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Our Theory of Social Change

The Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity has unique model which combines faith-based organizing, arts and cultural work, and strategic communication to address, protect and advocate for improvements to the quality of life for the most disenfranchised and vulnerable members of our society.  We carry out our mission through a theory of social change that organizes and unites inter-religious voices with those directly affected, including persons who are low-income, historically-underrepresented, and immigrant to oppose and improve conditions of harsh and inhumane enforcement (incarceration, detention and deportations) and other mistreatment based on status.

Our unique contributions to supporting community-led change are:

  • We strive to break down barriers and build up deep relationships and new understanding between immigrant/new arrivals and U.S.-born citizens through accompaniment, education, cultural immersion, and arts and cultural work.
  • We work to shift narratives and to change hears and minds through strategic communication, public witness, and our “FAITH OUT FRONT” liturgies/ We do this by humanizing immigrant stories and bringing our inter-religious  voices particularly to sectors where they are insufficient or absent, by consistently lifting up root causes and racial equity, and by cultivating “unusual/unlikely” messengers” such as African Americans supporting the immigrant rights movement and corporation leaders advocating racial, social, and economic justice.
  • We build economic, racial and social justice networks by forming partnerships with inter-religious communities and collaborating with enlightened secular individuals and organizations to build power and make valuable contributions to wider change.
  • We believe social change must be rooted in the tenets of inter-religious texts and traditions that respect the integrity of every human person as sacred with the right to thrive and live in strong and healthy communities.
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A Time to Break Silence

An interfaith service to honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. will be held Tuesday, April 4, at 7:00 pm in the sanctuary of Macedonia Baptist Church located at 1751 East 114th Street in Los Angeles. On the 50th Anniversary of Dr. King’s seminal sermon, “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence,” faith leaders and congregations will come together to look at how far America has come since 1967.

Based on today’s issues after the election of President Trump, for many people it feels like a slow slog to justice. Dr. King warned of “racism, militarism, and gross materialism.” Those are the same concerns today as people of color are disproportionately locked up in prisons, wars are raging on multiple fronts, and greed is driving people out of homes and healthcare is unaffordable.

You are invited to join Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity and Justice Not Jails to remember Dr. King and worship together with people of multiple faiths. This is our “Time to Break Silence.” We are called now to have faith and not fear as we stand in solidarity with people who are directly affected by recent Executive Orders and increased intrusion into their lives. Let us stand together for justice and integrity.

Rev. Dr. Art Cribbs

What: A Community-Wide Justice Revival and Rally
When: Tuesday, April 4th at 7 pm.
Where: Macedonia Baptist Church, 1751 East 114th Street, Los Angeles

Organizer: Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity – Justice Not Jails

Cosponsors: LA Progressive • Progressive Christians Uniting • AME Ministerial Alliance • Amity Foundation • Bartimaeus Cooperative Ministries • Bishop R. Guy Erwin, PhD, ELCA Southwest California Synod • Californians for a Responsible Budget • Council on American-Islamic Relations • Drug Policy Alliance • LA Council of Religious Leaders • Rev. R. Guy Erwin, Ph.D. Bishop, Southwest California Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America • Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism • South Coast Interfaith Council • Southern California Nevada Conference of the United Church of Christ • Interfaith Communities United for Justice and Peace • More To Come…

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Race, Gender, Class, Faith and Justice: In Trump’s New America

Join us along with students from the University of Southern California and Loyola Marymount University for a discussion on the issues of Race, Gender, Class, Faith and Justice in this new era under the Trump Administration. Work with us to help relieve some of the fears and concerns generated by the current political climate in our country.

We are focusing on issues that include President Trump’s executive orders, actions, and implied policies. Together, we will search out proactive strategies to determine what we can do in the Greater Los Angeles Area and  on our college campuses.

RSVP here