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JNJ’s Faith & Race Conference Two Weeks Away

Get Ready for a Transformative Experience!

2019 JNJ Faith & Race Conference flyer

Justice Not Jails is please to announce that distinguished theologian/activist Dr. Charlene Sinclair with be joining distinguished UCLA historian Dr. Kelly Lytle Hernandez in setting the table for a day of interactive conversation and renewed commitment to dismantling all expressions of white supremacy. Dr. Sinclair will help us discern what faith communities are called to do in order to help finally realize Martin Luther King Jr.’s “revolution of values” while there is still time. Dr. Hernandez will help us uncover the often-hidden historical roots of the toxic white supremacy that sustains America’s racist criminal justice system and its equally racist treatment of immigrant communities of color.

The Faith and Race conference will also feature a panel of people directly affected by mass incarceration and a second panel of faith leaders who are leading the struggle to push back against racism in all its forms. All who attend will be able to offer their own perspectives and voice their own ideas for fighting back.

It all happens on Saturday, January 27th, 2019, at the Holman United Methodist Church in West Adams. All are welcome. Space is limited, and we urge you to register today to ensure that you can take part.

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Where Is the Child? by Rev. Dr. Art Cribbs

As we celebrate the birth of Jesus and the visiting magi from the East, think about 7-year-old Jakelin Caal and Felipe Gómez Alonzo, 8. They were two migrant children who died in the past couple weeks while being held in Custom and Border Protection custody. Like Jesus’ parents, they searched for safe shelter as they fled tyranny.

When the three wise men arrived in Bethlehem, they found the Holy Family huddled in a humble abode a long distance from their homes. The magi were searching for the promised child who was born to change history. Jakelin and Felipe traveled with their mothers and arrived at the United States border where they were placed in detention centers without the medical attention their young bodies desperately needed. Instead of seeing a doctor, their mothers were taunted and reportedly told they were to blame for their children’s illnesses.

Take another look at the story of Jesus and the ruler who sought to find him. Herod was a crazy king whose heart was filled with rage, hatred, and bitterness. He was afraid of the baby who would become king. The comparison between Herod and contemporary leadership that thrives on fear, anger, and division cannot be ignored or overstated. Innocent children are put at risk inside government facilities without the necessary help needed to make their lives comfortable.

Instead of welcoming families who travel dangerous roads and take high risks in search of better lives, they are met with threats, incarceration, and denied medical assistance. This is occurring today during the High Holy Days of the Christmas Season. This is happening in our name and in our country. Jesus is being mistreated and threatened today when every child and parent is denied assistance.

Where is the child? There are thousands of children and parents who find themselves today in the same condition as Mary and Joseph when they were forced to flee King Herod’s campaign to kill newborn babies. Like the migrants from Central America today, the Holy Family crossed borders and landed in Egypt where they were given sanctuary.

It is most timely and very unfortunate to see the Biblical story of Baby Jesus being reenacted in our country. We are witnesses to the cruel and ungodly behavior and attitude that perpetuate inhumane and senseless conduct toward our fellow sojourners.

Rev.Dr. Art Cribbs
Rev.Dr. Art Cribbs, Executive Director Emeritus of Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity

Jakelin and Felipe are dead. They died because they sought sanctuary and a new way of life in America. They are our children. They are Jesus in our midst. Where is the child? Living and dying in front of us.

Happy New Year,

Art Cribbs