15 Religious Moments In 2015 That Give Us Hope For The New Year

compassion

Huff Post: by Antonia Blumberg & Carol Kuruvilla —

The world is a difficult and scary place to be, but we are continually floored by the way human beings to come together despite their differences to make life just a little bit easier for one another.

Here are 15 religious moments during 2015 that give us inspiration and hope for 2016:

  • 1 Germany’s Cologne Cathedral turned off its lights to protest an anti-Muslim march.
    Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
    One of Germany’s most famous landmarks, Cologne Cathedral, was plunged into darkness in early January in protest over a march planned by a growing grass-roots anti-Muslim movement in the country. “By switching off the floodlighting we want to make those on the march stop and think. It is a challenge: consider who you are marching alongside,” Cathedral Dean Norbert Feldhoff told Reuters at the time.
  • 2 Lassana Bathily, a Muslim grocery store employee, bravely saved lives during a terrorist attack at a French kosher supermarket.
    Paul Redmond via Getty Images
    When a gunman laid siege to Paris kosher grocery store Hyper Cacher on January 9, Lassana Bathily, a Muslim employee at the store, saved several people by hiding them in a walk-in freezer. Bathily appeared on BFMTV the following night to talk about the experience. When asked about his heroic acts, he replied, “We are brothers. It’s not a question of Jews of Christians or of Muslims. We’re all in the same boat, we have to help each other to get out of this crisis.”
  • 3 Hundreds of Norwegians circled an Oslo synagogue and mosque in a peace ring to stand for interfaith solidarity.
    JON OLAV NESVOLD via Getty Images
    After a synagogue was attacked in Denmark in February, more than 1,000 Muslimsformed a human shield around an Oslo synagogue in neighboring Norway, offering symbolic protection for the city’s Jewish community. The following weekend, hundreds of Norwegians gathered around an Oslo mosque to form a human peace ring in an effort to show solidarity and respect with the Muslim community.
  • 4 Interfaith clergy in Baltimore linked arms and marched toward the police line.
    In the midst of a tense uprising in Baltimore in April following the death of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man who suffered a spinal injury while in police custody, interfaith clergy joined hands for peace. In a powerful display of interfaith solidarity, more than 100 clergy members from local Christian churches and from the Nation of Islam linked arms and marched toward a police line. Periodically, they stopped to kneel and pray. “Our best sermon right now is not anything we say but what we do,” said Rev. Heber Brown, pastor of Maryland’s Pleasant Hope Baptist Church.
  • 9 Pope Francis stood beside multi-faith leaders at Ground Zero with a message of healing.
    During his September trip to the United States, Pope Francis gathered with leaders from the Buddhist, Hindu, Christian, Jewish, Muslim and Sikh communities at the Sept. 11 Memorial Museum. “Here, amid pain and grief, we also have a palpable sense of the heroic goodness which people are capable of, those hidden reserves of strength from which we can draw,” the pontiff said.
  • 10 The Parliament of the World’s Religions brought thousands of people together for a weekend of dialogue.
    Antonia Blumberg/The Huffington Post
    The Parliament of the World’s Religions convened in Salt Lake City, Utah in October, bringing together thousands of people from around the world. Virtually all of the world’s faith traditions were represented, as well as non-theist and Native American communities. During the conference, hundreds of women joined hands for a silent march for peace. And each day of the five-day conference, the Sikh community hosted a free langar lunch to show that all are welcome in God’s kitchen.
  • 11 Sanjay’s Super Team gave Hindu American families the chance to see their stories on the big screen.
    Made by Hindu American animator Sanjay Patel, the 7-minute short for Disney-Pixar called Sanjay’s Super Team was shown to wide audiences in November and depicted a community all-too-often neglected by American media. “If I could, I would go back to the 1980s and give my younger self this short,” Patel told The Los Angeles Times in April. “I want to normalize and bring a young brown boy’s story to the pop culture zeitgeist. To have a broad audience like Pixar’s see this… it is a big deal. I’m so excited about that.”
  • 12 Interfaith religious leaders joined hands after Paris attacks.
    Courtesy of Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church
    Following the November 13 terrorist attacks in Paris, some religious leaders refused to be torn apart by anger and discrimination. In Bethesda, Maryland, Muslim, Jewish and Christian leaders stood together for an interfaith service at Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church. The service included music and readings from Christian, Jewish and Islamic traditions, followed by a shared meal for all those in attendance.
  • 13 Muslim communities raised money for black churches and San Bernardino victims.
    Sean Rayford via Getty Images
    Twice this year Muslims around the country mobilized their communities to help bring healing to afflicted areas of the country. Following a string of church fires at black worship centers in the south in July, Muslim organizations raised over $100,000 to help rebuild the houses of worship. Then, after a shooting rampageat a social services center in San Bernardino, California in December, Muslim groups and leaders from across the nation united to help raise nearly $100,000 for the victims’ families.
  • 14 America’s religious communities came together in defense of refugees.
    Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
    Many religious groups denounced suggestions made by some Republican presidential candidates to impose a religious test for Syrian refugees trying to enter the country. Jenny Yang, vice president for advocacy at World Relief, an evangelical organization that helps resettle refugees, said the prospect of banning non-Christian Syrian refugees “does not reflect what we’ve been hearing from our constituencies, which are evangelical churches across the country.” In December, more than 1,000 American rabbis called on the United States to open its doors to refugees seeking sanctuary.

Read further

Additional Reading

Two Hundred Verses about Compassionate Living in the Quran

A Message of Compassion and Love from the Holy Bible

Leave a Reply