Category: justice

Posted in justice on September 7, 2010

Mobilizing Hope


NY Faith & Justice, The Micah Institute, & Union Theological Seminary invite you to:

Mobilizing Hope:
Adam Russel Taylor on Continuing the Work of Martin Luther King, Jr. Today

Friday, Sept. 20th
4:00pm
Union Theological Seminary
3041 Broadway @ 121st St.
NY, NY 10027

Martin Luther King Jr. read the words of the apostle Paul to the church in Rome–”Be transformed by the renewing of your mind”–as a call not to retreat from the world but to lead the world into the kingdom of God, where peace and justice reign. In King’s day the presenting problem was entrenched racism; the movement of God was a revolution in civil rights and human dignity. Now Adam Taylor draws insights from that movement to the present, where the burden of the world is different but the need is the same. See what today’s transformed nonconformists are doing at home and abroad to keep in step with the God of justice and love, and find ways you can join the new nonconformists in an activism of hope.

Adam Taylor is currently serving as a White House Fellow in the White House Office of Cabinet Affairs and Public Engagement. He was formerly the Senior Political Director at Sojourners where he was responsible for leading the organization’s advocacy, coalition building, and constituency outreach. He has also served as the executive director of Global Justice, an organization that educates and mobilizes students around global human rights and economic justice. Before co-founding Global Justice, he worked as an Associate at the Harvard University Carr Center for Human Rights and as an Urban Fellow in the Department of Housing Preservation and Development in New York City. Taylor is an ordained Associate Minister at the First Baptist Church in Washington, D.C. and is married to Sharee Mckenzie Taylor.

Posted in justice on August 31, 2010

Bowery Mission's Summer's End Garden Party


Come to the Bowery Mission’s Summer’s End Garden Party www.boweryyoungphilanthropists.org on Wednesday, September 15, from 6:30 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. at the West Yard of St. Mark’s Church-in-the-Bowery on 131 East 10th Street and 2nd Avenue, and bring your NYC community.  The $35 ticket goes to support their services to the homeless of NYC, and it comes complete with wine and food tastings and classy live music.

Posted in justice on August 17, 2010

Habitat - NYC School for Faith, Action & Impact


Registration is now open for our new groundbreaking training course created specifically for our dedicated Habitat-NYC faith partners. Sign up today and ask your congregation’s Habitat volunteers and supporters to join us on Saturday, October 2nd for the first session!

Habitat-NYC’s School for Faith, Action & Impact will explore how our faiths call us towards justice and how we can put our faith into further action by raising our voices for our communities and neighbors in need.

Session 1 – Breaking Down the Walls:
Saturday, October 2nd
10am – 4pm
Central Manhattan Location TBA
Lunch is provided!

This exciting first session explores the reality of poverty and the lack of affordable housing in our city and how our faiths call us to respond. The day will include interactive activities and exercises, special guest presenters, and much more! If you’re excited about Habitat and our mission, you’ll love this special opportunity to get more involved in serving families in need.

$10 requested registration donation per session or $20 for all three sessions. Scholarships available and congregational sponsorship of participation is encouraged. Lunch included.

Attend all three sessions to receive:
·         Free transportation to Habitat for Humanity – NYS’s March 2011 Albany lobby day
·         A certificate of training

To Register or for more information contact Matt Dunbar at: (212) 991-4000 x320 or mdunbar@habitatnyc.org

Save These Dates!!!

Session 2 – Faith in Action:
Saturday, November 6th

Takes an in-depth look at housing issues in New York City and State and equips faith partners with the tools needed to construct change

Session 3 – Building Impact:
Saturday, December 4th

Examines the importance of classic organizing models and coalitions and focuses on how faith-rooted advocacy can have a major impact by utilizing the unique and exciting opportunities individuals and communities of faith have to speak and act out for social change

Posted in justiceNews on August 16, 2010

Advocating for Farm Workers


This Thursday evening, August 19, at 6:00 p.m., there will be an opportunity to advocate for justice for farm workers outside of Trader Joe’s in Chelsea (6th Avenue and W. 21st Street).  The purpose of the advocacy is to help inform consumers about abuses against farmworkers and to push Trader Joe’s to join an agreement to end abuse and modern-day slavery.

