The Daily Item, Sunbury, PA

News

November 16, 2009

Jewish, Muslim leaders honored

SUNBURY — Separated by fear and suspicion seeded by nearly 1,400 years of bloody human history, and the invisible barrier between mosque and synagogue almost within sight of each other, leaders of two religions came together for peace Sunday.

Rabbi Nina Mandel, Congregation Beth El, and Sister Safiyyah Jihad Levine, of the Sunbury Islamic Center, were honored for their work on behalf of human rights by members of Sunbury’s Church Women United.

The group’s president, Ruth Koble, said the two women were treasured “peacemakers in our midst.”

About 50 people attended the awards ceremony at the Otterbein United Methodist Church.

Mandel and Safiyyah both spoke of the need to appreciate each other.

“Our diversity reflects God’s creative capacity,” Mandel said. “We need to learn to co-exist in our differences, even when they challenge us.”

Safiyyah said Allah, the Muslim name for God, is not a different or separate God. “He’s the same God.”

The word “Islam,” she said, is the Arabic word for peace.

“Honor killings, child killings, suicide bombing, beheading ... and horror of all horrors, female circumcision, all violate the tenets of Islam,” she said.

Mandel said Jews and Muslims often face similar challenges in raising children in predominantly Christian regions.

“Our children are often alone as non-Christians in their classrooms,” she said.

She and Safiyyah pledged to bridge the gap between their synagogue and their mosque more often.



New beginning

“This is the beginning of a new life together in the Susquhanna Valley,” Koble said.

But peace and goodwill are easier in countries where the right to be in the minority is taken for granted, said United Methodist congregation member Glenn Cunningham, of Sunbury. “We’re in an area where we can express ourselves. There may be underlying prejudice but we know we’re entitled (to our beliefs). “

“In the world, all people cry the same and laugh the same,” he said. “That unites us. Then we bring God in the picture. ... In some countries, people who speak out (against the prevailing religion) are annihilated and butchered.”

Both women acknowledged this is the case, but said it is not an excuse to stop working for peace.

“I am a Jew who believes in peace,” Mandel said. “You might want to kill me. You might want to wipe all Jews off the face of the Earth. People do. I can either stay on the side of peace or stay home and build an arsenal. I can either spread peace or spread war. ... Yes, some people don’t have that freedom, but they do have the freedom to be inspired by people who do have that freedom. That’s how revolutions happen.”

Saffiyah said the bad things others do shouldn’t stop anyone from working for good where they live, where they can.

Muslims have had to bear the suspicions and hatred brought on by people who pervert the religion to serve nonreligious ends. The Fort Hood killer is one of those, she said.

True Islam, she said, is against killing ... If we kill one person it’s like killing all mankind.

“Allahu Akbar,” the words the shooter is said to have shouted as he began shooting, mean “God is great,” she said. “For someone to take those words and use them to commit sin is very saddening,” she said.

She said she expects the Sept. 11 trials to end in convictions and executions. Dredging up Sept. 11 is not good for the Muslim community, she said, but she has found the Sunbury area hospitable and accepting of people of Muslim faith.



Optimistic stance

She’s also optimistic the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will be brought to a peaceful conclusion.

“Take Northern Ireland,” she said. “They said that would never be solved, but look at it today.”

Mandel said she was more cautiously optimistic. “There will have to be compromises, and no one will be completely satisfied. I pray I live to see it.”

People should tell themselves “There will be change, and I will be part of it,” she said.

Text Only
News
  • State board approves table games at Valley Forge casino

    VALLEY FORGE — A casino resort scheduled to open this spring in the Philadelphia suburb of Valley Forge has been approved for table games.

     

    February 9, 2012

  • Doctors telling more adults: Get out and exercise

    ATLANTA — A new study shows more and more U.S. adults are being told by their doctor to get off their duffs and exercise. A government survey found nearly 33 percent of adults who saw a doctor in the previous year said they were told to exercise. That was up from about 23 percent in 2000.

    February 9, 2012

  • fatal02.jpg Former Northumberland County judge and three others die in Florida crash

    EVERGLADES CITY, Fla. -- A former Northumberland County judge was one of four people killed Wednesday afternoon when their car collided with a van at an intersection, according to the Naples News. The victims were identified as James J. Rosini, 66, William J. Rosini, 68, Patricia C. Rosini, 65, all of Coal Township, Pa., and Deborah A. Korbich, 59, of Elysburg, Pa.

    February 9, 2012 2 Photos

  • Warden demotes four bosses

    SUNBURY -- Northumberland County Prison Warden Roy Johnson was able to trim about $135,000 in expenses by demoting four supervisors. He said Wednesday that he found a way to cut costs without laying off any staff. "I cut out 120 hours of supervisors' pay each week, but I need to fill the correction officer positions," Johnson said.

    February 9, 2012

  • DJ pumps up audience

    Every Tuesday evening, Richard Grogg can be found spinning tunes at possibly the most well-attended dance in Snyder County. A resident at the Selinsgrove Center since 1988, the 57-year-old said the thing he likes most about selecting and playing music is "making people happy." "Some people come up and ask for requests," he said.

    February 9, 2012

  • Agency closes adult center

    PENNS CREEK -- Union and Snyder County caregivers have had to look farther and wider for another program that can offer respite because the Agency on Aging can no longer afford to provide the service. The adult daily living center at the Penns Creek Adult Resource Center was a helpful program each week to about eight adults from the area dealing with Alzheimer's and dementia. But it closed Dec. 30.

    February 9, 2012

  • New Berlin pushes to acquire school

    NEW BERLIN -- The Borough Council sold the property where the New Berlin Elementary School is to the precursor of the Mifflinburg Area School District for $1 back in 1950. It was deeded to the district for construction of a school.

    February 9, 2012

  • Second suit filed to stop sewer merger

    SUNBURY -- It must have seemed like deja vu all over again Wednesday for some members of the Northumberland Sewer Authority, when for the second time in two weeks, former NSA Chairman Adam Klock filed a civil action against former board colleagues Jack Fasold, James Orner and Donald Troxell, alleging they held an illegal meeting -- this time on Monday -- where they voted to transfer the borough authority's assets to the merged North-Point Sewer Authority.

    February 9, 2012

  • Student Claims Bucknell Unfair

    LEWISBURG -- A man cleared of sexual assault but cited in a disciplinary action at Bucknell University in 2010 has filed a lawsuit against the Lewisburg school, claiming campus police and officials violated his civil rights after the woman lodged her complaint.

    February 9, 2012

  • School grants in works

    MILTON -- How school funds will be distributed through Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed block grant program, which combines four basic education budget lines, still needs to be worked out, the governor said at a press conference Wednesday.

    February 9, 2012

  • Corbett: Low taxes help generate jobs

    MILTON -- With a backdrop of Minuteman Environmental Services trucks and charts depicting state spending, Gov. Tom Corbett said Wednesday that his proposed fiscal 2012-13 budget is a realistic plan that will help create jobs while holding the line on spending.

    February 9, 2012

  • Viking Energy to close April 1

    NORTHUMBERLAND -- Unable to compete with the natural gas industry, the Viking Energy plant in Point Township will close April 1 and put 19 employees out of work. The news from the wood-fired power plant comes a week after officials at the coal-fired Sunbury Generation plant in Shamokin Dam announced it was temporarily laying off 63 employees for the same reason.

    February 9, 2012

The Daily Marquee
Local Video
Stocks
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.