Clergy share ideals as source of peace

Panelists, from left, Imam W. Deen Shareef, Pastor Christa Compton, and Rabbi Jesse Olitzky, consider the religious implications of achieving peace.
Photo by Robert Wiener
Panelists, from left, Imam W. Deen Shareef, Pastor Christa Compton, and Rabbi Jesse Olitzky, consider the religious implications of achieving peace. Photo by Robert Wiener


Date posted: April 20, 2016

Quotations from Jewish, Muslim, and Christian scriptures mixed easily with personal reflections as a Conservative rabbi, a Muslim imam, and a Lutheran minister joined together April 14 at Drew University in Madison for a lunchtime discussion on “Religion as a Source of Peace.”

The meeting, which drew some 40 students, teachers, and members of various faith communities, was sponsored by the Peace Islands Institute, an interfaith organization based in Hackensack that seeks “to facilitate a forum of mutual respect and collaboration…for all peoples in a society of different ethnic, cultural, and religious backgrounds.”

Kicking off the discussion, moderator Jonathan Golden, director of the Center on Religion, Culture & Conflict at Drew, asked the audience “How do we combat some of the more extreme elements in each of our faiths?”

One way to counter suggestions that violence can be justified in the name of God, he said, is to “open up the big, big books” that each religion uses as a holy text, noting that scriptural references to peace are far more prevalent than those which sanction harm to one’s enemies in the Torah, the Koran, and the Christian Bible.

Rabbi Jesse Olitzky of Congregation Beth El in South Orange, countering efforts by those who cite textual references to advocate violence, said, “Scripture isn’t necessarily the word of God, but a divinely inspired text. It is a combination of God and humanity. It is not just about believing in peace. It is not about standing idly behind and waiting for it to happen. It is making sure that the struggle for peace become part of our daily lives.”

“Í truly believe that much of what we see as violence in our world, much of what we see as the lack of civil discourse we see now, is motivated by fear,” said Pastor Christa Compton of Gloria Dei Lutheran Church in Chatham.

Compton said her faith demands personal involvement — “that we put some skin in the game when it comes to practicing peace and we build experiences into our worship that allows us to practice it.”

But, she said, one of Christianity’s “most difficult teachings is to love our enemies. I take comfort that Jesus said ‘love’ and not ‘like,’” she said, indicating that striving for peace does not have to entail making friends of one’s adversaries.

With an ecumenical spirit, Imam W. Deen Shareef of the Masjid Waarith ud Deen mosque in Irvington, listed biblical figures whom Muslims consider prophets: Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and Mohammed.

“We give a greeting of all the messengers and prophets — Shalom aleichem, Salaam aleikum, Peace be upon you…. It is giving a greeting that is a reminder that we, as human beings, are supposed to be people of peace,” he said.

Asked by Golden to name a person who inspired each panelist to work for peace and justice, Compton cited Leymah Gbowee, a Lutheran activist in Liberia who organized Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace. For her efforts in helping to end to the Second Liberian Civil War in 2003, Gbowee was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize in 2011.

Shareef said that during the racial struggles of the 1960s he subscribed to a definition of his religion that came from Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad that embodied the American ideals of freedom, justice, and equality.

“For Muslims that was not necessarily the definition of Islam, but for African-American people in the ’60s that was the definition that resonated with us,” said Shareef, an African-American. He said one of his role models was Elijah Muhammad’s son, W. Deen Muhammad, who disbanded the Nation of Islam in 1976 and transformed it into an orthodox mainstream Islamic movement. In doing so he rejected the Nation’s strict advocacy of racial separation and his father’s claim of being a prophet.

Shareef also saluted Frederick Douglass, the former slave who became the leader of the abolitionist movement. “He existed at a time when there was practically no peace, not only for black people, but there was no peace for white people, either. He became a spokesperson not only for the freedom for African-American people but he became a spokesperson for the freedom of human beings, period, as a reminder of how a human being is supposed to treat other human beings,” said Shareef.

