now associated with the terrible events of 1993 when the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms served a warrant on the Branch Davidian compound and to David Koresh, their leader. 
Read More...
  Adina AllenNature vs. Culture?
by Adina Allen

This week in our year-long class on Exodus our discussion focused on Moshe’s identity struggle as played out by his early forays out into the broader world, being incensed by the injustice all around him, wondering which side he is on and in to which world he belongs.
Read More...

Brandon TurnerInterreligious Dialogue, take 2
by Brandon Turner

Why did an individual who has never blogged, tweeted, or facebooked (is this the term?) decide to apply to a new interreligious initiative that will exist almost exclusively in the online world? Great question.

Admittedly, I am this individual who, until 2 weeks ago, never did anything online. But, when I received an email (ok, so I did email…) from a friend about the soon to be launched “State of Formation,” I eagerly jumped in.
Read More...
  Allana TaylorTo be, or not to be...an atheist
by Allana Taylor

Labels are cumbersome. To self-identify as an atheist, or a Jew, or a Hindu, or a Muslim, and so on, requires that you accept ownership of all that is attached to that label. It is wholly irrelevant whether or not you personally accept the burden of your label, it has been hoisted upon you and strapped down with steel chains by those around you. At least it feels this way sometimes, doesn’t it?
Read More...

Support the Growing Movement
 

State of Formation is one more example of how the Council is working every day to bring people together for a better world.  Please consider giving to help us continue this crucial work.

http://parliamentofreligions.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=1aaf03834d&e=de2da8dadc

Council Updates
  • Executive Director Rev. Dirk Ficca is in Geneva this week for meetings with the Coalition for a UN Decade of Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue, Understanding and Cooperation for Peace. Dirk Ficca is serving as Interim Chair of the Coalition.
     
  • The 2014 Parliament Site Selection Task Force has completed successful visits to Brussels and Guadalajara and will be visiting Dallas-Fort Worth next week. A common sentiment in these cities is, "The Parliament has already begun." Relationships and collaborations are being formed that will continue whether or not the city is chosen to hold the 2014 Parliament. Thanks to Brussels, Dallas-Fort Worth and Guadalajara for their inspiring work!
     
Did you like this newsletter?
http://us1.campaign-archive.com/?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=9fe5d8bbdc&fblike=true&e=de2da8dadc   http://us1.campaign-archive.com/?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=9fe5d8bbdc&e=de2da8dadc#fbcomments

 

VISIT US ON:

  http://parliamentofreligions.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=b3f2255d7f&e=de2da8dadc   http://parliamentofreligions.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=12ab2561a6&e=de2da8dadc   http://parliamentofreligions.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=30d7220101&e=de2da8dadc   http://parliamentofreligions.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=15d4f7de1064a5171ce87bc0e&id=7031dc9c58&e=de2da8dadc  

Council for a Parliament of the World's Religions
70 East Lake Street, Suite 205
Chicago, Illinois 60601 USA
Tel: + 1 312.629.2990
Fax: + 1 312.629.2991
info@parliamentofreligions.org

Forward this email to a friend | Unsubscribe from all CPWR emails | Update your subscription preferences


 

Margaret Henke, Founder and Executive Director of the  Orange County Interfaith Coalition for the Environment (OCICE)  receives award from SCCPWR  

 

L to Right: Margaret Henke receives award from SCCPWR Co-Chair Ruth Broyde Sharone and SCCPWR Chaplain Thomas Hedberg in recognition of OCICE's contribution to interfaith engagement and their "tireless efforts to create mindful caretakers of the Earth."  The award was presented on Saturday, October 30, at "Caring for Creation," an environmental conference sponsored by OCICE, and held at St. Marks' Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach.
 
 

 

 
Above: Los Angeles-based Singer/Songwriter and Humanitarian Daniel Nahmod performs an original composition during this OCICE event.
 
Below: A local group of young dancers perform.

 

 

 

L to Right: Margaret Henke, Bishop Charles Swing, president and founder of United Religions Inititative (URI), and Ruth Broyde Sharone..  Bishop Swing was the keynote speaker of the environmental conference.

