Posts Tagged ‘Susan Leslie’

After the Boston Bombings: We Are the Next Responders

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Sr. Simone addresses the crowd at the vigil. (Christopher L. Walton/UU World)

In response to the recent Boston Marathon bombings, the UU Mass Action state advocacy network quickly organized a vigil for Love Not Fear in Massachusetts as part of their seventh annual Advocacy Day on Tuesday, April 23rd. Over 100 Unitarian Universalists gathered outside of the Massachusetts State House as a faithful presence, calling for love and compassion for all our communities and especially for immigrants and Muslims. They were joined by Sister Simone Campbell, Executive Director of NETWORK and organizer of the “Nuns on the Bus” tour, who was the keynote speaker for Advocacy Day. Sr. Simone spoke of the need for us all “to touch the pain and from that pain talk with each other and our legislators.” She described how she does that in her role on Capitol Hill and announced that the nuns are going on the bus again for federal immigration reform. She also talked about the importance of not demonizing any faith tradition and applauded the message of Standing on the Side of Love. When she was finished, Jesse Jaeger, Executive Director of UU Mass Action, presented her with a Love t-shirt.

Rev. Fred Small, Senior Minister of First Parish in Cambridge UU, led the group in song and then addressed the gathering, saying :

“If we respond to this tragedy with hatred, with fear, with racial profiling, with religious bigotry, with attacks upon immigrants, with a fortress mentality that demonizes and excludes—they win. If we respond with courage, with compassion, with generosity, with inclusiveness—we win. Everyone wins. We honor the first responders who risk their own lives to save the lives of others. And we—we are the next responders.”

Rev. John Gibb Millspaugh, Director of Congregational Development for the Massachusetts Bay and Clara Barton Districts, spoke on behalf of the District and the Unitarian Universalist Association. He said:

“Already in the town of Malden, a town I drive through each week, a white male has assaulted a hijab-wearing woman of Middle Eastern heritage out with her baby stroller. He punched her for two minutes, shouting obscenities and saying ‘Muslims, you are terrorists.’ It’s inexcusable and morally abhorrent. And yet, people whose sacred space has been violated naturally desperately want someone to blame. I shudder to think what we might add to the desecration.

“We need courage, compassion, and commitment. Courage to grieve what we have lost. Compassion for one another, for all people, all of us. Even for a nineteen-year-old boy in serious condition and in custody. And commitment to not only call on our highest values, but also to call them forth. We can respond to the actions of these two individuals by calling on our highest values, and calling them forth. Together, we can make new life out of tragedy.”

Rev. Millspaugh invited the crowd to share some of their highest values aloud and various voices called out—love, compassion, justice, dignity, respect, solidarity, courage, and more.

Patricia Montes, Executive Director of Centro Presente, spoke in support of solidarity and the need to get the Trust Act passed—legislation that would bar local and state police officers from federal immigration enforcement. She said:

“In 2012 more than 61% of the people deported by [Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)] in Massachusetts had no criminal convictions. The ICE [Secure Communities (S-Comm)] program has failed to increase community safety, has shattered thousands of innocent, hardworking families through deportations with no due process rights, and causes distrust between local police and crime victims which ultimately decreases community safety.”

She also thanked UU Mass Action for their solidarity and partnership and said Centro is also standing on the side of love.

Jesse presents Sr. Simone with a Love t-shirt. (Christopher L. Walton/UU World)

During the vigil, a group of high school students who had been touring the State House joined the sing-along and asked for Standing on the Side of Love placards and pins, and then placed the placards on the windows of the bus as they drove away. The message resonated with those observing: one man jumped out of his car to take a photo while stopped in traffic; Duck Boat tours waved along with other supportive passersby.

Following the vigil, UUs visited state representatives to advocate for immigration reform, gun violence prevention, and teenage homelessness. A meeting with Governor Deval Patrick was held with Jesse Jaeger, Sister Simone, Susan Leslie (UUA Congregational Advocacy & Witness Director), and several UU ministers and lay leaders, including members of First Parish in Cambridge’s youth group.

Sister Simone spoke eloquently and warmly to Gov. Patrick’s Director of Constituent Services, Thomas Reece. “The TRUST Act is really an important step to deal with the issue of Secure Communities and making sure people feel comfortable reporting crime to law enforcement and protecting them from the consequences of that, the real need is for comprehensive immigration reform at the federal level. Compassionate state legislation can help move us in that direction.” She conveyed thanks for Governor Patrick’s support and asked that he continue to exert his influence saying, “What we need is leadership.”

