Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Progressive Community
The press releases posted here have been submitted by
America's Progressive Community
For further information or to comment on this press release, please contact the organization directly.
Most Popular This Week
Today's Top News
|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: Interfaith Worker Justice Cynthia Brooke, Communications Director Interfaith Worker Justice (773) 728-8400 ext. 40 |
Faith Leaders Flock to Arizona to Oppose SB-1070, Launch Coordinated Nationwide Weekend of Protest
NATIONWIDE - July 29 - Hundreds of people of faith in Arizona and in communities across the country are standing together to oppose Arizona's anti-immigrant law SB-1070 with a nationwide weekend of coordinated prayer and action. Part of the law goes into effect today, while other provisions were temporarily blocked by a federal judge in Arizona yesterday. At an interfaith prayer vigil this morning in Phoenix, and at events in more than a dozen cities across the country, people of faith denounced punitive laws that divide families and communities, called for an end to SB-1070 and similar legislation in other states, and urged immediate action from Congress to pass sorely needed comprehensive immigration reform.
"We have come to Arizona to protest SB-1070 because we know that worker rights and immigrant rights are integrally linked... we need comprehensive immigration reform," said Kim Bobo, executive director of Interfaith Worker Justice. She said that while religious leaders are heartened that some of the most troubling provisions in the legislation were set aside today with the preliminary injunction, there is still far more work to be done. "It in no way changes the fact that we need comprehensive immigration reform and there are still serious problems with the Arizona legislation."
The weekend mobilization, the National Weekend of Prayer and Action for Immigrant Justice, will take place July 29- August 1 in Chicago; Oakland; Cincinnati; Milwaukee; Toledo; San Francisco; New York City; Houston; Philadelphia; Charlotte, North Carolina; and Albany, New York and is coordinated by Interfaith Worker Justice. Actions include marches, rallies, prayer vigils, civil disobedience, educational forums, and worship services, sermons, and homilies about immigration, as hundreds voice their opposition to SB-1070 and demand a just solution to the broken immigration system that gave rise to this draconian law.
In Arizona, people of faith gathered at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral in Phoenix for a prayer vigil today at 6 a.m., which will be followed by a press conference with national faith leaders at 7:30 a.m., a 9 a.m. rally at the Sandra Day O'Connor Federal Courthouse in downtown Phoenix and a 5 p.m. interfaith vigil at the state capitol.
Rev. Trina Zelle, director of the Arizona Interfaith Alliance for Worker Justice and Presbyterian minister, shared her on-the-ground perspective as a resident of Arizona who works with workers and families who are being exploited by a broken immigration system and punitive legislative that has already led to fear and division.
"People are living in fear, afraid to go to work and church, or to leave their home at all. Since April 23, I have heard from people ... who have been stopped and had their citizenship challenged on the basis that they're Hispanic," Rev. Zelle said. "SB 1070 is dehumanizing and violates our human rights. I believe it grieves God. All of us in Arizona are grateful for the outpouring of support and solidarity from people around the country.
"We join with people of faith everywhere who are calling for comprehensive immigration reform," said Rev. Peter Morales, president of the Unitarian Universalist Association. "Beyond that, we want to participate in an effort to change the hearts and minds of people. Our public policy ought to represent our most humane values not our narrowest fears. This is a struggle for America's soul. Will we operate out of fear, or out of hope? Will we retrench into racial profiling... or move forward with optimism and acceptance into a multiracial and multicultural future?"
Rev. Morales will join with other national leaders at this morning's press conference in Phoenix, making a strong moral case for stopping the spread of anti-immigrant legislation at the state level and urging the federal government to pass comprehensive immigration reform.
One of the most heinous parts of the legislation, which has been temporarily blocked by today's ruling on the preliminary injunction, instructs law enforcement officers to stop any individual they suspect of being undocumented, a requirement rife with potential for abuse and racial profiling. "I join with brothers and sisters from the interfaith community to voice opposition to SB-1070," said Hussam Ayloush, Executive Director of the Southern California Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). "As a Muslim, I can personally attest to the destructive nature on racial profiling on my community. I refuse to see this unjust and un-American practice in the form of SB1070. It is an ill-advised and extremely ineffective way to fix the country's broken immigration system."
This weekend's nationwide actions build on months of religious activity from Interfaith Worker Justice and the Interfaith Immigration Coalition in support of immigration reform and in opposition to regressive state laws like SB-1070 and similar prospective legislation across the country. In July, IWJ's Memphis chapter held a prayer vigil to stand in solidarity with immigrants in Arizona and call on elected officials in Tennessee to reject copycat legislation being considered. The Arizona Interfaith Alliance for Worker Justice has also been working around-the-clock since SB-1070 was signed into law to protect Arizonan workers and families and oppose the legislation.
