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January, 2005

Biggest Food Sort Ever Held on December 2

About 40 UUCCSM volunteers and friends (including many young people) sortingcans and packages of food on December 2 at the Westside Food Bank in Santa Monica,and breaking the all-time record. "This year you sorted a record 14,660 poundsof food in one evening," Bruce Rankin, Food Bank director, told them. "Thanksagain for the fabulous job you did, sorting the food that came in during thestart of our Holiday Food Drives. Over the past year our 65 member agencieshave seen a growing need for food assistance among the working poor familiesand individuals they serve. We greatly appreciate your efforts to help ensurethat those in need receive the food that is so vital to their existence." TheFood Bank distributed nearly four million pounds of food last year. Over 100,000people on the Westside, including 50,000 children, live in poverty, accordingto the Food Bank. Our church's Faith in Action Committee sponsors Food Sortsin December and June.

January, 2008

Opera Coming to UUCCSM

The Celestial Opera Company returns toUUCCSM this spring with a new production of"The Bartered Bride," a comic tale of love andtrickery by Bedfiich Smetana. The opera will beperformed in English. Watch for dates.

January, 2008

Faith In Action and the Peace & Civil Liberties Committee Event - Father Roy Bourgeois

Faith In Action and The Peace & Civil Liberties Committee present Father Roy Bourgeois, founder of the School of the Americas Watch. On Tuesday, January 8, come to see "The Struggle to Close the School of the Americas." Gather at 7 p.m. for the program, which starts at 7:30 p.m. Special guests are Theresa and Blase Bonpane, and Frank Dorrel, with music by Jose-Luis Orozco. There is a suggested donation of $10 at the door.

January, 2008

Faith In Action and the Peace & Civil LibertiesCommittee Event - Father Roy Bourgeois

Faith In Action and The Peace & Civil LibertiesCommittee present Father Roy Bourgeois,founder of the School of the Americas Watch. OnTuesday, January 8, come to see "The Struggle toClose the School of the Americas." Gather at7 p.m. for the program, which starts at 7:30 p.m.Special guests are Theresa and Blase Bonpane,and Frank Dorrel, with music by Jose-LuisOrozco. There is a suggested donation of $10 atthe door. For more information, call (310) 838-8131 or visit School of the Americas Watch athttp://www.soaw.org

SOAWatch is an independent organizationthat seeks to close the U.S. Army School of theAmericas, under whatever name it is called,through vigils and fasts, demonstrations andnonviolent protest, as well as media, and legislativework. On November 16, 1989, six Jesuitpriests, their co-worker, and her teenage daughterwere massacred in El Salvador. A U.S. CongressionalTask Force reported that those responsiblewere trained at the U.S. Army School of theAmericas (SOA) at Ft. Benning, Georgia. In 1990SOAWatch began in a tiny apartment outside themain gate of Ft. Benning. While starting with asmall group, SOAWatch quickly drew upon theknowledge and experience of many in the U.S.who had worked with the people of Latin Americain the 1970s and '80s.

Today, the SOAWatch movement is a large,diverse, grassroots movement rooted in solidaritywith the people of Latin America. The goal of SOAWatch is to close the SOA and to change U.S. foreignpolicy in Latin America by educating thepublic, lobbying Congress, and participating increative, nonviolent resistance. The Pentagon hasresponded to the growing movement and to Congress'near closure of the SOA with a PR campaignto give the SOA a new image. In an attemptto disassociate the school with its horrific past,the SOA was renamed the Western HemisphereInstitute for Security Cooperation in January of2001.

Attend this event on January 8 to learn moreabout the work of SOAWatch. Park for free in theUCLA garage on 16th Street.

January, 2009

The Louis Durra Trio forsakes its recent genre-hoppingexplorations to play a concert of straight-aheadjazz. Find out and hear what that sounds like. It'salways awesome. January 18, 7 p.m. in the sanctuary.Champagne reception follows. $10 suggested donation.

Watch out for the upcoming early choir Sunday. Ourdevoted choir members and section leaders will sing at9 a.m. instead of 11 a.m. and our 11a.m. crowd willhear our guest musician. The very first one of these for2009 will be 9 a.m., January 25.

The Music Committee is launching a new series ofevents coordinated by VictorWylie. Folks are invited tocome together and play music. No rehearsal required.This will occur four times a year. Two will be for popularmusic and two for the classical repertoire. All arewelcome. Our first event will be all kinds of popularmusic on February 8, 4

January, 2009

Faith in Action Town Hall
Peacemaking: A Draft Statement of Conscience

The invasion and occupation of Iraq is going on sixyears in 2009. President-elect Barak Obama has todecide on a strategy for Afghanistan. How do we asUUs feel about pacifism versus a "just" war? How dowe practice "just" peacemaking?

