Peace of Abraham, Hagar, & Sarah: Sacred Seasons, Fall 2006-07

11 Steps toward the October 8 Interfaith Fast

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 9/12/2007

ELEVEN STEPS ON THE SACRED PATH
TOWARD THE INTERFAITH
PEACEMAKING FAST
ON OCTOBER 8

1. Read the Call at http://www.shalomctr.org/node/1269 and share it with others. You can use the brief version you will find at the end of this letter. If you are the clergyperson of a congregation, place a phone call to and arrange to meet with the clergypersons or leaders of religious communities other than your own — to explore arrangements such as those below. (If you are not clergy yourself, you could place the calls anyway or ask your clergyperson to do so.) Those who agree to plan this could become an informal “planning committee” for the event.   Read more »

Dear friends,

How do we announce a major religious event, such as the October 8 Fast to move America from conquest to community, from violence to reverence?

When the steering committee of the Fast began discussing this, our first response was the conventional one in American society –- a press conference.

But then we recalled that there are ancient traditions for making the announcement of such a religious act itself a religious act. In the Talmud, for example, there is described a way of Calling a Communal Fast in Time of Calamity. (The calamity might be a drought, a famine, a war.)   Read more »

Fasting on Oct. 8 to challenge the culture of Violence

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 6/11/2007

WE CALL FOR A NATION-WIDE FAST ON OCTOBER 8
TO DISCOVER THE TRUE AMERICA;

TO MOVE FROM CONQUEST TO COMMUNITY,
FROM VIOLENCE TO REVERENCE

A Call from the Tent of Abraham, Hagar, & Sarah

America stands in great danger of becoming addicted to violence, at home and overseas.   Read more »

Interfaith Fast to Make Peace in Iraq

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 6/9/2007

Dear friends of all faiths and communities,

If you want to sign on to the Call for the Interfaith Fast, please write to Office@shalomctr.org and explain what religious congregation, organization, or community you are working with. PLEASE ALSO SIGN UP AND DESCRIBE THE EVENT YOU ARE PLANNING, BY CLICKING TO —

Http://www.INTERFAITHFAST.ORG

Shalom, salaam, peace –
Rabbi Arthur Waskow

FROM CONQUEST TO COMMUNITY,
FROM VIOLENCE TO REVERENCE:
AN INTERFAITH FAST on OCTOBER 8
TO END THE WAR IN IRAQ   Read more »

Dear friends,

For a YouTube video about the Muslim-Jewish event described here, see —
http://youtube.com/watch?v=EPdZ3hizUS0

Sometimes the earth on which we stand begins to shake, uncontrollably. We can respond with measured concern, even fear, and reach out for help to each other; or we can respond with panic and rage against anyone we think might be responsible for the earthquake. We can try to grab on to some “immovable” strong point - or we can learn to dance, with each other, in the earthquake.   Read more »

Why Do We Need a Tent of Abraham?

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 2/15/2007

Reopening the Tent of Abraham

Rabbi Phyllis O. Berman and Rabbi Arthur O. Waskow *

The world is falling helter-skelter down a steep incline toward a fatal cliff: an endless world war between the whole Muslim world and the West, or perhaps the United States. A war between the different families of Abraham.

Sometimes it seems we are already over the edge of the cliff, but perhaps, God willing, im yirtzeh hashem, inshallah, not quite yet. Barely.

Such a war would leave us all at constant risk of death, impoverishment for all public and many private goods, ridden and riddled with fear and rage. Write large – write “global” — the tip of Manhattan on September 11, 2001; the city of Baghdad all of June, July, August, 2006; Qana on July 30, 2006; Kfar Giladi on August 6.   Read more »

Healing the Planet: Major Phila Inquirer feature article

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 10/30/2006

Philadelphia inquirer, Oct. 7, 2006, p. B-4
By Kristin E. Holmes
Inquirer Staff Writer
 
[With dramatic photos of the wounded earth and with photos of Rev. Edgar & Dr.  Syeed, this article took more than half the page.]
 
Religious leaders will gather in Philadelphia tomorrow to discuss global warming, and to recognize special days in several religious traditions.
 
“Sacred Seasons, Sacred Earth: An Interfaith Call to Reflect and Act” will consider what believers can do to temper the effects of climate change that organizers call a “crisis of global scorching.”
 
“We felt that ‘warming’ was a term that is too pleasant,” said Rabbi Arthur Waskow, who will moderate a panel discussion at tomorrow’s event. “It’s not honest. The heating is not some kind of benign warmth. It’s dangerous.”   Read more »

Faith-based climate care: Phila Inquirer Editorial

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 10/30/2006

By - Philadelphia Inquirer, Editorial
Tuesday, October 17, 2006 - Web Link
October 17, 2006
Historians and scientists may someday tell us whether New Orleans was, in fact, the first city destroyed by global warming, as some believe. They’re vigorously studying whether rising sea surface temperatures contributed to the wrath of Hurricane Katrina.
Regardless of their conclusion, the lesson is clear: Natural disaster hurts most those least able to cope with it.
Katrina could be a harbinger of things to come. Without mitigation, rising global temperatures are expected to cause ferocious hurricanes, tornadoes and floods; spawn heat waves, drought and famine; and prompt the spread of disease-carrying insects.   Read more »

An Interfaith Plea to End the 'Global Scorching'

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 10/30/2006

Philadelphia Jewish Exponent
October 12, 2006 - Rachel Silverman

[Photo] “Sacred Seasons, Sacred Earth: An Interfaith Call to Reflect and Act” attendees join hands for peace outside the Arch Street Friends Meeting House

At times, the headlines are dominated by images of inter-religious strife. The pope vs. the Muslims. Jews against Arabs. The religion-based tenor of the war on terror.

But on Sunday afternoon, leaders of various faith communities gathered in Philadelphia to say in one voice: “We must repair the world.”

Drawing a diverse crowd to the Arch Street Friends Meeting House, “Sacred Seasons, Sacred Earth: An Interfaith Call to Reflect and Act,” offered a daylong inter-religious program on halting environmental degradation and other forms of “global scorching.”   Read more »

Syndicate content