‘Love thy neighbor’ theme galvanizes 1,000 at JUF interfaith gathering in Chicago

Members of Chicago's Jewish, Muslim and Christian communities gathered in solidarity against hate on Wednesday, Feb. 8, at Chicago Loop Synagogue, which was vandalized earlier in the week. (Photo by Robert F. Kusel)
Members of Chicago’s Jewish, Muslim and Christian communities gathered in solidarity against hate on Wednesday, Feb. 8, at Chicago Loop Synagogue, which was vandalized earlier in the week. (Photo by Robert F. Kusel)

Some 1,000 Chicagoans of all faiths gathered Wednesday afternoon for an event titled “Love Thy Neighbor: An Interfaith Gathering Against Hate” at Chicago Loop Synagogue.

Sponsored by the Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish United Fund, the event featured stirring words against intolerance and for unity from Jewish, Muslim, and Christian faith and community leaders.

The synagogue was the target of vandalism early Saturday morning, Feb. 4, when an attacker smashed a front window and placed swastika stickers on the building. It was the first such attack on the synagogue, which opened in 1959. A hate crime investigation led to the Tuesday morning arrest of Stuart Wright, 31.

Also last week, the Lake County JCC received a bomb threat and anti-Semitic vandalism was reported at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.

Concerned citizens and organizations from many faiths offered support to the Loop Synagogue, including Muslim women and children who sent notes and flowers.

“By coming together, we are reaffirming the best of what our country and our city is about,” said Emily Sweet, executive director of JCRC, who welcomed attendees at the interfaith gathering. She called on Chicagoans to “stand together, not just in response to one crime, but during all the days to come, reaffirming our commitment to the tenet that unites all of our faiths: Love thy neighbor.”

Chicago Loop Synagogue President Lee Zoldan recalled the 1 a.m. phone call she received regarding the vandalism. As she stood in the winter night with her husband, looking at the damage, she said, “We felt very alone. But we were not alone.” She explained that, from that day to this, her job has consisted mostly of saying “thank you” to hundreds of cards, calls, and donations. “One single act of hate led to hundreds of acts of love,” she said.

JUF/Jewish Federation President Dr. Steven B. Nasatir noted that the support from Christians and Muslims at the event mirrored JUF’s commitment to helping others, from the victims in Aleppo to the Federation’s leadership of the Illinois Refugee Social Service Consortium, which over the course of 40 years has “rescued over 125,000 victims of war and persecution of all faiths and nationalities.” He said these efforts emerged from the Jewish belief in “the absolute dignity and sanctity of every person.”

While religious hatred is old, Nasatir said, the level of hate crimes now occurring is “new and alarming. An FBI report released in November 2016 showed 5,818 hate crimes occurred in 2015, up about 6 percent over the previous year. Anti-Muslim hate crimes rose by 67 percent; Jews, just 1.7 percent of the population, are the target of more than 50 percent of all religious hate crimes.” His response: “Let the word go out from this assembly that we stand together to say ‘No!’ to all forms of hate. Let there be no light between us, save the light of liberty.” ( Read Nasatir’s complete remarks during the program. )

Bishop Sally Dyck of the United Methodist Church warned against the “temptation to go numb” felt by many due to “the outrages that erupt on a daily basis.” She spoke of the community as a unified “body” or “fabric” of neighbors. She said that she came to the gathering “to speak, to pray, and to stand with” the Jewish community in the “hope for shalom.” Dyck read a brief poem about the world — “Where does it hurt? Everywhere” — and said people must unite for “Shalom, everywhere.”

Jenan Mohajir, international programs specialist of the Interfaith Youth Core, told her Muslim parents’ immigration story. She said that she, too, raises her children with positive messages, even as one child asked about the synagogue vandal, “Will he break our window, too?”

To help her children cope, Mohajir had her children write messages of solidarity and buy flowers, then brought them to the synagogue on Sunday morning. “We have to be both vulnerable and vigilant,” she said. “My Islam is filled with love and hope. We leave no room for despair.”

Pastor Chris Harris of Bronzeville’s Bright Star Church recalled the Civil Rights movement, and urged the crowd to “say nothing about violence and hatred until we do something about them.” He recalled a recent news story about New Yorkers using hand sanitizer to scrub swastikas off the subway, responding, “What we need is heart sanitizer, to wipe away hatred and bigotry.”

