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    Religion claims its place in Occupy Wall Street

    BOSTON (AP) — Downtown Dewey Square is crammed with tents and tarps of Occupy Boston protesters, but organizers made sure from the start of this weeks-old encampment that there was room for the holy.

    No shoes are allowed in the "Sacred Space" tent here, but you can bring just about any faith or spiritual tradition.

    A day's schedule finds people balancing their chakras, a "compassion meditation" and a discussion of a biblical passage in Luke. Inside, a Buddha statue sits near a picture of Jesus, while a hand-lettered sign in the corner points toward Mecca.

    The tent is one way protesters here and in other cities have taken pains to include a spiritual component in their occupations. Still, Occupy Wall Street is not a religious movement, and signs of spiritually aren't evident at all protest sites.

    Clergy emphasize they are participants in the aggressively leaderless movement, not people trying to co-opt it. Plus, in a movement that purports to represent the "99 percent" in society, the prominent religious groups are overwhelmingly liberal.

    Religion might not fit into the movement seamlessly, but activist Dan Sieradski, who's helped organize Jewish services and events at Occupy Wall Street, said it must fit somewhere.

    "We're a country full of religious people," he said. "Faith communities do need to be present and need to be welcomed in order for this to be an all-encompassing movement that embraces all sectors of society."

    Religious imagery and events have been common since the protests began. In New York, clergy carried an Old Testament-style golden calf in the shape of the Wall Street bull to decry the false idol of greed. Sieradski organized a Yom Kippur service. About 70 Muslims kneeled to pray toward Mecca at a prayer service Friday.

    A Chicago group, Interfaith Worker Justice, has published an interfaith prayer service guide for occupation protests nationwide.

    Clergy who support the protests say they are a natural fit with many faiths, because they share traditional concerns about economic injustice. They also point to history, including the civil rights movement and abolition.

    "Every movement for social change that has really made a difference has included the power of God, the power of the spirit and the power of people of conscience," said the Rev. Stephanie Sellers, one of the Episcopalian "protest chaplains" praying with protesters at different sites.

    Sieradski said his Jewish faith's commitment to helping the powerless was one reason he was attracted to the movement, but he didn't intend to establish regular Jewish services. He announced his first event, a Sabbath potluck dinner, on online social networks, not knowing what to expect. The strong turnout led him to help organize the Yom Kippur service, activities during Sukkot, and what Sieradski hopes will be regular religious events.

    In Boston, Marty Dagoberto said the Sacred Space was also created in an unforced way, after he suggested the idea at Occupy Boston's first general gathering. He said the space helps promote a spirit of calm and unity crucial to bringing change.

    "I feel like it's really important for us to stay rooted in love, simply put," Dagoberto said.

    Religious elements haven't sprouted up as visibly in other Occupy Wall Street movements nationwide, said Elizabeth Drescher, a lecturer on Christian spirituality at Santa Clara University, who has visited the occupations in Santa Cruz and St. Louis.

    She said some protesters are wary because they don't recognize the authority of institutions, including religious ones, and are generally looking for clergy to be "ministering but not proselytizing." She recalled a conversation with an Occupy Santa Cruz protester while a man in a clerical collar picked up trash.

    "(The protester) said, 'That dude's here with us. He's not handing out pamphlets and trying to save me. He's picking up trash,'" Drescher said.

    While protesters are cautious about religious leaders, those leaders have concerns, as well. The Rev. Katharine Henderson, president of Auburn Theological Seminary in New York, has visited Occupy Wall Street and praised the movement for forcing society to re-examine its values. But she said the school is still trying to discern how much to be involved.

    "There's so much polarization in our country now, and demonization of one side of the other. ... As religious leaders, we want to be 'repairers of the breach,'" she said, paraphrasing a passage in Isaiah. "So the question is how we can come together, Wall Street and Main Street, to come up with solutions that are going to work for all of us?"

    Mark Tooley of the Institute on Religion and Democracy, an advocacy group for conservative mainline Protestants, said while Occupy Wall Street has succeeded in getting attention, it's limited because it's only attracting religious support from the left.

    A call for government redistribution of wealth and reliance on street activism doesn't appeal to the swath of suburban churchgoers with conservative political and religious leanings, he said.

    "It doesn't seem they put a lot of thought into expanding their support base beyond those who identify with 1960s-era protest action," he said.

    The movement could still attract center-right religious support from the Roman Catholic Church, said Stephen Schneck, director of the Institute for Policy Research & Catholic Studies at the Catholic University of America. But he said it must be clear protesters in the still-fuzzily-defined movement share mainstream Catholic concerns about consumerism and an unfettered free market.

