Archive for October, 2012

Standing on the Side of Love with Walmart Workers

1 Comment | Share On Facebook| Standing on the Side of Love with Walmart Workers Share/Save/Bookmark Oct 31, 2012

This post was written by Charlotte Droogan, Lay Community Minister and member of the UU Society for Community Ministries Lay Working Group and the Universalist Unitarian Church of Joliet, IL.


I am on the board of the Warehouse Workers for Justice Interfaith Action Commitee. My church is also deeply involved in supporting Walmart workers under the banner of Standing on the Side of Love. We plan to show Walmart workers some love by participating in a witness on ‘Black Friday’, the day after Thanksgiving, following our huge action earlier this month.

Standing on the side of love at the Elwood rally.

On October 1, we participated in a rally and act of civil disobedience to support the striking workers at the Walmart warehouse in Elwood, Illinois. We carried our banner and wore our now famous t-shirts. It was estimated that nearly 1,000 people were in attendance.

Along with more than a dozen others, I was arrested, wearing my clerical collar, for civil disobedience. Even though this was a planned peaceful protest, a Mobile Field Force Team in riot gear marched down the Walmart entrance towards us.

The police officer was a friend-of-a-friend and I joked with him that I felt like I was in a wedding, marching down the road with him. He chuckled and we just kept walking to the paddy-wagon (old Chicago term) without missing a beat. I felt like we were on a movie set. We were all charged with trespassing and given a $120 ticket in the parking lot of the Elwood Police Department.

The most exciting part of the whole demonstration was knowing that Walmart shut down the entire warehouse for the day. This intermodal facility in Will County is the third largest in the world after those in Hong Kong and Singapore. For our little band of warriors to shut them down for twenty-four hours and almost immediately have Walmart rehire and pay the workers their back wages was pretty close to a miracle.

Charlotte getting arrested.

As Jeannie Owen, another member of Committee on Lay Ministry, reported in our church newsletter:

“We marched for miles (or so it seems) for the Walmart warehouse workers today. The workers are paid $10 an hour for lifting backbreaking boxes in temperatures that can range from 0 to 120 degrees, there are no benefits, they never know how many hours they will work, and often get ripped off for overtime if paid at all. … The largest, richest company in the world that earns billions and gives millions to the Walton inheritors cannot be bothered with the wellbeing of its own workers.

“A number of people who recognized the Standing on the Side of Love banner as UU came over and spoke to us. Many unions and activist causes participated. It was estimated there were between 600 and 1,000 people there marching, walking, standing up for justice. Beware of little old lady activists…”

We plan to continue our campaign in Joliet with ‘un’-shopping days and a Black Friday witness in November. Learn more at our website. Wherever you are, please join us by participating in Black Friday Actions–you can deliver a letter to manager, hold a prayer vigil, organize or join a flash mob. Check here for registered events close to you or register your own event for a Walmart in your area!

 

Dream. Act.

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Dream. Act. Share/Save/Bookmark Oct 26, 2012
evan.keely.uucmc02

Rev. Evan Keely

This November, voters in Maryland will cast ballots on Question 4—a referendum on a statewide version of the DREAM Act, which would allow undocumented students to pay in-state tuition at Maryland community colleges. Several weeks ago, Rev. Evan Keely, Interim Senior Minister at Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Church in Bethesda, preached on the topic of immigration and education in a powerful sermon entitled “Dream. Act.” Here is an excerpt:

I want everyone in this congregation to do two things. I want us to dream and I want us to act. I want us to dream, together, as a people of faith, of a world in which access to education is increased. I want us to dream of a world in which people who want to make a contribution to our society are given the chance to do so. Then, I want us to act to make that dream a reality. Dream of a future, here in the state of Maryland, where obstacles to education will be lowered. Because we all know—as my family history demonstrates, as the history of the American Republic demonstrates, as the history of the world demonstrates over and over again—that education is a key, sometimes perhaps even the key, to a better future.

Education breaks cycles of poverty and despair. Education equips people to contribute meaningfully to society. Education, especially higher education here in the USA, is very expensive. That’s a fact. If we can lower those barriers, if we can create more opportunity for people to get an education—people who want to expand their horizons, people who want to give back, people who want to contribute something to society—if we can make that just a little bit easier, why in the name of God wouldn’t we?

All these young scholars who would be the direct beneficiaries of the DREAM Act are asking for is the right and the opportunity—as people who were brought to this country as children, people who live here in Maryland, people who have attended and graduated from a high school here in Maryland, whose families have paid taxes here in Maryland, who have a good character—all these people are asking for is a chance. And I think we have a moral responsibility as a people of faith to do everything we can to give them this chance.