 

 LOS ANGELES DESIGNATED AS A PEACE CITY  BY PARLIAMENT OF THE WORLD'S RELIGIONS

 
Because of the outstanding interfaith work of the SCCPWR, Los Angeles was recently recognized by The Partner Cities Network of the Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions in their announcement of their launch of Peace Cities
 
"Because of your city's' partnership with the Council for a Parliament of the World's Religions, your city is being designated as a Peace City. "
 
The launch is being held in conjunction with the United Nations International Day of Peace on September 21, 2010.  Peace Cities is a city-to-city interfaith networking opportunity for self-organized grassroots interfaith groups, made available through the Council's very own social networking site PeaceNext.org.  Over 70 international cities are being awarded this designation in recognition of the outstanding organizing efforts of their local interfaith communities.   For more information, go to: Peace Cities. 
 
 
 

 
 
 
“Sectarianism, bigotry, and its horrible descendant, fanaticism, have long possessed this beautiful earth. They have filled the earth with violence, drenched it often and often with human blood, destroyed civilization and sent whole nations to despair. Had it not been for these horrible demons, human society would be far more advanced than it is now. But their time is come; and I fervently hope that the bell that tolled this morning in honor of this convention may be the death-knell of all fanaticism, of all persecutions with the sword or with the pen, and of all uncharitable feelings between persons wending their way to the same goal.”
                                                                                       
These inspiring words were spoken by Hindu swami Vivekananda at the first Parliament of the World’s Religions, which took place at the Chicago World’s Fair on September 11, 1893. As we contemplate the current state of our country and the world, it’s clear that these prophetic words still ring true. The rise of religious bigotry in the United States is sending shock waves throughout the world, imperiling peace and emboldening religious fanatics, and is a cause of deep concern for those of us connected with the Southern California Committee for a Parliament of the World’s Religion (SCCPWR).
 
As we hold in our hearts the victims of the attacks that took place on September 11, 2001, as well as the words of Vivekananda spoken on September 11, 1893, we call on people of good will of all faiths and of no faith join together “to foster understanding, mutual respect, and cooperation” in our local communities and around the world. This is the mission of SCCPWR and of the interfaith community: to overcome religious bigotry by promoting interreligious harmony.
 
As former Parliament executive director William Lesher pointed out, “The Interreligious Movement in the US and around the world has been building bridges of understanding among religious communities, including Islam, for the last few decades.  Many religious people in the US are affiliated with local interreligious councils or with national and international organizations like United Religions Initiative (URI) or Religions for Peace (RFP) or have participated in one of the four modern Parliaments of the World’s Religions (PWR) with which I am affiliated. These people have led the way in this historic movement to develop knowledge, understanding, and respect for religious and spiritual communities of the world, many of whom have growing numbers of adherents in our towns and cities, states and nation.” (http://www.parliamentofreligions.org/news/index.php/2010/08/cpwr-chair-emeritus-rev-bill-lesher-weighs-in-on-park51-debate/)
 
In order to foster interreligious harmony both locally and globally, we support the right of Muslims and all people of faith to build houses of worship wherever they please, in accordance with local laws and the US Constitution. We oppose all acts of desecration, including the burning of sacred scriptures such as the Quran. We stand in solidarity with those who are working for justice, peace, and religious pluralism. It is our hope and prayer that we can help create a world where religion will no longer be used an excuse for violence or hatred, and where freedom, dignity and peace will be the birthright of every man, woman, and child.
 
 
 
FROM FIRE STORM TO ILLUMINATION:

http://www.parliamentofreligions.org/index.cfm?n=1&sn=7

William Lesher, Chair Emeritus,

Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions

What some in the media have referred to as “a fire storm” over the mosque debate in lower Manhattan is turning out to be a catalyst to launch a much needed national discussion (and tutorial) on Muslims in America.

