8:39 pm By la Macha · Immigration · 1 Comment
11 Aug 2009
I have a special place in my heart for nuns. Yes, I realize that nuns have a long history of committing really horrendous crimes against native peoples in particular and young kids in general (looking the other way while sexual violence goes on does not absolve a person from responsibility in the violence happening in the first place).
But at the same time, nuns also brave violence that priest are too cowardly to even imagine standing up to, work amongst the people in a way that priests are often too “godly” to, and have been killed more than once because they were creating community support for something that the church and the people in power wouldn’t be able to hold off if it became fully actualized. This work doesn’t dismiss or make less important the fact the way nuns have hurt and violated people–it just shows why I have a soft place in my heart for nuns when many may justifiably feel they don’t deserve it.
And then there’s these women:
Royal Berg, an Immigration attorney who is Catholic, contacted the sisters with the idea of praying outside the Broadview facility on Friday mornings.
…
Berg and the sisters started the ritual in January 2007. For Murphy, the sight of the detainees in handcuffs and ankle shackles recalled memories of victims she met at Su Casa.
“It’s demonic,” she said, her voice rising to a shout. “What is torture other than to reduce people to nothingness? That’s what torture is, and that’s going on here.”
Soon the sisters asked for permission to enter jails where detainees are held before reaching Broadview. After they encountered difficulty gaining access to the McHenry County Jail, where the majority of detainees are held, they joined forces with other clergy as well as immigrant advocates from the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant Refugee Rights and the Chicago New Sanctuary Alliance. Together they drafted the Access to Religious Ministry Act of 2008 and fought for its passage.
The sisters’ most memorable moment came in November 2008 during a trip to Springfield with a group to lobby for the bill. After being shuttled from secretary to secretary, they were finally led to the Senate floor and came face to face with Senate President Emil Jones Jr. (D-Chicago).
Murphy grabbed Jones by the arm and said forcefully, “You have the power to do this! You have the power to change things!”
Jones laughed uncomfortably, and Murphy said, “It’s not funny. You have the power to change people’s lives.”
On Nov. 30, the bill passed unanimously in both houses.
I read this article, and I admit, I teared up. Coming from a very harshly conservative area where churches are praying for the strength to “turn away” the masses that seek to destroy our good nation, I just felt grateful that somewhere out there, there are at least a few people who believe that no matter what sin detainees have committed, they are still human beings entitled to love and compassion and human connection. On many levels, I am physically incapable of giving certain people that kind of blessed love (see: previous post), but that doesn’t mean that I don’t think somebody somewhere who CAN give that kind of love shouldn’t. In fact, I thank whatever god there is out there that even the worst of the most heinous people out there will be the recipients of such love.
Nuns are the reason why every once in a great while I still sort of identify as a Catholic. What these women are doing is the reason why I still occasionally believe in life.
6:08 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Bizarro|Religion · 1 Comment
30 Jul 2009
Porque it’s hot and Mala’s tired, here’s a reminder that Jesus is always with us.
This image of Jesus that appeared in a baking tray after Oliver Bellerby of Yorkshire, England cooked a burger.
Via / Boing Boing
6:31 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · mexico|Religion · 1 Comment
30 Jun 20094:58 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Controversia|GLBT|Politics|race|Religion|society · 1 Comment
19 May 2009
…apparently because being gay “is a choice”:
“We know what we have gone through as an ethnic group. We feel the terminology, the definition itself, has really been hijacked,” he said. “Unfortunately, it’s just another ploy to garner more support from people who may not understand what the civil rights struggle was all about.”Bishop Michael A. Badger, pastor of Bethesda World Harvest International Church on Main Street, said that he doesn’t doubt there is discrimination against gay people but that it is hardly on the order of what African-Americans have encountered and still face.
“As an African-American, I don’t have a choice in the color of my skin. I have a choice in whether I’m abstinent or not,” Badger said. “I don’t think you can compare the two.”
Actually he said because “abstinence” is “a choice”. Well, that makes even less sense.
Just because the two issues aren’t exactly the same doesn’t mean they aren’t both about civil rights. And sorry, I think we can draw more parallels between the civil rights movement and the fight for gay rights than with the fight against gay marriage. To quote journalist Earl Ofari Hutchison: “Homophobia and racism are frequently two sides of the same coin.”
Let’s be honest. I’d rather get schooled on said parallels and what the civil rights movement was about by Coretta Scott King than from this guy.
Oh, and for those of you who wonder why this issue is even important, read this story from today’s NYT.
What do you think?
Via / Buffalo News
Image via LogoOnline(Noah’s Arc)
As a person of very mixed faith I read the following article with sort of a sick feeling in my stomach. Apparently, Rumsfeld (remember him?) used to send daily updates to President Bush that were plastered with quotes from the bible:
One showed US troops trudging through the desert under a passage from Isaiah: “Their arrows are sharp, all their bows are strung; their horses’ hoofs seem like flint, their chariot wheels are like a whirlwind.”