There is a well-documented human rights crisis in Florida’s fields, and conditions facing farmworkers who harvest the tomatoes we buy at places such as Trader Joe’s are as urgent as they are appalling.  Farmworkers picking tomatoes for Trader Joe’s chain of supermarkets earn 40-50 cents for every 32-pound bucket of tomatoes they harvest–wages hat have not risen since 1978.  A worker must pick nearly 2.5 tons of tomatoes just to earn minimum wage for a typical 10-hour day.  Grinding poverty leaves farmworkers vulnerable to the most exploitative employers, often resulting in egregious labor rights abuses.

We have the opportunity to encourage the supermarkets where we shop to support social responsibility in the Florida tomato industry.

For more information visit workers@ciw-online.org

Posted in justice on August 11, 2010

Some things we take for granted...


“One was rubbing a peach along his face, and I said, ‘It’s supposed to feel like that.’ Another was breathing into the peach, and I said, ‘It’s supposed to smell like that.’ Another was biting into the peach, and the juice was running down his face and arms, and I said, ‘It’s supposed to taste like that.’ In a country of plenty, everybody should have the experience of tasting the bounty.” Chef Tony Geraci, director of food and nutrition for Baltimore City Schools, on the reaction of second-graders eating fresh peaches for the first time in their lives after he brought in 40,000 pounds of tree-ripened, Maryland-grown peaches for school lunches. (USA Today)

Posted in justice on August 5, 2010

Food, Faith and Health Disparities Summit


Faith Leaders for Environmental Justice invites you to

Food, Faith, and Health Disparities Summit

October 29-30, 2010
Location TBA

What is it like to live in a “food desert”? What is the link between poverty, obesity and diabetes? Do things just have to be this way? Is it a lost cause or can we do something about it?

Mark your calendars now and join faith and community leaders, health and environmental advocates, and government representatives from the Boroughs of the Bronx, Manhattan, and Brooklyn in October for the Food, Faith, and Health Disparities Summit.

Join hundreds of New Yorkers who live in New York City’s food deserts and those who don’t. Listen and share your stories of food, faith and health. Work with a small group representing a diverse cross-section of New Yorkers to discern the spiritual, social and structural causes for our city’s health disparities. Then work together to set action priorities for the next year.

Be a part of the solution!

This summit is made possible through the generous partnership of the Bronx Health REACH Legacy Grant.

Co-sponsored by:
NY Faith and Justice, Everyday Democracy, Muslim Women’s Institute, NYC Coalition Against Hunger, We Act for Environmental Justice, Our Planet Media, The Interfaith Center of New York, Center for the Study of Science and Religion, New York Divinity School, New York Lawyers for the Public Interest, Borean Baptist Church, It Is Well Living Church, Convent of the Sacred Heart, The Blak Project, New York Theological Seminary, UFCW-Local 1500, NYC Dept of Health-Strategic Alliance for Health, Metro Hope Church NYC, Mid-Bronx Senior Citizens Council, Lambs Church of the Nazarene, Office of the Borough President of Manhattan, Trinity Grace Church, Sustainable South Bronx, F.U.R.E.E., NYC Economic Development Corporation

Posted in justice on August 2, 2010

Modern-Day Slavery Museum to Tour New York


From August 2nd to August 4th

The Florida Modern-Day Slavery Museum consists of a produce truck of the same model that farmworkers were locked inside of and chained in one of the latest slavery prosecutions (U.S. v. Navarrete, 2008), accompanied by displays on the history and evolution of slavery in Florida agriculture. The museum’s central focus is on the phenomenon of modern-day slavery – its roots, the reasons it persists, and its solutions.