Thomas Reece, Jesse Jaeger, Sr. Simone Campbell, Susan Leslie (Credit: Audra Friend)

Mr. Reece was receptive to the comments, and asked in return: “What I need to say to all of you is, don’t stop here at this office or at this State House. Keep pushing and putting a face to the story so our congressional leaders understand how important this is to all of you. “

Jesse delivered a letter that was also passed along to all Massachusetts legislators, signed by UUA President Rev. Peter Morales, UU Service Committee President Rev. William Schulz, UU Urban Ministry Director Rev. Catherine Senghas, UUA Clara Barton & Mass Bay UUA District Executives Rev. Sue Phillips and Rev. William Zelazney, the UU Mass Action Board, and 300 UU clergy and congregational leaders from across the state, calling for Massachusetts legislators to let compassion not fear guide public dialogue and public policy, and to continue progress on immigration reform, gun control, and respect for all faiths and peoples.


This post was written by Audra Friend & Susan Leslie of the Unitarian Universalist Association’s Congregational Advocacy & Witness Office. They are also Bostonians and members of our Standing on the Side of Love Team.

Day 29: Make a Resolution for Love

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Today is Day 29 of the Thirty Days of Love. Today’s action is to share photos and stories from your Thirty Days events, and make a resolution to stand on the side of love for the rest of the year. Click here for resources, family actions, and more!


We are almost at the end of our second annual Thirty Days of Love, and what a month it has been! We’ll send out a more complete round-up next week, but we wanted to share a sneak peek with you now:

  • On Day 14, we asked you to sign-up to help us send messages of love to those affected by acts of violence. Over 119 of you registered, and we will give you another chance to join in next week when we announce the winning name for our response team.
  • During Day 19, Ravi Ragbir shared his personal immigration story, and asked that we send messages to Congress asking for  immigration reform that keeps families together. Over 1,156 messages were sent to Congress sharing your concerns!
  • Christina Warner, from Shoulder-to-Shoulder, invited us to join her in a webinar learning how to respond to anti-Muslim bigotry on Thursday, Feb. 28. You can still sign-up here.

At our Standing on the Side of Love worship service, my own congregation, First Parish Cambridge, will present a Courageous Love Award to Tina Chery. Tina founded Mothers for Peace and the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute in Boston. After losing her son Louis to gun violence, Tina has dedicated her life to non-violence and is an inspiration to our community. We are also reading The New Jim Crow and our congregation is thinking deeply about how to respond to mass incarceration. We are planning a program at our church with interfaith and community activists to explore how to address this issue in Massachusetts.

I plan on standing on the side of love for the rest of the year, and beyond! What is your resolution to continue standing on the side of love in the next year? Click here to share it with us.

Also, please forward this message to your congregation, your friends, and community. We’ve grown our vibrant online community to over 30,000 people. Let’s continue to grow. Folks can use this link to sign-up for our email list.

Will you continue to stand with me?

Susan Leslie
Standing on the Side of Love Lead Organizer
Member, First Parish Cambridge Unitarian Universalist

PS: Don’t forget to join us for our Thirty Days of Love online worship service! Services will be held on Sunday, February 17 at 8:00pm ET and Monday, February 18 at 9:00am and 1:30pm ET at http://www.livestream.com/questformeaning. Click here to RSVP and invite your friends.

Transitions

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The message below went out on Monday, July 30, 2012 to Standing on the Side of Love supporters. You can sign-up for these emails here.


After two fantastic years managing the Standing on the Side of Love campaign, I have made the difficult decision to step down as Campaign Manager. Thank you so much for granting me the privilege to act as a guide on our shared journey.

I cannot convey in mere words how much this campaign has affected me personally and reshaped how I think about my professional advocacy. Every day, I remain in awe of the incredible passion for justice that each and every one of you holds as a guiding principle. I have been so fortunate to work with lovely, dedicated, talented, and fun colleagues at the Unitarian Universalist Association, and to meet equally inspiring people all across the country.

The individuals who brought this campaign to fruition—Rev. Bill Sinkford, Rev. Meg Riley, Adam Gerhardstein, Fred Garcia, Susan Leslie, the Leadership Council at the UUA, and our partners at Fission Strategy—infused it with so much heart. It was easy for me to pick up the baton and run with it. And it has been so heartening to see congregations and individuals across the country use this campaign as inspiration, and as a prism, for your advocacy.

New challenges await me. My plans are to return to the world of political & communications consulting and non-profit management—the work I was doing prior to joining the UUA team. I have signed on to work with two great organizations—Justice at Stake, which is committed to an independent judiciary, and Farm Forward, which seeks to reduce farm animal suffering and advance sustainable agriculture. I will also continue officiating weddings, which is one of my great joys in life. This is an ideal time for me to make a change, given my own upcoming wedding Labor Day weekend.

I will step down as campaign manager in mid-August, but will continue to assist my colleagues with the transition to a new campaign manager. Stay tuned for a job description! I’m heartened to know that the next leader of this campaign may be reading this email right now, ready to breathe new vision into this incredible movement.

