100+ religious leaders arrested at UN

From: Robert Pollard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, December 12, 2002 9:09 AM
Subject:  100+ religious leaders arrested at UN

A Sacred Day in New York (12/10/02)

Submitted to Portside by Chris Vaeth

Today the faith-based revolt against the impending war in Iraq poured out of
hallowed halls and into the streets. Joining people in 120 other cities and
towns under the b! anner of United for Peace, New York's religious leaders
celebrated International Human Rights Day by bearing witness to the poverty and
suffering of those both in Iraq and at home. Before the day's end, the mass
arrest of interfaith leadership marked the arrival of still another dimension
of the burgeoning anti-war movement.

The stage seemed to be set by a full-page ad in The New York Times on December
4, placed by the National Council of Churches. President Bush was pictured with
his head bowed in prayer. The caption, reminding the president of his lip
service to his own faith motivations, pleaded to him: "Jesus changed your
heart. Now let him change your mind."

While religious communities have long been at the forefront of anti- war
activism, they showed their collective force today. Following an interfaith
vigil in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, more than 100 ministers, imams, rabbis, nuns,
lay leaders, seminarians, a! nd faith-based community organizers blocked the
sidewalk and were arrested in front of the U.S. Mission to the United Nations.

The accused, after being divided by gender, were packed into two holding cells
at the NYPD's 17th Precinct. Among the 60 men in our cage were Rev. Herbert
Daughtry (pastor of Brooklyn's House of the Lord Church), Rev. Luis Barrios
(liberation priest at St. Mary's and San Romero), Ben Cohen (co-founder of Ben
& Jerry's ice cream), Imam Faiz Khan (of the Asma Society), Rev. Peter Laarman
(minister of Judson Memorial Church), and Daniel Ellsberg (publisher of the
Pentagon Papers). While it has so far been impossible to receive reports from
the women's side, it appeared that at least as many women were arrested.

Among the women inside was the director of the Kensington Welfare Rights Union,
Cheri Honkala. She arrived to town yesterday from a month-long, nationwide bus
caravan for econom! ic human rights, to host a "Truth Commission" on poverty in
front of the United Nations. The coordination of anti-war and anti-poverty
protests was fitting. After all, we were reminded, Saddam Hussein isn't the one
closing welfare centers and cutting off unemployment benefits. The violence
that our government commits abroad is funded by the violence of poverty at
home.

Most in the men's cell wore clerical garb; many were carrying sacred texts; one
smuggled in the "Prison Journals of a Priest Revolutionary" by Philip Berrigan.
Father Berrigan, a Jesuit priest who spent 11 years of his life in prison for
anti-war civil disobedience, succumbed to cancer last week. His spirit seemed
to hover over the space as the jailed read his words aloud.

The holding cell became a forum for prayer, storytelling, announcements, an
impromptu teach-in, planning for next steps, and loud singing and clapping. An
Episcopal archbishop ! stopped by the precinct to see if the conditions inside
were adequate. One of the jailed ministers responded: "We're doing fine. The
problems are out there." Eager to return to daylight, they were nevertheless
experiencing a rare fellowship forged of shared commitment.

The day was, in a sense, a reunion. Many of the seasoned jailed clergy already
knew each other, from their work with Latin American liberation movements, the
Civil Rights Movement, the struggle in Vieques, the Plowshares movement for
disarmament, and more. It was as if they were renewing their vows; they were
recommitting to an old, sacred struggle with some new details, and welcoming
the younger among them.

One of the "secular saints" inside, Daniel Ellsberg, proudly introduced his 25
year old son, Michael, on this occasion of his first arrest. He told a story of
25 years ago, when baby Michael was only 3 months old. Back then, his father
first pre! sented him to some of the same people in this very cell, saying: "I
want you to introduce you to your future co-conspirators." After all that time,
they were meeting again.

Of course, the day's action was not the first step in a movement that is
rapidly gaining momentum, but it was among the first broad and active religious
responses. The protesters followed the lead of 2000 New York City students,
from middle-school to high school and college age, who walked out of school
last week to march against the war. And it anticipates this Saturday's Uptown
March for Peace and Justice, to be led by youth of color from Washington
Heights, Harlem, and the Bronx.

Prior to today'scivil disobedience, Rev. James Lawson, who was responsible for
much of the training in nonviolent resistance during the Civil Rights Movement,
addressed the participants. He admonished that the severity of the impending
war in Iraq will demand muchmore than symbolic protest. It will require
Americans, especially people of faith, to render the war plans of this
administration literally unmanageable ... blocking traffic in the streets,
standing in front of government agency doorways, sitting on the floors of
congressional offices, and choosing the rite of passage into the nation's
jails.

He was givingvoice to a call that more and more people of conscience, both
within and outside religious institutions, hear in their hearts. It is a call
from a creative force in the universe, of many names or no name at all, to
block this war machine with both their spirits and their bodies. Today is a
hopeful indication that faith leaders, en masse, are answering.

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