Harris gave three instructions for dealing with challenges to community solidarity: Show up, step up, and speak up; he concluded with three more guidelines: Be connected, be concerned, and be compassionate. These actions engage the head, hand, and heart, he said.

Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III of Trinity United Church of Christ also spoke of the Civil Rights movement, saying that his father had marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel and like them, “prayed with his feet.” He explained how jazz music was an amalgam of sounds and instruments from many places that still harmonized, while ensuring that “every instrument has a right to solo.” In this way, he said, “jazz taught America democracy.” He encouraged the attendees to “write, on the blank pages of history … a new song.”

Rabbi Michael Siegel, senior rabbi at Anshe Emet Synagogue, then led the assembly in prayer. He praised God for “believing in the power of holiness in us — despite our flaws.” He said that the light to dispel darkness comes from “acts of kindness … the power of love.” Explaining that the directive, “Love thy neighbor,” the event’s theme, was from the Torah, he asked God’s help to “meet hatred with love and unity” and “to find peace in the midst of upheaval.” Siegel concluded by leading participants in the singing of ” Oseh Shalom” (Establish Peace).”

JCRC Chairman David T. Brown closed the gathering. “I grew up in a world of ‘Never Again,’ in which the depravity of the 1930s and 1940s could never be replicated,” he said, “But our work is not done. We must continue to stand up for what is right.”

Brown said the day’s turnout gave him hope: “Look at this outpouring of community. We must continue to build bridges. This is only the beginning.”

Letters of support from Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, both out of town, were in the event’s program, as was a poem written by Chicago-area Jewish, Muslim, and Catholic fourth-graders participating in Poetry Pals, an organization that uses creative expression to promote understanding and peace in a multi-faith society. Poetry Pals received a two-year JUF Breakthrough Fund grant that will help the program expand its reach to middle and high schools, and create a curriculum that can be replicated in other cities.

Illinois First Lady Diana Rauner was in attendance at the event, as were Illinois Congressman Mike Quigley, Aldermen Michelle Smith, Debra Silverstein, and Ameya Pawar, as well as others representing the City of Chicago and Cook County. Also present were: Holocaust survivor Fritzie Fritzshall, president of the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center; Consul General of Israel to the Midwest Aviv Ezra; Michael H. Zaransky, chairman of the JUF Board of Directors; and representatives of other groups.

Attendees received buttons with the event’s theme, “Love Thy Neighbor,” in English, Hebrew, and Arabic. As Brown explained, “This is our clarion call. This is what our Chicago community believes in. And this is the sentiment we want to share far and wide.”

For video clips of all speakers, visit www.juf.org/videos .

Chicago Tribune Editorial: Plan of Chicago: Sister Neighborhoods and Sister Strong

City Treasurer Kurt Summers has launched a “think tank” of leaders from all of the city’s 77 community areas. “We’re building bridges between neighborhoods,” he says. (E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune)
City Treasurer Kurt Summers has launched a “think tank” of leaders from all of the city’s 77 community areas. “We’re building bridges between neighborhoods,” he says. (E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune)

 

icago is a city of diverse neighborhoods, many of them struggling with joblessness, crime and deflated dreams. But they all share an asset: Each one brims with doers — innovators who have ambitious ideas to improve this city one block at a time.

Our Plan of Chicago project, now in its third year, promotes powerful homegrown ideas to boost education, create jobs and improve safety. These ideas come from business leaders and corner grocers, foundation panjandrums and the guy who lives in a bungalow down the street. Our current theme reflects our firm belief: Chicago Can Do This.

One idea quickly percolated to the top of our list: Create a Sister Neighborhoods program so thriving communities can help those that struggle. Among our inspirations was an Archdiocese of Chicago program in which parishes are linked together and assist one another.

Many Chicagoans eagerly step forward to help fellow residents in violence-wracked or job-starved areas. Similarly, every neighborhood has expertise and resources that could help another neighborhood. Yes, we know that neighborhoods vie for scarce resources from City Hall. But we also know that whenever a neighborhood thrives, so does Chicago.

Can neighborhoods of different needs and means help one another conquer their challenges? Can they align in partnerships that grow over time?

Think of these pairings as blind dates in which neighborhood leaders can discover shared goals and explore the ways to help each other.