Thank you for the inspiration, for the partnership…and most importantly, for the love!

Peace,

danwmegaphone

Dan Furmansky
Campaign Manager
Standing on the Side of Love

(Photo credit: Imari Kariotis)

Day 18: Interfaith Webinar – The Only Secure Community is the Beloved Community

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The message below went out on Thursday, February 2, 2012 to those Standing on the Side of Love supporters who signed up for daily Thirty Days of Love emails. You can sign-up for the 30 Days of Love emails here.


Following the passage of SB1070 in Arizona, the spread of copycat bills around the country, and with little prospect of humane immigration reform at the national level, the UUA worked with our partners in the Interfaith Immigration Coalition, New Sanctuary Movement, and National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON) to develop a nation-wide grassroots campaign to stop the mass detention and deportation program of undocumented immigrants in this country.

Today, in conjunction with our partners we are hosting a webinar so that you can learn more about the campaign to end the mass detention and deportation program called “Secure Communities” (also known as S-Comm).

Join us today, Thursday, Feb. 2nd, at 8 p.m. EST (5 p.m. PST).

Sign up for the webinar here.

State by state, community by community, people are coming together to say NO to the breaking up of families in our cities and towns. There are 11 million people trapped in a system that won’t create a path to legalization thereby criminalizing an entire group of people whose only ‘crime’ is that they came here to work and provide for their families. The demonization and hatred that some politicians, media personalities, and xenophobic groups have organized against immigrants is nothing less than immoral. They have cynically taken advantage of the fear that people felt after Sept. 11th, 2001, and now the recession, to scapegoat, fear-monger, and promote racist rhetoric. People from my generation remember a time when our borders were fairly open; people came and went, worked for a while in the U.S. and returned home or created a life here and became citizens. That was when we had an Immigration Naturalization Service. The U.S. economy benefitted by this cheap labor and while many of us supported the farm workers struggles (and Unitarian Universalists have a long history of doing so), we never imagined the situation that confronts us now. Today we have ICE (Immigration Custom and Enforcement), a multi-billion dollar industry in border enforcement, and a national enforcement program with the misnomer of ‘Secure Communities, ’ that breaks our communities into “us” – the citizens – and “them” – the unwelcome ‘illegals.’

There is a growing movement of people who want nothing to do with this and who are organizing our communities to speak out and act on higher aspirations. They are clergy and people of faith, they are city councilors, selectmen, county commissioners, and police chiefs. They are day laborers, immigrant rights activists, congregation-based community organizers, and UU legislative ministries leaders. While we continue to educate our communities, we are also organizing at the community level, asking our elected representatives and our criminal justice officials to engage in grassroots resistance and the implementation of home rule by refusing to comply with ICE. What this means is that local and county law enforcement refuse to hold people for ICE after an arrest for non-violent crimes. They are refusing to play the role of immigration enforcers. They care about the relations they have with the communities that they have pledged to serve and protect, and know that ‘Secure Communities’ does not benefit this purpose.

The Department of Homeland Security states that the Secure Communities program will be mandatory for all states by the year 2013. So we have this year to organize to stop this program. Already Cook County, Illinois and Santa Clara County in California have new guidelines for civil immigration detainers, which end the counties’ collaboration with ICE. Washington, DC, Arlington, VA, Cambridge, MA, and El Paso, TX are among the communities who have taken this action. The Governors of NY, IL, and MA have publicly stated their opposition and refusal to participate in the ICE program. Several state legislatures including CA and WA have rejected the program. Since the movement to resist Secure Communities began, the Department of Homeland Security felt compelled to hold hearings on the program and announce a review. UUs have shown up with our partners at these hearings across the country. Local policy change is possible and momentum is building around the country! UUs and our partners have been at the forefront of these efforts.

Please join me and others in this strategic effort that is building community and change at the grassroots level.

Participate in a national Interfaith Immigration Coalition/New Sanctuary Movement/NDLON webinar on Thursday, Feb. 2nd, at 8 p.m. EST (5 p.m. PST) to learn more about the campaign to end the mass detention and deportation Secure Communities program. Sign up for the webinar here:

http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1272/p/salsa/web/common/public/signup?signup_page_KEY=6419.

My minister at First Parish Cambridge (MA) UU, the Rev. Fred Small who helped lead the effort to stop Secure Communities here in Massachusetts, says, “The only secure community is the beloved community.” Our partners at NDLON, who invited us to create Justice GA to shine a light on the human rights abuses in Arizona and beyond, say we can “Turn the Tide from hate to human rights.”  We are. Be part of it. We need you. Our faith needs you.