    "If it becomes just another version of American progressivism, then I can imagine the church probably wouldn't want to cozy up to it too much," Schneck said.

    Imam Al-Hajj Talib Abdur-Rashid, who helped organize Friday's Muslim prayer service in New York, believes religious groups have already amplified the movement's power. He sees his involvement as a duty, because so many in his congregation are affected by the nation's economic woes.

    "If Moses or Jesus or Mohammed were alive in this day and time they'd be out there guiding and inspiring and teaching these young people," he said.

    ___

    Associated Press reporter Karen Matthews in New York contributed to this report.

     

    2,061 comments

    • Shady  •  4 mths ago
      Yahoo....can you get RID of the "New Location" crap????
    • JimC  •  4 mths ago
      I refuse to click on Yahoo's ''Location" box. It's nobody's business where I'm located.
    • oneofmany  •  4 mths ago
      Yahoo, stop forcing the location on us! If we wanted it there, we'd put it there! These popups are irritating and ridiculous!
    • ab  •  4 mths ago
      The last bastion of absolute privacy is in one's mind.....guard it well.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Naples, United States  •  4 mths ago
      Talking about patriotisim is a lot like talking about your sex life. Those that talk the most and loudest have little to offer when it comes to really doing something
      Reply
    • Jabberwocky  •  4 mths ago
      In 1980 we started to lose the consumer protection afforded
      by the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. By 1999 it was completely
      gone. It was destroyed by both parties. They were bought out.
      Wall Street has since become a rigged gambling house.
      It no longer has much to do with corporate ownership.
      Day traders continually siphon off money from the system.
      This leaves less value in the corporations that Wall Street
      is supposed to represent. Day trading and derivatives eventually
      puts all the money in the pockets of the large banks.
      Some go broke, some get rich,... one big gambling house.
      They make more money playing the market
      than loaning money out for interest. So they quit loaning.
      Loaning money is supposed to be what banks are for.
      But now they are able to play the market with other
      people's money and keep the profits since they are a bank.
      It goes on to this day even after all their lies and deceit
      in the 2008 mortgage debacle.
      "The little guy need not apply."
    • !  •  4 mths ago
      Aflec the self proclaimed Quack. It is easier for a camel to get through the eye of a needle than it is for a rich man to enter the Kingdom Of Heaven.
    • Buckethead  •  4 mths ago
      We live in a country with a lot of people that just think they are religious.
    • unforgiven  •  4 mths ago
      The betrayal of Jesus to the hands of the chief priests was for 30 pieces of silver. What did it take for the politicians to sell out the people of the U.S. to special interests and foreign governments?
    • T  •  4 mths ago
      Since we can't compete with slave labor: if it comes from a country with no child labor laws, no minimum wage, no safety laws, or no pollution laws...tax it at 500%. See how fast the factories come back.
    • gary  •  St. Paul, United States  •  4 mths ago
      Theft in the name of religion is still theft.
    • frederick  •  Cape Girardeau, United States  •  4 mths ago
      How shocking it must be for repubs when they reach the spot in the bible where Jesus says to feed to poor and tend the sick (with no mention of repayment btw... all for free /gasp =O)
      "For if you do this for the least of these you do it as unto me."
      A big part of this whole messy issue is that some people have gotten the idea that EVERYTHING has to make a profit, even if it is at the expense of someone who cannot spare it... that it where capitalism goes wrong... OWS is not necessarily against capitalism.. it is against the selfish heartless corporatism that took over capitalism. There is nothing wrong with making an honest dollar, but when you make it by screwing others over or renting legislation to carry favors for you at the expense of hard working people left to eat dog food because it is the only way they can survive and still afford their medication you have to stop and realize you have gone to far.
    • T  •  4 mths ago
      4 years ago we had 8 million more jobs. Where did they go?
    • T  •  4 mths ago
      So many people seem to be in favor of in favor of the leadership of AIG and Counrywide etc., taking risks that bankrupted the company but made themselves billions in bonuses....and then taking a federal bailout and NOT lending to small businesses and getting even more bonuses?...
    • truth sayer  •  Nome, United States  •  4 mths ago
      1 Timothy 5:8) “But if anyone does not provide for his own, and especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.
    • T  •  4 mths ago
      Nobody is protesting capitalism. They can't. We don't HAVE capitalism, and haven't had it in a generation. Bailing out banks and auto companies and airlines is SOCIALIST. Captialism lets businesses fail when their exeuctives are so stupid or greedy that they drive the company into bankruptsy.
    • S  •  Dallas, United States  •  4 mths ago
      Wake up from the American Coma!