Since this discussion was intensified by the exaggerated rhetoric and distorted claims of Pamela Geller, a conservative blogger in her post on May 6, a consensus seems to be forming among constitutionally committed citizens across the political spectrum.  Fair-minded people are agreeing that the Imam and his wife in charge of the mosque project, Feisal Abdul Rauf, Daisy Khan and their supporters, have every right to expand their center and include a new worship space on the site.  They have worked from and worshipped in this place for many years, two blocks from the World Trade Center disaster.  Even though current polls claim that 7 out of 10 Americans oppose the project, opponents can hardly argue that the project planners do not have a constitutional right to carry out their vision.  As one letter to the NY Times editor put it, “As a legal matter, there is nothing to debate.  If a church or synagogue could be constructed on this site, so may a mosque.  Period. The first amendment means at least that.”

The location of the proposed Islamic Center touches the raw nerve that has elicited often shrill claims ranging from insensitivity to the families of the 9/11 victims and desecration of hallowed ground to an international Islamic conspiracy to subvert the nation.  Given the fact that the vast majority of Americans know little of Islam and know almost nothing of the history and intentions of the center planners in lower Manhattan, it is not surprising that the barrage of misinformation that initiated and continues to stoke the current national discussion has filled this vacuum and created the sharp negative and often heated responses.

But now, as the national discussion continues, one might cautiously hope, even anticipate, that the time is right for a nation-wide learning process to unfold.  This could become a time for Americans of fairness and goodwill to take the time to listen and to learn from people in the interreligious community and from Muslims themselves about the importance, the variety, and the beauty of this second largest religion in the world. And to hear as well, about the healing potential for having a thoroughly American expression of Islam close to the site of Ground Zero.

The Interreligious Movement in the US and around the world has been building bridges of understanding among religious communities, including Islam, for the last few decades.  Many religious people in the US are affiliated with local interreligious councils or with national and international organizations like United Religions Initiative (URI) or Religions for Peace (RFP) or have participated in one of the four modern Parliaments of the World’s Religions (PWR) with which I am affiliated. These people have led the way in this historic movement to develop knowledge, understanding, and respect for religious and spiritual communities of the world, many of whom have growing numbers of adherents in our towns and cities, states and nation.

People affiliated with the growing interreligious movement know about the great diversity that exists within Islam, not unlike the wide spectrum of beliefs, traditions and behaviors among different sectors in the Christian and Jewish communities. They know what William Dalrymple wrote about in an illuminating Op-Ed piece in the New York Times entitled, “The Muslims in the Middle,” that Islam is not a monolithic religion.  Rather it is as complex as Christianity and Judaism, with as many, perhaps more divisions, sects and traditions, some in opposition to others, as is true of every major religious group. Dalrymple helpfully teaches in his article how “Feisal Abdul Rauf…is one of America’s leading thinkers of Sufism, the mystical form of Islam which in terms of goals and outlook couldn’t be farther from the violent Wahabism of the jihadists.  His videos and sermons preach love, the remembrance of God and reconciliation…..But in the eyes of Osama bin Laden and the Taliban, he is an infidel-loving, grave-worshipping apostate…”

Members of the interfaith movement are also leading the resistance to the resisters and need to do so more and more.  In another New York Times article describing protests against mosques in several communities around the country, Laurie Goodstein focuses on Temecula, Ca.  There she writes: “In late June …members of a local Tea Party group took dogs and picket signs to Friday prayers at a mosque that is seeking to build a new worship center on a vacant lot nearby.”  She goes on to say that an estimated 20 – 30 people turned out to protest the mosque.  But then Ms. Goodstein states what many of us think is the real story in Temecula, “that the protesters were outnumbered by at least 75 supporters” who affirm the right of the Muslim congregation in Temecula to expand their mosque.  Something good is happening in Temecula when, less then a decade after 9/11, local citizens know and act on the difference between their mainstream Muslim neighbors and the terrorists whose actions violated the most basic tenants of Islam. It’s too bad that the NY Times headlined the Goodstein article, “Across Nation, Mosque Projects Meet Resistance” and missed the positive thrust of the Temecula story.

