Message from the District Executive Florida Congregations and links Consultation on Youth Task Force
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Date: 09/13/2001 As I write this column, it is the morning of the third day. The church office has been abandoned early on that first day, abandoned after discovering the awful truth of the morning's events of September 11, 2001. Abandoned after futile attempts to work while hearing nothing but the grim reports. Abandoned to go home, to assure myself of the safety of my children; one of whom is in a school plagued by bomb threats in recent weeks. I want to see television, to see pictures and to confirm the terrible reality. And it is confirmed: in the car on the radio, in the eerie silence and
emptiness around Tampa International Airport, in the traffic jam that
notifies us of troop movements onto MacDill Air Force Base , in the haunting
videos of a nation in panic and a nation in mourning. Things are normal
in my home. The new screen room is going up, and the pool guys are here
to begin the preparation of the ground. No planes fly to and from the
nearby airport. Allis too startlingly quiet. No sounds, no conversation,
only the radios outside-one turned to a Spanish language channel and one
to an English-and the sound of the television inside. One by one, my family
arrives home. My husband home early when the University of South Florida
evacuated, one son off work, my son and his friend home from school, my
daughter from work. The contrast of the construction and the destruction
is too much to bear. Workers are worried about their children, and I promise
not to tell they've left early to find their own comfort. And this morning, the third day, as Americans search for victims and for answers amid the rubble; today there is fresh news. News of the terrorist organization, and news too of the attacks on Muslims and Islamic Centers here in our own country, in our own cities. A fresh, but all too expected, grief. A call, whether we really believe or not, upon the God of many names. And in grief, a message, a message of hope without which we cannot continue to live. I firmly believe that as Unitarian Universalists we carry a message of respect for the dignity and worth of all peoples of all faiths that when spoken can serve our nation and the world at times of crisis and upheaval. In the midst of this crisis, let us join together as people of all faiths to condemn these murders and these senseless retaliations on the innocent worshippers of Allah as contrary to the teachings of the great religions of humanity and to the concept of human rights and dignity as we understand them. We call for a state and a nation where violence can never again be seen as a source of justice and where the love of neighbor taught in all faiths prevails over the stress and pain of these moments. We join our Muslim brothers and sisters of good will as we pray for the
healing of the families of these men ,women and children who were murdered,
for the healing of our nation, for the healing of the human family; torn
as it is by the highly charged emotional context of this tragedy. The
fabric of world community has long been torn by these political and religious
differences; today that fabric lies in shred sat our feet. We had dinner on the new patio last night. Life is going on as before, and not as before. There is no "normal" to return to. Normal is what is now, and it is the task before us to learn to live in this new world that has been thrust upon us. It is my hope that you will all join me in this community to bind up the wounds, to bridge the divisions and to make gentler the life of this world. |