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Islamic Community Center of Tempe | Facebook
Faith communities respond to rising hate
March 23, 2018
Hate crimes are on the rise in the U.S., but some faith communities are using those painful moments to reject bias.
Stop Hate Project
Hate crimes and incidents are on the rise across the country March 23, 2018
Tracking hate crimes has its challenges, but one trend is clear: the number of hate crimes, particularly those targeting Muslims and Jews, is on the rise. That finding emerged in several reports from the FBI's Hate Crimes Statistics, the Anti-Defamation League, South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT), and the Southern Poverty Law Center. To understand what is happening and how communities are responding, we talk to Becky Monroe, the director of the Stop Hate Project at the Lawyers Committee for Civil Right Under Law.  We also hear from Shayna Stevens, a board member of the Arizona chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR-AZ. She tells us how the Muslim community and allies in the faith community responded to a recent incident in which two moms live-streamed themselves using anti-Muslim slurs and taking flyers and brochures from the local mosque in Tempe, Ariz. 


Shayna Stevens, board member of the Arizona chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations
Becky Monroe, director of the Stop Hate Project at the Lawyers Committee for Civil Right Under Law
Becky Monroe explains the goals behind the Stop Hate Project.
Rapid Response to Hate Network | Clergy Coalition of Coral Springs and Parkland
How communities of faith are organizing against hate March 23, 2018
Faith communities are responding in different ways to hate, from creating proactive relationships to holding unity walks and interfaith dinners. We talk to Rabbi Bradd Boxman of Congregation Kol Tikvah in Parkland, Fl. He organized a proactive Rapid Response to Hate Network there that was inspired by his outreach efforts years ago in Danbury, Conn., shortly after 9/11. We also hear from executive director Rabbi Gerry Serotta and lead organizer Symi Rom-Rymer of the Interfaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington. Serotta says he's finding a silver lining in the current political climate: a new interest in learning about different traditions and desire to stand in unity with targeted communities.

Rabbi Bradd Boxman of Congregation Kol Tikvah in Parkland, Fl., co-chair of the Rapid Response to Hate Network with the Clergy Coalition of Coral Springs and Parkland
Adam Hamilton's new book
If fear and hate are linked, how can we become 'Unafraid'? March 23, 2018
Understanding fear, when it is important and when it undermines our sense of security is the focus of Pastor Adam Hamilton's new book, Unafraid: Living with Courage and Hope in Troubled Times.  We talk to Hamilton and learn that his motivation for writing the book, based originally on a series of sermons, was inspired by the 2016 elections.  He discusses how fear of the other can be weaponized and used to divide and in some instances, lead to violence. Hamilton also describes his own efforts to introduce his congregation, one of the largest in Kansas, to their Muslim neighbors, and what they learned about each other. 

Pastor Adam Hamilton, of the United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kan., and author of Unafraid: Living with Courage and Hope in Troubled Times

Pastor Adam Hamilton