۷ اردیبهشت ۱۴۰۳ |۱۷ شوال ۱۴۴۵ | Apr 26, 2024
News ID: 348037
21 December 2016 - 11:05
American Muslims, Jews march in solidarity against Islamophobia

US Boston’s Jewish residents will take to the streets to light candles to shed light on racism, including Islamophobia. For the second annual Hanukkah solidarity march, marginalized groups come together at a time of crisis.

Hawzah News Agency (Boston, USA) - Hundreds of Boston’s Jewish residents will take to the streets to symbolically light nine candles — the amount on a menorah — as a way to shed light on racism, including Islamophobia.


Organized by the Jewish Voice for Peace Boston chapter, the Hanukkah solidarity march is a way for Jews, Muslims and all allies to combat Islamophobia and racism at a time that activists say is especially treacherous for those minorities.

 


“This is the second annual Hanukkah against Islamophobia [march] but given the past election year we’ve been through, we’re seeing a rise in hate crimes targeting Muslims,” said Liza Behrendt, an organizer with Jewish Voice for Peace Boston.


“Hanukkah is a holiday where Jews across the world gather together and light candles, so across the country tomorrow groups like ours will gather to take a stronger stand to visibly oppose Islamophobia and racism,” she said.

 


Behrendt said. “Our safety and freedom is bound in the safety and freedom of other marginalized groups. There’s strength in numbers and it’s important to maintain a sense of solidarity as we enter a new era.”


There are more than 60,000 Muslims in the Greater Boston area, said Kanwal Haq, director of development with Jetpac Inc., and yet their voices aren’t heard. Jetpac Inc. is an organizing partner of the march and a political advocacy center that focuses on equipping Muslim residents will the skills they need to be elected into office.

 


“We’re doing the organizing work that trains them to lead a community they are already involved in,” Haq said. “Muslims are vastly underrepresented in office.”


Shannon Erwin, executive director of the Muslim Justice League, said that the timing of this march is important for getting people who are wondering what they can do to help involved.

 


“This is an opportunity to move from an expression of interpersonal solidarity — a thing that a number of us have engaged in in recent weeks — to a real focus on education and structural change,” she said.


The nine candles will be the spark for that education. As the groups march through downtown Boston, they’ll stop and symbolically light the candles, which each stand for a commitment they pledge to make to help oppose Islamophobia and other forms of racism.

 


“We will not be silent about anti-Muslim and racist hate speech and hate crimes,” the first commitment reads.


A news release about the event says that members of Black Lives Matter will participate in and speak at the march. 


About 2,000 people have responded that they will attend the march via its Facebook event page. It will begin at the Massachusetts State House at 5 p.m. and continue through downtown Boston.  

 

 

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