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Hope and Interfaith in Kachi Abadi.

Rev. Dr. Art Cribbs Executive Director of the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity is currently participating in an Interfaith Delegation in Pakistan. Below is a journal of his experience.

 

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A walk through Kachi Abadi, also known as F-6 Sector in Islamabad, is a short, tight journey to a community of people whose eyes reflect hope and their voices echo the songs of faith.  An invitation into the home of a proud resident who cheerfully welcomed her international guests inside her one room abode was generous hospitality not easily understood.  The experience prompted multiple levels of human response and speculation.  For her affluent American visitors, the step into this private world of a distant culture may have provoked a sincere expression of concern and compassion.  Yet, from the heart of the hospitable hostess, it was an authentic embrace of the complex human family.  She was pleased to receive and welcome all of us into her home and asked us to sit down.  Our compliance was the height of respect and dignity.

Kachi Abadi is home to more than 500 Christian Pujabi families.  Although they are part of the largest ethnic majority in Pakistan, members of this community are reduced to an outcast, impoverished people relegated to the margins of society.  That is because of their unyielding dedication to their faith.  They are strengthen by their unapologetic devotion to Jesus Christ.
Our delegation was taken from her home to one of the local churches for a special service held in our honor.  Hand-crafted leis made from local roses were placed around each of our necks by the young pastor and women from his ecumenical congregation.  They are joined as one body across denominational identities of Baptists, Catholics, Evangelicals, Methodists, and Mormons.  They are a church for all Christians.  Although they are not allowed to prostylize, they attract new members by conducting healing services.
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The pastor explained to be a Christian means to endure indignity and poverty in accordance with the suffering Christ.  It is a source of personal purpose and faithful living.  Amid the conditions of governmental neglect and insult a resolved community was formed and solidified by neighbors who support and care for each other.

On the day of our visit, we were greeted by a group of young mothers and their small children.  They talked about their plans to attend college and see their visions of a different future for their toddlers.  They are encouraged by the pastor and his wife who expounded a message of new life in Christ.  Despite social and economic injustice, the women reflect a determination that defines their lives as meaningful with profound awareness that fills them with undaunted joy.  They are witnesses of God’s grace and possess a detectable sense of self worth.

Our visiting eyes perceived living conditions smothered under repression and discrimination.  Our hearts and souls experienced the Beloved Community that puts faith into action, welcomes the stranger, and embodies the high tradition of faithfulness.

Although their living environment is evidence of societal discard, the community of a Christian minority in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan is a testimony to make the symbolic display of inclusion and compassion represented in the national flag, a true reality for every person, including citizens, refugees, and religious minorities throughout the country.

Our walk through Kachi Abadi took us to the center of true Christian practice against a tsunami of disappointment and heartbreaking disparity buffered by inexplicable possibility.  This was an intersection that connected our interfaith delegation to the wider world.

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Berta Carceres Memorial and Solidarity with COPINH

Memorial for Berta Cáceres, leader of Copinh Intibucá, Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras (COPINH) and other members of COPINH slain in the struggle to defend their rivers, lands, and rights, including Nelson Garcia

all photos are  courtesy of Brooke Anderson Photography

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A Family’s Reunion — Public Witness

A couple of weeks ago I had the honor and privilege of witnessing the reunion of a family from El Salvador. Marta and Jose are a part of the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity Leadership Project, where Marta is a leader in the warehouse workers movement for justice. Son of Marta and Jose, Armando, is a 14 year old youth who finally arrived to the United States of America after a full month of traveling through Guatemala and Mexico without documents. All Armando wanted to do was to be with his parents and meet his brother Chris, who was born in the USA 8 years ago.

When Marta and Jose- a young couple were unable to find the opportunities needed to provide for their family in El Salvador they left Armando with Marta’s mother in search of a better future. For 10 years, this hard working couple worked in the USA without the opportunity to take a vacation and have only been able to communicate with their son Armando via telephone.

At the age of 14, Armando became vulnerable to the recruitment of gangs, like most youth in El Salvador his age. He is now a part of a different group, the children-youth from Central America traveling alone looking for their parents, and hoping the USA would recognized them as who they are: refugees.

Armando spent weeks detained in Texas waiting to be processed. Once he arrived to LAX both Marta and Jose cried. The reunion overwhelmed Marta. “It’s very hard to describe the feelings I had when I saw my son arriving at the airport after almost 10 years without seeing him,” she said. “It was very emotional to see him not (as a) little child anymore. I left him behind when he was 4 years old.” Marta’s joy was tempered by the reality of their son’s daring journey alone through several countries and across borders without documents. ” During all the time he was traveling (on) his way to America,” she continued, “my love for him strengthened my faith that we will be together soon. Thank God everything went fine and we are all together,” she confided.

Armando is very happy now, to be with his own family although he misses his grandmother he is happy playing with and having the opportunity to know his brother. Chris, his brother is happy with his ‘new” brother and to have someone to talk and play with. Armando has registered in High School, made new friends and is happy to finally live a normal family life with his parents and brother instead of being separated by borders.

Marta and Jose are happy with their 2 sons. Their hope is to be able to stay legally in the USA, continue working, paying their taxes as they have been doing, and raising a family without fear of a separation.

-Moisés Escalante-Senior Lead Organizer with IM4HI.