Love,
Susan

Susan Leslie
Standing on the Side of Love Lead Organizer
UUA Witness Ministries

P.S. You can also learn more at InterfaithImmigration.org, where you can download the Toolkit for Interfaith Grassroots Advocacy and look at the map to see if there are any Advocacy Teams already working on this issue near you.

P.P.S. All kinds of educational resources, congregational stories, a blog, and national and state policy information are available on www.uua.org/immigration to help you get started. See our Faithful Witness and Action section for our Immigration as a Moral Issue Curriculum and Welcoming Our Neighbors: A UU Guide to Immigrant Justice

How Can We Deepen and Broaden Our Work?

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The message below went out to Standing on the Side of Love supporters on Tuesday, January 10, 2012. You can sign-up for these emails here.


This past fall marked the third year for the Standing on the Side of Love Campaign and my twentieth year serving the Unitarian Universalist Association. In all my time of providing faith-based social justice programming and resources to our congregations, I have never seen anything ‘catch fire’ like our ‘Love’ campaign.

Over 80% of our congregations report some kind of participation with Standing on the Side of Love, from gracing our buildings with banners to solidarity actions with immigrant, Muslim, and LGBTQ communities. That’s exciting and firm ground for us to inhabit together as we contemplate the moment we find ourselves in.

In the past year we’ve seen new space open up to dream about what kind of world we want to live in as the Occupy movement seized the streets and our imaginations. Around the country, faith communities and Occupy groups are meeting together to engage in collective visioning for what comes next, and channel the energy of the movement.

In light of this, I believe now is the time for us to deepen and broaden our campaign. While many clergy and individual leaders in our congregations have mobilized a faithful response to identity-based oppression, this is an ideal moment for reflection, and for engaging in congregational conversations about what this moment is calling on us all to do.

Click here to find the resources to help your congregation take part in 30 Days of Love.

Recently, I had the privilege to participate in guided reflection with Campaign Manager Dan Furmansky and several UU ministers who have been deeply engaged with faith support for the ‘occupiers,’ asking ourselves questions about how we think about this moment in time, and recognizing that within the 99%, those who are historically marginalized are suffering the most. This past Sunday, leaders from the UU Arizona Immigration Ministry joined with the Phoenix Barrio Defense Committees for a community visioning session with over 100 hundred people. Out of these and other reflections comes 30 Days of Love, this year’s National Standing on the Side of Love Month, a moment to provide your own congregation with the opportunity to reflect and to build a Story of Us and Story of Now.

In order to help your congregation “think and work together to interpret the signs of the times in light of our faith,” as UU theologian the Rev. James Luther Adams put it, we have created a number of resources, including a 30 Days of Love Theological Reflection Guide.

Click here to find the resources for your congregation for 30 Days of Love.

It’s through sharing our stories, identifying common values, and lifting up our most compelling concerns that we create a public narrative of who we are, where we stand, and where we are heading. Community organizers, the Dreamers (immigrant students advocating for the Dream Act), and most famously, perhaps, President Obama have all used the organizing method known as Story of Self, Story of Us, Story of Now, to define their own leadership and inspire others to action. We’ve adapted that process for a two-hour session that can be used at community potlucks, house meetings, covenant groups, or even over the course of two worship services.

This past Sunday, my own congregation, First Parish Cambridge UU, where I serve on the Social Justice Council, launched our ‘kick-off’ for Thirty Days of Love by inviting the congregation to attend the Cambridge Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Commemoration together, wearing our ‘Love’ shirts and pins. Members of our Coming of Age group will be participating in the event. On Sunday, Jan. 15th, Senior Minister Rev. Fred Small will be preaching on racism and building the Beloved Community in a sermon called “Colorwise.” Later in the month we will be hosting a common read on Immigration Stories: The Death of Josseline. In February we are holding a workshop offered by the UUA on transgender inclusion and welcome. And on Feb. 12th we will hold what has become our annual Standing on the Side of Love service, where we will present a community Courageous Love Award.

In addition, our Social Justice Council is planning a potluck for our members to share our stories and identify and create our congregational story of us and now. Through these activities we believe we will develop a collective spirit of what we are being called to do next. Will we become a church host of Occupy Boston General Assembly? Will we strengthen our solidarity efforts with our immigrant partners? Will our understanding and acceptance of transgender people grow? Will our faith be enlivened and our mission of creating Beloved Community become more of a reality? We look forward to finding out through 30 Days of Love what comes next for our congregation.

What are the stories of the people in your congregation and in your community?

These resources are all offered to you with love and the hope that your congregation will join us for these 30 Days of Love that offer congregational and individual opportunities for action and reflection.

Dr. King knew that our dreams are what keeps our stories developing and our collective story improving. May these 30 Days of Love help you lift up your dreams.

In faith,

Susan Leslie
Standing on the Side of Love Lead Organizer
UUA Witness Ministries