This is where we move from dreaming to acting… This is a question of faith for us. This is a question of living our faith. This is question of being a Unitarian Universalist in the world and how we live our faith… [We must] show that people of all walks of life support this initiative, not a small group of people who want special rights or amnesty. The message that we proclaim to the world by showing publically our support for Question 4 is that all of us, all of us, stand to benefit when hardworking people are given the chance to make a contribution to society. An investment in education, which is what the DREAM Act is, is an investment in the betterment of society.

[The holy work of justice] is a difficult struggle. There is a lot of work for us to do together, but we have the resources and the talent and the means to move our country forward in a direction that we as a people of faith believe is right and the direction that is best for all of our people.

[Our faith teaches] the holy power of people coming together, people who are different—people with different backgrounds and different ideas and different experiences and different ways of loving and different ways of looking—coming together and seeing each other not as “alien,” not as “other,” not as a threat, not using the word “illegal” as a noun, but to see in the face of someone different from ourselves, to see the holy there, to see the divine there, to discover the divine in the interaction which may at times feel threatening and confusing and awkward and a little scary…That is at the core of our faith.

Racism and xenophobia try to convince us that certain people are different, they are not as good as the “we” that we perceive ourselves to be. In other words, racism and xenophobia put up a wall of judgment and fear that prevent us from encountering one another as human beings. So by voting for Question 4, we are knocking down that wall of judgment and fear. Like a mighty trumpet blast of love, we’re knocking down that wall and reaching out to one another in understanding and hope. By voting for Question 4, we’re saying no to racism and xenophobia. We are saying yes to being in relationship with others as human beings.

Click here to download an audio recording of Rev. Keely’s full sermon, “Dream. Act.” If you’re a Maryland resident and would like to get involved with the DREAM Act campaign, click here to learn more.

Erring on the Side of Love (Theologically Speaking…)

3 Comments | Share On Facebook| Erring on the Side of Love (Theologically Speaking…) Share/Save/Bookmark Oct 24, 2012
Rev. David Miller

This post was written by Rev. David A. Miller, minister of the UU Fellowship of San Dieguito and SSL Creative Advisory Team member.

As I listen and view the debates on marriage equality and all the issues during this election season, I cannot help but remember a conversation I had with a professor while attending seminary. She said, “do not get into a debate about whose interpretation of scripture is wrong or right, it is a discussion that you will never win.” I think she said this because there are so many chapters in the Bible, so many verses that can be read one way or the other, that is possible to “proof-text,” or pull out what one needs to prove one’s point.

Some say that the bible is inerrant, that each verse is the word of God–but is that not easier for the issues that one wishes to highlight and a little more difficult for those verses that time, customs, and culture have changed? I love that line they use in The West Wing from Leviticus 11:6-8 about how one should not be touching the skin of a dead pig because it makes one unclean, but I sure know a lot of deeply religious people of all denominations that love football. Another favorite is Exodus 35:2 – “Six days shall work be done, but on the seventh day there shall be to you an holy day, a Sabbath of rest to the LORD: whosoever doeth work therein shall be put to death.”

My point is it is not just about the words, but about the spirit of the whole idea–what is the overall message of the Bible? Since we all choose passages, here are my two texts I would like to “proof:”

Matthew 22:37-40:
“Jesus said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.”

And,

1 Corinthians 13
“If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am become sounding brass, or a clanging cymbal. And if I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge; and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.”

As a raised-Jewish, Unitarian Universalist, agnostic, mystic, post-Christian Jesus appreciator, I am really far from a biblical scholar, which detractors would be happy to point out, but this seems pretty clear to me: “If I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.” I can have all the faith in the world, but it means nothing if I do not have love. Love is the be-all and the end-all message of almost all of the wisdom traditions. Relationships of mutual love, of mutual respect, of mutual understanding, and of mutual commitment are heralded in the wisdom literature.

So whether or not I read or understand the Bible as detailed poetry, incredibly wise metaphoric lessons, or literal interpretations, I choose to err on the side of love. I choose to spend my time on earth praying that love conquers all, not praying with others that love be kept on the sidelines of that football stadium, (with perhaps the pigskin). I choose to spend my time on this earth taking from these wise and timeless lessons, that love is the request, love is the rule, and love is the reason. That is why I intend to be kind to those who hold views in opposition to mine, support love everywhere possible, support the right for two people who love each other, whoever they are, to marry and, in this and all elections, intend to cast my vote on the side of love.

