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Strength From the Roots Summer Concert

“We have to do something together so we can identify with each other.”

 

Thank you to everyone who participated in our Strength From the Roots/ Fuerza de La Raiz concert. For the past two years, our team of cultural artist has worked with local congregations, community groups and organizations to increase awareness about the value of telling stories of life journeys and sharing them with others. Through a process of introducing social justice movements from across the United States and other nations, participants learned about the history of social change and ways people committed themselves to making the world better by improving life conditions for the most vulnerable.

Strength from the Roots introduces participants to stories and music of global movements. With that background participants in the project were encouraged to write their own stories through original poems, songs and narratives. During the past two years we have learned how effective and powerful this process can be to make real change.

We are thankful to those who have helped bring the vision of this program to fruition, including Mr. Francisco Herrera, Ms. Christina Perez, Mr. Hipolito Puentes, Ms. Maria Puentes, Mr. Moises Escalante, Maestro Vince Gomez, and all of our participants. We are also very thankful to Antonio and Luz Maria Ayala and TODEC for providing hospitality and a safe space for participants to convene and rehearse. This project has been made possible by a generous grant from James R. Irvine Foundation.

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Visit our Interfaith Coalition for Immigrant Rights Blog

We are excited to finally connect our blog to our website and increase the information we are able to provide! The ICIR blog has up to date information on actions that have taken place across the state, updates to policy and a host of events that you can attend or lend support. Please take some time to see all the things happening on our blog.

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Statement from Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity On recent African American church fires – July 2, 2015

The winds of change are not blowing very hard when it comes to attitudes about the Confederate flag. Thus, it may not be too surprising to see the rise of vicious and hateful acts of burning Black churches across the South. 20 years ago, a rash of church fire bombings caused the nation to pause and wonder why the attacks occurred.

52 years ago, in Birmingham, Alabama, four little Black girls were killed in their Sunday school class when a bomb with a minimum of 15 sticks of dynamite was placed under the steps of the 16th Street Baptist. That savage attack was labeled “an act of white supremacist terrorism.”

Although the recent black church burnings are under investigation, at least three have been declared arson. Whether or not these latest assaults are tied to the controversy over removing the Confederate flag from state and public buildings, history suggests the church burnings may be hate crimes fueled by attitudes of racism and white supremacy.

According to a CNN ORC poll, 57 percent of Americans say the Confederate flag is a symbol of Southern pride and not racism.

The Confederate flag was unfurled in some Southern states during the Civil Rights movement in protest to the progress Black people were making to breakdown segregation. But, more disturbing today are indicators across the country of a major divide between Blacks and Whites in perception of racism. It is the apparent proximity to the victims of the church burnings that separate attitudes along racial lines.

For Black Americans, the burning of black churches and the massacre of black parishioners during Bible study in Charleston, South Carolina, hit very close to home and reminds Black folk of a history and legacy of violence. It is not lost on many Black people that the arrival of Black African ancestors were violently forced from their homelands, strapped to the hull of ships, brought to America across the Atlantic Ocean against their will, and brutally enslaved, legally, for more than three hundred years.

The Emancipation Proclamation signed by President Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves on certain conditions but did not prevent the enactment of Jim Crow, legalized segregation, the rise of public lynching, and the subsequent struggle to end discrimination.

While a majority of Whites see the Confederate flag as a symbol of Southern pride, there is an apparent blind eye and a loss of memory about the declaration of war against the Union. In today’s vernacular, it was domestic terrorism that divided the nation in a civil war with a well-organized strategy to bring down the government of the United States of America.

As a society, a warning cry is sounded in this precarious and dangerous period that the protracted movement by hate groups pose a threat against Blacks, Muslims, immigrants, gays, and other people they deem targets of their hatred.

Now is the time to determine which path the nation will take into the future: tolerating racism, bigotry, and violence; or, recognizing “every human person is sacred across all borders.

” We really do have a choice in this matter. Which way, America, will we go?

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(Veasey Conway / Morning News)