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"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:
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.
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