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Politics : Middle East Politics -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: StormRider who wrote (2434)10/27/2002 1:27:56 PM
From: StormRider  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6945
 
Mix of Faiths Opposes War With Iraq
Coalition including Muslims, Christians and Jews calls attack immoral and
unwise.
By Larry B. Stammer
Times Staff Writer

October 26 2002

As the debate continues over the Bush administration's policy toward Iraq,
religious leaders -- at least those from the liberal end of the political
spectrum -- are stepping up their opposition.

Led by the Rev. George Regas of the Progressive Religious Partnership,
religious spokesmen in Los Angeles this week denounced the prospect of a
preemptive war against Iraq as "immoral, illegal and unwise."

"Rabbis, imams, priests, ministers and bishops -- a broad-based religious
coalition -- call on President Bush to meet the moral obligations as leader
of this nation under God," said Regas, rector emeritus of All Saints
Episcopal Church in Pasadena.

The religious opponents of Bush's policy list a host of secular reasons for
their position: Iraq has not declared war on the U.S.; there is no proven
connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda terrorists; a war would cost many
innocent lives. Rabbi Steven Jacobs of Temple Kol Tikvah in Woodland Hills
said an attack on Iraq would inflict "irreparable damage to Israel."

But their religious beliefs are more central to their motivation, the clergy
members said.

"This president and his advisors have been meditating on blood, and the
blast of war has been ringing in their ears," said Rabbi Leonard Beerman,
founding rabbi of Leo Baeck Temple in Los Angeles. "As religious leaders of
three faiths, we're here to attest that there is another way."

"I may be a liberal human being, but in faith, I'm very devoted. In some
ways I'm a conservative," said the Rt. Rev. J. Jon Bruno, Episcopal bishop
of Los Angeles. "This is not a political issue for us, but a faith issue.
This war would not be of God."

Not all religious figures would agree with that statement. Richard Land of
the Southern Baptist Convention is among several prominent Protestant
figures -- mostly political conservatives -- who have declared their support
for Bush's policies. So has the Rabbinical Council of America, a leading
Orthodox group. The Union of American Hebrew Congregations, an organization
of Reform synagogues, has conditionally supported Bush.

Maher Hathout, spokesman for the Islamic Center of Southern California, said
Thursday that he had hoped even more religious leaders would oppose a war on
Iraq. But in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the
patriotic fervor that followed, Hathout said it is difficult. "It's not only
a matter of conviction but a matter of courage," Hathout said.

It is a dilemma that especially confronts Muslims, said Nazir Khaja of the
Islamic Information Service in Los Angeles.

Mainline Christians are finding it hard to raise their voices as well, said
the Rev. Thomas C. Hill III, a ranking Southern California official of the
United Methodist Church.

"The religious community is opposed to a war with Iraq, but many of the
persons in our congregations want to be supportive of our nation," he said.
"So for many of us, the dilemma is how to be faithful to our God and at the
same time supportive of our nation. No one wants to appear anti-American, or
anti-Bush administration."
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at
latimes.com/archives. For information about reprinting this article, go to
www.lats.com/rights.