      The 8-hour workday and the 40-hour workweek became a standard by which we judged our economic success, and a reality check against which we could verify the American Dream.

      If a family could live a good life with one wage-earner working a 40-hour job, then the American Dream was realized. If the income from that job could pay the bills, buy a car, pay for the kids’ braces, allow the family to save enough money for a down payment on a house and still leave some money for retirement and maybe for a college fund for the kids, then we were living the American Dream. The workers were sharing in the prosperity they helped create, and they still had time to take their kids to a ball game, take their spouses to a movie, and play a little golf on the weekends.

      Ah, the halcyon days of the 1950s! Yeah, ok, it wasn’t quite that perfect. The prosperity wasn’t spread as evenly and ubiquitously as we might want to pretend, but if you were a middle-class white man, things were probably pretty good from an economic perspective. The American middle class was reaching its zenith.

      And the top marginal federal income tax rate was between 45 and 90%. Wake up! The rich do NOT create jobs, the MIDDLE CLASS creates jobs!
    • unforgiven  •  4 mths ago
      It is clear that many Americans are struggling in this economy that protects the banks at the cost of the majority. Let’s call it for what it is. We are in the middle of the biggest financial disaster in history spurred on by the investment banks and their purchased colleagues in Washington D.C. How do we know this? Because no real reform has been enacted on Wall Street and we enter a decade of lost wages. The middle class is disappearing because bankers have used “socialized” corporate welfare to shield themselves from the brutal corrections of the markets while the rest of Americans need to get by on an average of $25,000 per capita. Oscillating votes from Democrats to Republicans has done absolutely nothing.
    • 356  •  4 mths ago
      Seems like we have a mix of people getting along. Nice change
    • John  •  New York, United States  •  4 mths ago
      Hey #OWS, Glass-Steagall is Your Number One Priority
      By Chris Jadatz

      Most of the media coverage of the OWS movement is centering on the divide between the top 1% and the lower 99% of American citizens. The OWS rallying call: We are the 99%. And, yeah, the jobs issue is a huge part of this. There are plenty of charts that offer a glimpse into the reasoning, and there is a perfect justification of those points.

      The huge disparity between the top 1 and the lower 99 is an effect of a degenerating system, and it's abhorrent. I don't think anyone with half a brain can say otherwise. But it's not like distributing the wealth of the 1% down to the 99% is going to make everything peachy, and you can't expect results out of protesting an effect without engaging the cause.

      As we've documented here on this site, the crash of 2008 is inextricably linked to the same process that brought us the both LTCM crisis and the 1987 crash: the constantly accelerating erosion of the constitutional control of the US government over its economy in favor of a floating currency, deregulation, and globalization. In other words: fascism. And as Sky pointed out, it's not just the degeneracy of economic policy, but the social and cultural degeneracy of the past several decades which allowed for that deregulation to occur. The problem is, indeed, as much the moral corruption of the entire population as it is blatant evil of the very few who were steering us into this mess.

      The truth is that our constitutional system was based on Hamilton's idea for a highly regulated, federally-centered credit system, and it is for this reason that without going back to the original Constitutional principles that were laid out by Hamilton and Ben Franklin, and engaged by every truly successful period of the US economy; as under the direction of Monroe & JQA, of Lincoln and Lincoln Republicans, and under FDR in building the great arsenal of democracy to destroy the Nazis, the slide of our economy since the post-1971 period will continue.

      The good news is (and it IS good news) all of these huge banking institutions and houses of finance are totally bankrupt. They're like the walking dead. Their shifting of cash piles and the eating of one another in a pathetic attempt to maintain some semblance of status quo even as they beg for government intervention is utterly laughable. It should be clear now that deregulation obviously doesn't work, and if demanding trillions in taxpayer dollars from the government isn't the final and absolute proof that Adam Smith and Ayn Rand and all these other losers weren't completely wrong, then nothing is.

      I could say at this point that if we had preserved Glass-Steagall, we would have let these banks collapse under the weight of all their absurdly illegal 'investment' activities and the bailout would have never happened, but that's not true. If Glass-Steagall had remained as it was instituted, there would have been no 2008 crash at all, and no 1987 crash for that matter. That's because the part of the financial system that Occupy Wall-Street is protesting now, that huge parasite sitting on top of our actual economy, would have died off long ago, because it could not have survived without massive support from within the US Government, against the founding principles of that government itself.

      If you restore Glass-Steagall, and the people demand of the government the will to enforce it, the institution of Wall Street will shrivel up. It will provide the basis for an accurate and functioning credit system as prescribed by LaRouche and originally designed for by Hamilton.
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