Take Action for Marriage Equality

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Take Action for Marriage Equality Share/Save/Bookmark Oct 23, 2012

When my wife and I were married in the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Richmond, VA, two years ago next month, we celebrated our love and our commitment openly with our family and friends in our spiritual home. At the same time, we knew that we would not be receiving any of the benefits and protections from the state and federal government we would have received had we been a man and a woman. So in lieu of gifts, we asked our guests to make donations to support Equality Virginia.

With just two weeks left until Election Day, there is great hope that 2012 could be a tipping point for LGBTQ equality at the ballot box. Voters in Washington, Maine, and Maryland have the opportunity to approve marriage equality laws, while Minnesota voters will hopefully vote “no” to writing discrimination into their state constitution.

No matter where you live, you can take action to support marriage equality. Click here to get involved.

There are several innovative programs that allow marriage equality supporters across the country to take action. The Human Rights Campaign has developed a revolutionary “Call4Equality” tool that harnesses the power of Facebook to connect you with people you know in these states. The tool automatically creates personalized call lists and scripts for you to drum up votes and volunteers. For the more travel-inclined, you can work on one of the equality campaigns through United for Marriage’s “Volunteer Vacation” program.

Please join me in standing on the side of love this election season. Click here to find out how you can speak out for marriage equality no matter where you live.

Two years ago, my wife and I knew that Virginia was, and still is, a long way from voting to approve marriage equality. But this year in Washington, Maine, and Maryland, we have a real chance – a chance to make it clear that attitudes have changed – that the majority of Americans now support the right of everyone to marry the person they love. And, in Minnesota, we have a shot at saying “no” to defining marriage according to a few people’s view of what love should be. Help us seize this opportunity. Please take action for marriage equality today.

In faith,

annette_marquis

Annette Marquis
LGBTQ & Multicultural Ministries Program Manager
Unitarian Universalist Association


The message above went out on Tuesday, October 23, 2012 to Standing on the Side of Love supporters. You can sign-up for these emails here.

Show Walmart Workers Some Love

3 Comments | Share On Facebook| Show Walmart Workers Some Love Share/Save/Bookmark Oct 18, 2012

The poet Langston Hughes writes, “I dream a world where all will know sweet freedom’s way, where greed no longer saps the soul, nor avarice blights our day.” Across the country, Walmart store and warehouse workers are risking all they have to make that dream a reality. Just this month, Walmart workers walked off the job in 12 different states to protest Walmart’s poor wages and working conditions.

Now, Standing on the Side of Love and Interfaith Worker Justice are coming together to support Walmart workers on Black Friday, November 23, 2012. Click here to find an action near you.

I have had the honor to meet some of these brave workers. Sebastian* gathers carts in the parking lot of a California Walmart store. He loves his job and his co-workers, but he doesn’t love the pay or treatment by managers. He can’t get enough hours to be eligible for health care benefits, so he has none. He makes just a bit above minimum wage and keeps hoping for a raise, but hasn’t gotten one in two years. The managers ignore him and treat him like he is disposable. Sebastian is smart and committed to the company. He deserves a voice. He deserves respect.

The average Walmart Associate makes just $8.81 per hour and many, like Sebastian, have no benefits because they aren’t allowed to work the minimum number of hours to receive health care coverage. As one of the largest employers of immigrants and people of color in the United States, Walmart’s policies have a direct impact on some of the most marginalized members of our communities.

Walmart can afford to do better. Last year, the company made $10 billion in profits. In 2010, the net worth of six members of the Walton family exceeded the combined wealth of the bottom 42% of American families. Walmart claims it is doing its share to help poor people by keeping prices low. Phewy! Walmart could still have low prices and pay its workers living wages and benefits.

This year on Black Friday—Walmart’s number one profit day, we’re going to show Walmart workers some love. Please join me and other worker advocates and people of faith in showing support for Walmart workers. Some of us will be doing prayer vigils and delivering letters to managers. Others will be holding flash mobs inside the store. Together, we will raise our voices with those of workers across the country to call for increased wages, better working conditions, and more respect for Walmart workers.

Please join me in standing on the side of love with Walmart workers. Click here to find an action at a Walmart store near you.

In justice,

kim

Kim Bobo
Executive Director
Interfaith Worker Justice
kimbobo@iwj.org

*name changed for his protection


The message above went out on Thursday, October 18, 2012 to Standing on the Side of Love supporters. You can sign-up for these emails here.