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annm4peace

(6,119 posts)
Tue May 1, 2012, 12:23 AM May 2012

A church in the shadow of upcoming NATO summit takes a stand for peace and civil liberties

http://www.fightbacknews.org/2012/4/30/church-shadow-upcoming-nato-summit-takes-stand-peace-and-civil-liberties?utm_source=Fight%20Back%21%20News%20Service&utm_campaign=2762e6b93f-UA-743468-8&utm_medium=email


A church in the shadow of upcoming NATO summit takes a stand for peace and civil liberties
By Staff | April 30, 2012
Read more articles in Antiwar Movement
Chicago, IL - The Reverend Errol Narain and the congregation of Trinity Episcopal Church are extending open arms to protesters who will be marching against NATO this month.

The church, located at 125 E 26th Street, is the closest congregation to McCormick Place – literally in the shadow of the NATO summit.

Trinity Episcopal has invited protesters arriving from outside Chicago to camp on their lawn during the weekend of May 19-21. One group of cyclists (grassroutescaravan.org) that will be arriving from Madison, Wisconsin, on the evening of May 19 will be the first group to take them up on the offer.

To prepare the neighbors for the sight of protesters sleeping in tents on the lawn of the church, the congregation will co-host a town hall meeting with the Coalition Against NATO/G8 War and Poverty Agenda (CANG8) on May 3, from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.

Newland Smith, organizer for CANG8’s Interfaith Committee and an Episcopalian activist, said, “The stand taken by Reverend Narain and the leadership at Trinity is an inspiration. This is the response to the expression of First Amendment rights we would expect of our elected representatives, instead of threats to re-open Joliet Prison.”

Speakers at the town hall meeting will include Father Bob Bossie, 8th Day Center for Justice; Mary Dean, Voices for Creative Non-Violence, who spent part of last year in Afghanistan; Margaret Jackson, American Friends Service Committee and Rabbi Brant Rosen of the Jewish Reconstructionist Congregation in Evanston. National Nurses United and the Iraq Veterans Against the War will also have spokespersons present.

Joe Iosbaker of CANG8 praised the congregation. “More and more people are turning against the war in Afghanistan and will march in their thousands and tens of thousands to bring an end to it. We expect more churches will follow the lead of Trinity Episcopal.”
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