The exhibits were developed in consultation with workers who have escaped from forced labor operations as well as leading academic authorities on slavery and labor history in Florida. The museum is endorsed by several leading human rights and anti-slavery organizations, including Amnesty International and Anti-Slavery International, respectively the largest human rights organization and the oldest human rights organization in the world. It has recently been hosted at the U.S. State Department building and the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

The museum was conceived by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, the human rights award-winning farmworker organization that has aided in the prosecution by the Department of Justice of seven farm slavery operations and the liberation of well over 1,000 workers since 1997. A federal indictment for the most recent forced labor case in Florida agriculture was unsealed just this month.

The tour will also raise awareness about labor conditions in the tomato supply chains of Ahold’s USA supermarket brands, including Giant, Stop & Shop, and Martins.

“Slavery in Florida agriculture today is not separate from the past – indeed, its roots extend deep within our state’s history. Farmworkers have always been, and remain today, the state’s poorest, least powerful workers,” explains Gerardo Reyes of the CIW. “If we are to abolish slavery once and for all in Florida agriculture, we must pull it up by the roots by addressing farmworker poverty and powerlessness.”

NEW YORK CITY STOPS INFORMATION

Date: Monday, August 2nd

Location: Cathedral of St. John the Divine, 1047 Amsterdam Ave.

(between 112th and 113th Streets)

Time: 10am – 9pm.

Date: Tuesday, August 3rd

Location: Judson Memorial Church, 55 Washington Square South (West

4th at Thompson)

Time: 10am – 9pm.

Date: Wednesday, August 4th

Location: Middle Collegiate Church, 50 E. 7th Street (between First

and Second Avenues)

Time: 10am – 9pm.

Posted in Eventsjustice on July 27, 2010

Reveal Summer Spa Benefit


Reveal is a volunteer-run nonprofit organization benefiting local women recovering from abuse and sex exploitation. It was birthed out of one of TGC’s first missional communities. All proceeds of Reveal’s Summer Spa Benefit go to the Reveal monthly self-care workshops.

Wednesday, July 28, 8 pm at the Jeunesse Spa & Salon, Empire Hotel (1885 Broadway at Lincoln Center)

Admission: $25 online, $35 door

Free mini-treatment to first 50 individuals to purchase a ticket; $30 gift card to first 50 individuals in at the door.

RSVP online
Posted in justice on July 20, 2010

We are prophets of a future not our own


It helps, now and then, to step back
and take the long view.
The kingdom is not only beyond our efforts,
it is beyond our vision.

We accomplish in our lifetime only a tiny fraction of
the magnificent enterprise that is God’s work.
Nothing we do is complete,
which is another way of saying
that the kingdom always lies beyond us.

No statement says all that could be said.
No prayer fully expresses our faith.
No confession brings perfection.
No pastoral visit brings wholeness.
No program accomplishes the church’s mission.
No set of goals and objectives includes everything.

This is what we are about:
We plant seeds that one day will grow.
We water seeds already planted, knowing that they hold future promise.
We lay foundations that will need further development.
We provide yeast that produces effects beyond our capabilities.

We cannot do everything
and there is a sense of liberation in realizing that.
This enables us to do something,
and to do it very well.
It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way,
an opportunity for God’s grace to enter and do the rest.

We may never see the end results,
but that is the difference between the master builder and the worker.
We are workers, not master builders,
ministers, not messiahs.
We are prophets of a future not our own.

Amen.

(A prayer of Archbishop Oscar Romero, who was martyred in San Salvador in 1980)

Posted in justice on July 19, 2010

Shalom and Justice


Lisa Sharon Harper, co-founder and executive director of New York Faith & Justice, who spoke at TGC on July 18, referred to a ground-breaking book that should be must reading for all Christians.  The book is Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America, by Michael O. Emerson and Christian Smith. 

A second book, also recommended is United by Faith: The Multiracial Congregation as an Answer to the Problem of Race by Curtiss Paul DeYoung, Michael O. Emerson, George Yancey, and Karen Choi Kim.

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