The Interfaith Peace Project supports the following initiatives and urges your kind consideration. +++ From The Interfaith Center at the Presidio Two Bay Area interfaith organizations, SiVIC (Silicon Valley Interreligious Council) and ING (Islamic Networks Group) have issued statements on the current situation in Gaza and its impact on relationships between religious communities here and around the world. The Council for a Parliament of the World”s Religions has likewise called for peace and Justice. It is in the difficult times that the basic principles of interfaith work are tested, and the relationships built over time enable lines of communication to be opened. The Interfaith Center at the Presidio supports the work these groups and others in our community and around the world do to build relationships of respect and cooperation. On the Gaza Conflict July 22, 2014 As events continue to unfold in Israel and Gaza, we in the Silicon Valley Interreligious Council (SiVIC) are grieved by the human cost and suffering occasioned by the current conflict. While members of our community may lean more toward support for Israel or for Gaza, together we know how important it is for us to maintain connections and dialogue with one another, especially when some would polarize the debate and end discussion. Regardless of our individual stances, we share a recognition of our common humanity and a conviction that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict must cease, that there is no violent solution to that conflict, that all human life is valued, and that all parties must cooperate to achieve a just and lasting peace on behalf of God’s children who reside in the land that many of us call holy. We affirm these guiding principles, articulated during previous armed conflicts in Gaza:
Guided by these principles, we recognize the urgent need for the prompt implementation of a just and lasting peace. Toward that end,
Statement on Recent Anti-Jewish ING, in line with the principles of justice advocated by all our religious traditions, rejects notions of collective guilt and collective punishment. In situations of violence, whether in Gaza, in Paris, in Brooklyn, or elsewhere, it is all too easy to blame whole peoples and whole communities for the actions of a few. We call in particular on all those critical of Israeli actions to refrain from blaming those actions on the Jewish people as a whole, just as we call on those critical of organizations such as Hamas and those who join us in condemning the attacks in Sarcelles to refrain from blaming Muslims or Arabs as a whole. Every incident of violence should make us turn with greater determination to making peace in our hearts and in our actions with the diversity of peoples, cultures, and faiths in our world. Parliament of the World’s Religions Stands with Peace and Justice in the Holy Lands July 24, 2014 The Parliament of the World’s Religions grieves whenever violence and conflict flares, as is now occurring in Palestine and Israel. Grief, however, must not paralyze faith communities and the interfaith movement into silence and inaction. Instead, we are called to serve as moderating agents in the cause of sustainable justice, unconditional compassion, and enduring peace by raising our voices against those who seek the annihilation of their enemies. The Parliament, therefore, asks religious and spiritual communities across the globe, and the interfaith movement specifically, to be vocal and active in:
The Parliament of the World’s Religions encourages all faith communities and especially the interfaith movement to actively expose and challenge anti-Semitism and Islamophobia in their neighborhoods, cities, and in the public discourse. Let us be moderating voices and agents that will revitalize the dialogue and cooperation between Jews, Christians, and Muslims. This mission should be a part of our sermons, prayers, and civic action. Please share this information with your networks. |
Rev. D. Andrew Kille
INTERFAITH CENTER AT THE PRESIDIO
Off