Posts Tagged ‘Christina Warner’

Challenge Anti-Muslim Bigotry

1 Comment | Share On Facebook| Challenge Anti-Muslim Bigotry Share/Save/Bookmark Feb 19, 2013

We have cause to celebrate. American society is well on the way to reflecting the diversity of a globalized world. As the director of the Shoulder-to-Shoulder campaign, I have the privilege of working in the midst of this beautiful multiplicity of thought, faith, and culture every day.

Growth in religious diversity offers rich opportunities for engagement across lines of faith and inspires my own commitment to continue this important work. I have had the privilege of witnessing how interfaith communities support one another in their shared needs for vibrant worship, and in service to address common social concerns. As such, interreligious communities play an important role in ensuring that the road to a truly multicultural society is normative, not hostile.

Help create a socitey where everyone is welcome and join me for the “Taking Action Against Anti-Muslim Bigotry” webinar on February 28.

As the saying goes, change doesn’t always come easy. While American Muslims make up just .9 percent of the U.S. population, 2010 FBI hate crimes statistics indicated a 50 percent increase in attacks targeting American Muslims. That is the fastest growing rate of hate crimes amongst American religious groups, and it has held steady in recent years.

We cannot sit idly by while members of our communities are targeted with hate and violence. Join me for the “Taking Action Against Anti-Muslim Bigotry” webinar on February 28. We’ll discuss ways of challenging anti-Muslim bigotry from individualized attacks, to proposed anti-Shari’ah legislation and stereotypical rhetoric.

Click here to register today.

Together, let’s explore practical options for you and your community to take in order to help make the road to a diverse society a healthy and supportive road for each American community, including American Muslims.

In faith,

Christina Warner
Director
Shoulder-to-Shoulder Campaign

PS: Faith-based organizations can also sign up to become Shoulder-to-Shoulder Community Members! This national network provides state, local, and regional faith-based organizations with resources to address anti-Muslim discrimination in their community and across the country. Email cwarner@shouldertoshouldercampaign.org for more details.


The message above went out on Tuesday, February 19, 2013 to Standing on the Side of Love supporters. You can sign-up for these emails here.

Day 12: Challenging Anti-Muslim Bigotry

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Day 12: Challenging Anti-Muslim Bigotry Share/Save/Bookmark Jan 30, 2013

Today is Day 12 of the Thirty Days of Love. Today’s action is to register for our “Taking Action Against Anti-Muslim Bigotry” webinar. Click here for more resources, family actions, and more! Click here to sign up for the daily Thirty Days of Love emails.


We have cause to celebrate. American society is well on the way to reflecting the diversity of a globalized world. As the director of the Shoulder-to-Shoulder campaign, I have the privilege of working in the midst of this beautiful multiplicity of thought, faith, and culture every day.

Growth in religious diversity offers rich opportunities for engagement across lines of faith and inspires my own commitment to continue this important work. I have had the privilege of witnessing how interfaith communities support one another in their shared needs for vibrant worship, and in service to address common social concerns. As such, interreligious communities play an important role in ensuring that the road to a truly multicultural society is normative, not hostile.

But, as the saying goes, change doesn’t always come easy. While American Muslims make up just .9 percent of the U.S. population, 2010 FBI hate crimes statistics indicated a 50 percent increase in attacks targeting American Muslims. That is the fastest growing rate of hate crimes amongst American religious groups, and it has held steady in recent years.

We cannot sit idly by while members of our communities are targeted with hate and violence. Join me for the “Taking Action Against Anti-Muslim Bigotry” webinar on February 28. We’ll discuss ways of challenging anti-Muslim bigotry from individualized attacks, to proposed anti-Shari’ah legislation and stereotypical rhetoric. Click here to register today.

Together, let’s explore practical options for you and your community to take in order to help make the road to a diverse society a healthy and supportive road for each American community, including American Muslims.

In faith,

Christina Warner
Director
Shoulder-to-Shoulder Campaign

PS: Faith-based organizations can also sign up to become Shoulder-to-Shoulder Community Members! This national network provides state, local, and regional faith-based organizations with resources to address anti-Muslim discrimination in their community and across the country. Email cwarner@shouldertoshouldercampaign.org for more details.

Moving Religious Debate Beyond Divisive Tactics

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Moving Religious Debate Beyond Divisive Tactics Share/Save/Bookmark Jul 20, 2012
christina_warner

Post by Christina Warner, director of the Shoulder to Shoulder campaign.

This past Monday we at Shoulder-to-Shoulder had the privilege of partnering with KARAMAH: Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights, to host an interfaith panel on Islam, Shari’ah and the U.S, moderated by Ms. Jean Duff of Full Circle Partners. At the event, Rabbi David Saperstein, Dr. Azizah al-Hibri, Esq., and Dean Robert Destro answered questions about Islam in the U.S. while modeling how rich religious debate can move beyond divisive tactics.

For the event, 150 people gathered at National City Christian Church in Washington, DC, to hear about the topic, which was dense, to be sure, but the panelists’ message was loud and clear:

Religious disagreements have always existed in the United States, and they will continue to exist. We people of faith must hold closely to debate, while respecting absolutely the right of all individuals to worship according to their conscience. If we allow disagreements to cross the line into discrimination, we sacrifice the religious liberties on which we all depend.

American Muslims currently experience the fastest growing rate of religious discrimination in the U.S., and misconceptions about Shari’ah (aka Islamic law) have accompanied this growth. For example, in the past two years 23 states have introduced legislation that would bar judges from considering Shari’ah law in any form when weighing decisions. Rhetoric accompanying the legislation often applies stereotypes to all who faithfully practice Shari’ah, including American Muslims. For Muslims, Shari’ah dictates everything from belief in God to how one should enter into a marriage contract and the necessity of adhering to the law of the land in which they live.

s2s_town_hall

Rabbi David Saperstein (Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism), Dr. Azizah al-Hibri, Esq. (KARAMAH), and Dean Robert Destro (Catholic University of America) answer questions from the audience. (Credit: Jesse Epp-Fransen)

As with many events on the topic of Shari’ah, we were joined by a few organized individuals who held the floor to ask heated questions of the panel. Panelists responded to these challenges with generous and honest answers. As a result they offered us in the audience a much deeper lesson about the richness of sincere religious debate.

It was a breath of fresh air. Too often, political debates take important issues and empty them of substance. Discernment is replaced by loyalty to branded political catchphrases. In this case serious issues of national security and civil liberties rest on how words like ‘Muslim’ or ‘Shari’ah’ have been branded.

We have the ability to move beyond oversimplified debates if we do so together and with generosity. On Monday, this response not only provided answers to difficult topics of how religious law, including Shari’ah, fits into the American landscape. It also provided every person in the audience the opportunity to be heard and respected in kind. These leaders modeled how standing shoulder-to-shoulder as religious communities can end this iteration of American religious discrimination, and lead the way to full acceptance of American Muslims as a valued part of the American tapestry.

Christina Warner is Campaign Director of Shoulder-to-Shoulder: Standing with American Muslims; Upholding American Values, a national campaign of faith-based, interfaith and religious organization dedicated to ending anti-Muslim sentiment. Footage of the event will be available on the Shoulder-to-Shoulder website, soon.