Referring to the Passover celebration of Jewish freedom from Egyptian bondage, Olitzky talked about the obligation to empathize with the slaves. “In every generation it is an obligation to see ourselves as if we were freed from Egypt…to use the story of freedom, justice, and equality as a trigger to help us understand that in every generation we need to be a part of the fight for freedom, justice, and equality.”

Olitzky praised three fellow rabbis as pursuers of peace. One was Joachim Prinz, who served as religious leader of Temple B’nai Abraham in Newark, then moved with the congregation to Livingston. Prinz, a refugee from Nazi Germany, was an outspoken advocate of the civil rights movement; a close ally of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Prinz introduced the civil rights leader when he delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech at the 1963 March on Washington.

Another man Olitzky mentioned was Rabbi Seymour Atlas, who lost his pulpit at the then-Orthodox Agudath Israel Etz Ahayem Synagogue in Montgomery, Ala., after endorsing the African-American boycott of the city’s segregated buses on Rosh Hashana in 1955.

Like Prinz, Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, an eminent Conservative educator and theologian, was a close associate of Dr. King’s. Heschel described marching with King against segregation in Selma, Ala., as “‘praying’ with my feet, and that is a part of what our faith tells us to do,” Olitzky said.

Source: New Jersey Jewish News , April 20, 2016


Related News

The Peace Islands Institute’s 5th Annual Law Enforcement Appreciation Award

The outstanding contribution of law enforcement officers was recognized at an award ceremony in Morristown, New Jersey. The Peace Islands Institute’s 5th Annual Law Enforcement Appreciation Award united community members with law enforcement personnel.

Fethullah Gulen talking about Turkey’s failed coup: Responses to Philadelphia World Affairs Council

Right now, all critical voices are silenced in Turkey and only the voice of those in power is heard. Consequently both Turkish people and outside observers are misled. The misperception about the coup continues because there is only one voice. The government interprets everything according to their calculations. They are using this event to express the antipathy they already had against Hizmet movement. The coup attempt is serving to justify their plans to persecute Hizmet movement.

Turkish Cultural Center aims to bridge East and West

PAUL GRONDAHL Staff writer MENANDS — The Turks are rising in the Capital Region. In the past six months, Turks have bought a building on Broadway in Menands, renovated it and created the Turkish Cultural Center of Albany with the help of the organization’s first paid full-time employee. Once limited mostly to a few graduate […]

NBA player and Erdoğan-critic Enes Kanter’s father arrest in Turkey

Dr. Mehmet Kanter, father of NBA player and Turkish government-critic Enes Kanter has been arrested in Instanbul. This comes days after Turkish officials issued an arrest warrant for the US-based basketball player and seeked assistance from Interpol to extradite him to Turkey.

Erdogan may keep winning, but it wont’ do Turkey any good

I don’t believe Ankara is ever really going to stray from its partnership with the U.S., because Turkey simply cannot afford it. The coup — failed though it was — has left the formerly expanding Turkish economy gasping. Credit-rating agencies have lowered the nation’s stock, and the purging of coup conspirators, both real and imagined, has left tens of thousands of crucial private- and public-sector positions empty. Economic growth, meanwhile, is expected to dip.

Why does Turkey’s President Erdogan want Knicks’ Enes Kanter in jail?

A Turkish prosecutor asked for NBA’s New York Knicks star Enes Kanter to be jailed for up to four years for insulting Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, the state-run news agency Anadolu reported on Wednesday. “I have said less than that honorless (man) deserves. Add another 4 years for me, master,” he told his 526,000 Twitter followers.

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

SEO Skill Suite: Tools for Keyword Research, Technical & Backlink Analysis

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

In Case You Missed It

Hospital to be opened by volunteer Turkish doctors in Ethiopia

PKK terrorism, piety and the Gülen movement

Faith Communities and Home-Grown Extremism

NY Times Editorial Board: Mr. Erdogan’s Reckless Revenge

Karzai honored Turkish schools in his country

Behind the secret documents – Turkish government profiled a large number of individuals

Fethullah Gulen Acquitted

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News