Several such fix-ups are in the works, thanks to Chicago Treasurer/Sister Neighborhoods Matchmaker Kurt Summers. Summers tells us the Tribune’s Plan of Chicago series inspired him to launch a “think tank” of leaders from all of the city’s 77 community areas. “We’re building bridges between neighborhoods,” he says. “We know there are opportunities day in and day out. So let’s start building the muscle of communities working together.” Bravo, Mr. Treasurer.

In July, Summers gathered those “thought leaders” at the Chicago City Council chambers to kick-start his Sister Neighborhoods program. He wanted grass-roots energy and independent action, not government planning and stultifying bureaucracy.

Result: We’re happy to report that Chicago Can Do — And Is Doing — This.

Two of Summers’ matches already have bloomed:

When Avondale met Englewood

When Glen Fulton, of Englewood on the South Side, met Margaret Ptaszynska, of Avondale on the Northwest Side, the attraction was mutual. Fulton is executive director of the Greater Englewood Community Development Corp., which last spring launched a new small business accelerator, a place that helps more than 50 entrepreneurs grow their businesses.

Ptaszynska, who leads the Greater Avondale Chamber of Commerce, strives to help companies in her neighborhood, known for its large Polish community and a growing Hispanic population, plant their flags in new places.

Their first order of business: Fulton led a tour of Englewood to show Ptaszynska potential opportunities. “One of the things that Margaret and I are talking about is creating incentives for businesses that want to come to Englewood,” he says, acknowledging that the neighborhood’s reputation for crime and poverty could scare away some companies. “Historically, we have had a bad reputation, and the conversation has been a negative one,” he tells us. “But we are changing that conversation with the business accelerator.”

The two leaders set a course. They would build a small-business exchange. The goal is to help Englewood business owners who want to expand in Avondale, and vice versa.

Fulton envisions cross-learning experiences, so that businesses can share with each other on a wide range of subjects: financial literacy, loan opportunities, finding and exploiting resources. In other words, a business exchange of ideas, tips and eventually businesses.

Ptaszynska tells us that she has an Avondale medical training institute that’s quite interested in opening a location in Englewood.

“It’s just the beginning of the conversation,” she says, “but the general idea of this partnership is really good and helpful.”

When Albany Park met West Rogers Park

Summers’ summit brought together a second serendipitous pairing: Rodney Walker, executive director of the Albany Park Community Center, and Shalom Klein, executive director of the Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park. Albany Park had successfully lobbied for a new library; West Rogers Park seeks to persuade the city to replace a 1960s-era library at 6435 N. California Ave.

“We are following the playbook of communities like Albany Park,” Klein tells us. “They said, if you want to talk to someone who can make this happen, we can help.”

Albany Park officials connected Klein with Chinatown officials and others who have learned the ways of clout to get a library built.

“What it boils down to is we are engaged in conversations and in learning that without Sister Neighborhoods, we would have never known,” Klein tells us. “If we want a library, we should be talking to people who have advocated successfully for a library.”

So far, a West Rogers Park petition drive has gathered more than 1,300 signatures in two months. A newly organized committee is bringing together a diverse group of business and civic organizations to push for the library.

Chicago Public Library Commissioner Brian Bannon has noticed. “The ingredient of a strong community desire (for a new library) is always important when making a decision about neighborhood improvement. Not only do we love it, but we think it is important that a community is engaged and actively interested in seeking improved services.”

And what benefits flow back to Albany Park? Walker says he is confident those will come. “We are just beginning to learn what other organizations do — which services they provide in their communities and how we could leverage those resources moving forward,” Walker tells us. Also as a result of Sister Neighborhoods, these two are planning a networking event between the business owners of their communities.

Yes, this is just beginning. Connections beget connections. Solutions evolve and spread. Neighborhood leaders learn how to deal with their own communities’ struggles.

Sister Neighborhoods initiatives may expand beyond Summers and his 77 thought leaders. There’s another group, formed in 2013 after our first Plan of Chicago series, that is in talks with the Chicago Community Trust to launch a similar effort. We are watching them with high hopes.

Can your community, your group, offer or profit from your own blind date? Matchmaker Summers is easy to find. And he has plenty of potential mates for you and yours.

Read more at Chicago Tribune…

 

 

Working on training for the Las Vegas marathon in support of Chicago Yachad

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