Another showed Saddam delivering a speech to camera with these words from the First Epistle of Peter: “It is God’s will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish men.”
Draper noted that unlike Bush, Rumsfeld did not wear his faith on his sleeve. And he said the use of the biblical passages was the brainchild of a director for intelligence working under the Pentagon chief.
“Still, the sheer cunning of pairing unsentimental intelligence with religious righteousness bore the signature of one man: Donald Rumsfeld,” Draper’s report said.
“At least one Muslim analyst in the (Pentagon) building had been greatly offended,” it said.
“Others privately worried that if these covers were leaked during a war conducted in an Islamic nation, the fallout — as one Pentagon staffer would later say — ‘would be as bad as Abu Ghraib’.”
Now, really–I don’t think that Rumsfeld technically did anything wrong, at least not compared to the other shit he did (advocating torture, starting wars with little rhyme or reason, etc). But on a purely emotional level, I find this news to be reprehensible. It demonstrates to me on the most base level that the wars the U.S. are in right now were not based on what is best for U.S. citizens–but rather instead were based on and justified on the religious beliefs of a few powerful white men that remain completely disconnected from the people they claim to represent.
Does that sound like anybody else to you?
It does to me.
You can see the images of the folders here at GQ
1:15 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Gaza|israel|Politics|Religion · Comments Off
13 May 2009My posts regarding the Pope normally criticize whatever brand of hate, divisiveness and false morality he happens to be brewing up for us at the moment. But this one won’t, simply because I don’t know what to make of his stance on the Israel-Palestine conflict. While the previous Pope spoke about importance of peace in the region, this one is outright supporting Palestine’s right to exist, which seems crazy coming from such a conservative figure. This week on a trip to Israel, Pope Benedict addressed the Palestinian people in Bethlehem:
“In a special way, my heart goes out to the pilgrims from war-torn Gaza. I ask you to bring back to your families and your communities my warm embrace, and my sorrow for the loss, the hardship, and the hardship, and the suffering you have had to endure,” he said.Israel granted permits to about 100 Christians to leave the Gaza Strip and attend the Mass in Bethlehem.
The enclave is under tight restrictions imposed by Israel and Egypt on the movement of people and goods, by land, air, and sea. The embargo, which Israel says is due to security reasons, has resulted in shortages of supplies, including construction materials needed to rebuild from the recent war.
In his homily, the pope said he is praying for an end to the closure.
“Please be assured of my solidarity with you in the immense work of rebuilding which now lies ahead, and my prayers that the embargo will soon be lifted,” he said.
11:45 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · children|Peru|Religion · Comments Off
23 Jul 2007There’s really nothing I can say to do this video justice. I watched it, I was frightened and that’s that. It’s a 9 year-old child televangelist from Peru preaching like he’s possessed, and for those who don’t speak Spanish, he’s basically on tirade about how evolution is a lie.
According to 20 Minutos, the kid’s name is Nazaret Castillo Rey (stage name “Casti Rey”), he’s Peruvian, and has been preaching since he was 3 . Apparently his little empire is growing thanks to YouTube, which is making Casti Rey a household name. I think someone needs to call Señorita Laura on his parents for child exploitation.
Via / 20 Minutos
2:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Religion|Sports · Comments Off
7 Mar 2007
Evangelism surrounds me. First my mom and Jen, tell me about the Rican (yes one of my people) who claims to be Jesus and the Anti-Christ and then on my subway ride this morning Yankee Mariano Rivera told me that the Bible was his guide and that it should be mine too.
Rivera will be the face of a subway advertising campaign running March 3rd to April 1st that encourages Latinos across New York City and the Tri-state area to read the Bible and experience its life changing message. Rivera will promote the central theme of the campaign – “La Biblia Es Mi Guía…Leela!” (The Bible is My Guide…Read it!).
This is part of a larger campaign outreaching to the Latino community that we wrote about last September. But can Mariano or De Jesus appear in a cake pan? That’s what I wanna know. Then maybe I’ll believe.
Via / PR Newswire,
12:55 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia|houston|Religion · Comments Off
7 Mar 2007Or a Puerto Rican that says he’s Jesus. Thanks to an ubersnarky Spanish TV blogger I love, BobPop, you can see Jose de Jesús, “the second coming of Jesus Christ” on video:
4:50 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · mexico|Religion · 1 Comment
5 Mar 2007
Last week Mala told you about a sighting of the Virgen de Guadalupe that occurred in a baking pan in Texas. La Virgen’s latest trick apparently took place in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico, when an image of her allegedly began to shed bloody tears.
According to Univision.com, on Ash Wednesday (also the day of the baking pan incident) the image, which its owner, María Guadalupe Salazar Martínez, keeps in her home (which according to Univision, is “made of cardboard, boards and aluminum), began to cry. First, the tears were “normal”, but she later began crying tears of blood. Since then, the home has become a shrine for devout visitors from all over the city, and clergymen have gone to witness the phenomena firsthand to see if it can be indeed declared a miracle. No word on that…yet.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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