Speaking from the experience of the Parliament of the World’s Religions, the 2004 Parliament in Barcelona, Spain focused major attention on the issue of Religiously Motivated and Experienced Violence.  After several days of intense workshop discussions, participants from across the interreligious spectrum, agreed that the minimum responsibility of religious communities  is to come to the aid of any religious community whose house of worship is the target of an attack, vandalism, threat or destruction.

The recent Parliament in Melbourne, Australia in 2009 featured a strong focus on IslamImam Feisal Abdul Rauf himself was a major presenter leading or participating in six interreligious programs with the following titles: “Applying Islamic Principles for a Just and Sustainable World”;  “Sacred Envy Panel: Exploring What We Love about Our Own Faith, What We Admire in Others and What Challenges Us in Both”;  “Purifying the Heart and Soul through Remembrance of Allah”; “Dhikr As An Islamic Devotional Act for Inner Peace”; “How Islam Deals with Social Justice, Gender Justice and Religious Diversity”; and “Islam and the West: Creating an Accord of Civilizations.”  How much could such a teacher of Islam help to bridge the gulf of misunderstanding about this great faith tradition by continuing his long and much admired ministry in lower Manhattan where he has built an international reputation for promulgating a modern version of Islam?

So, while some call it a “fire storm” and do their best to make it so, there are other voices that seem to be gaining strength.  Among the shouting and the uninformed outrage that sometimes seems ubiquitous, I sense that  responsible media outlets and people in the interreligious movement are grasping the significance of this moment and are helping to seed the discussion with historical facts, accurate information and a commitment to understanding and respect.  If this trend continues we will all learn important things about ourselves and about the most recent global religious tradition to enter the mainstream of American life.

 

 

May 2010 Awards Banquet Drew Nearly 200 Attendees

 

Six outstanding interfaith groups and youth were honored at SCCPWR’s  First Annual Awards Banquet on Sunday, May 16, 2010. Entitled Joining Hands to Save the World, the event was held at the Center for Spiritual Living in Redondo Beach and featured keynote speaker, Rosemary Radford Reuther. An eco-feminist author, scholar and peace activist, Reuther is considered a pioneer in the area of feminist theology in North America, with a particular focus on gender, ecology, social justice issues, and liberation theology, especially in Palestine and Latin America. A distinguished academician as well as an author of many books, including Sexism and God-Talk: Toward a Feminist Theology, she has also been an outspoken critic of war since the Vietnam era and continues this work today. 
 
The organizations that were honored at the May event were:
·          Interfaith Communities United for Justice and Peace, (ICUJP)
·          Orange County Interfaith Coalition on the Environment (OCICE)
·          Pacifica Institute
·          S.A.R.A.H. (Spiritual and Religious Alliance for Hope)   
·          South Coast Interfaith Council (SCIC), and the
·          Unity and Diversity Council (UDC)
 
Youth honored for outstanding interfaith contributions: Jasmine Haley, Sarina vanZyl, and Zach Perlman.
 
The festive event brought together some 200 participants from approximately 30 Southern California interfaith organizations and academic institutions.  A video with highlights of the 2009 Melbourne Parliament, created by Sarina vanZyl,  was screened, and the evening was interspersed with musical performances by peace troubadour Rev. Stephen Longfellow Fiske, Zach Perlman, (Exec. Director of Monks Without Borders), the Bhajan Band, and the MTO Sufis from USC.
 
Preceding the awards ceremony, SCCPWR presented two 45-minute workshops, facilitated by leaders of the organizations honored and by SCCPWR members. Workshop themes included 21st century ecological challenges, conflict resolution, women’s empowerment, interfaith dialogue, sacred poetry, and techniques for appreciative listening. Participants praised the workshops highly, and many stayed behind to continue their conversations even when the workshops ended—a sure sign of success! 
 

 
 
How you can become involved

 

To find out how you can take part as a Friend or member of our organization,

contact Ruth Broyde Sharone at rabsharone@aol.com. .

 

or any other member of the steering committee listed on our website

 

 



Number of visitors 51021


Website powered & layout © by TipTopWebsite.com