Attend the FIA Town Hall meeting on January 11 tocontribute your thoughts and vote on the followingstatement of conscience:

Do we, the UUCCSM, covenant to take up peacemakingas part of our mission through worship, religiouseducation, and social action?

Please take a look at the UUA's website for the completetext of the proposed draft statement:http://www.uua.org/socialjustice/issuesprocess/currentissues/peacemaking/121606.shtml

In order for Peacemaking: A Draft Statement of Conscience to appear on the General Assembly (GA) 2009agenda, a 25% quorum of congregations is required.That is, 25% of all certified congregations must participatein the Congregational Poll. Let us fully participatein our democratic process by having our congregationalvoice heard. Handouts on the proposed statementwill be provided at the meeting.

- Cathie Gentile

January, 2009

Faith in Action Town Hall
Peacemaking: A Draft Statement of Conscience

The invasion and occupation of Iraq is going on six years in 2009. President-elect Barak Obama has to decide on a strategy for Afghanistan. How do we as UUs feel about pacifism versus a "just" war? How do we practice "just" peacemaking?

Attend the FIA Town Hall meeting on January 11 to contribute your thoughts and vote on the following statement of conscience:

January, 2011

Singers Needed

A Celebration Choir will perform at Rev. Bijur’s installationservice on Sunday, February 13, at 3 p.m. Singersare invited to join members of the UUCCSM choir andthe choir of the Unitarian Universalist Church of LongBeach. Learn wonderful music and make a joyful noisecelebrating the installation of our ninth settled minister.Contact the church office to RSVP: e-mailoffice@uusm.org or speak to an office volunteer onSunday morning.

January, 2011

Santa Monica Martin Luther King Day Recognition

Santa Monica’s 26th annual Martin Luther King Jr.Day Celebration takes place on Monday, January 17.This is a multi-ethnic, interfaith program with featuredspeaker Val Zavala, Vice President of News and PublicAffairs at KCET; musical performances; and a scholarshippresentation that begins at 9 a.m. at the SGI-USAAuditorium at 525 Wilshire Blvd. in Santa Monica. Thetheme this year is “Democracy Is Not a Spectator Sport,We Must Act Now.” This program is followed by aCommunity Involvement Fair from 10:30 a.m. to noonat 606 Wilshire Blvd., with refreshments and informationaldisplays by a variety of community organizations.Free parking is available on 7th Street andWilshire (behind 7-Eleven store). We plan that nextyear our church will have a display, and encourage peopleto check out the event.

Margaret Rhoades

 

Undy Sundays are Here

Once again we seek to provide what the homeless ofSanta Monica don't get - new underwear. Every Sundayduring January there will be a collection bag nextto the usual collection box for the homeless. While wethank you for all the contributions you have made ofclothing, towels, blankets, and toiletries, most of usdon't contribute our used underwear, no matter howclean and usable. While various organizations provideshowers, it would really help people feel a little betterto have new underwear. We distribute men's, women'sand children's underwear, in all sizes. I thank you foryour help.

- Geralyn Lambson for FIA

 

UUCCSM to Host Peace Sunday January 30

Theme: The Cost of War; The Priceof PeacePeace

Sunday 2011 will take place in our sanctuaryfrom 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. January 30, with exhibits open inForbes Hall the hour before and the hour after. Alongwith dialogue and music, there will be a preview ofNorman Soloman's insightful film, "War Made Easy."

Peace Sunday is an annual event sponsored by InterfaithCommunities United for Justice and Peace(ICUJP), The Unity and Diversity Council (UDC), and,this year, our church's Faith in ActionCommission (FIA).

The Rev. Rebecca Benefiel Bijur willdeliver the invocation. Speakers includeStephen F. Rohde, chair ICUJP; RickRhoads, chair FIA; hostmusician/author Rev. Stephen LongfellowFiske; and Rev. Leland Stewart,UDC founder.

Participants will hear music by Rev.Fiske, Persian songstress Mitra Rahbar, gospel/spirit singer Crystal Davis, and Salvadore

January, 2011

Santa Monica Martin Luther King Day Recognition

Santa Monica’s 26th annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day Celebration takes place on Monday, January 17. This is a multi-ethnic, interfaith program with featured speaker Val Zavala, Vice President of News and Public Affairs at KCET; musical performances; and a scholarship presentation that begins at 9 a.m. at the SGI-USA Auditorium at 525 Wilshire Blvd. in Santa Monica. The theme this year is "Democracy Is Not a Spectator Sport, We Must Act Now." This program is followed by a Community Involvement Fair from 10:30 a.m.

January, 2013

Peace and Social Justice Committee: Review of 2012

In their meeting of December 9, the Multiracial Development and Peace and Social Justice committees decided to merge into a single committee, Peace and Social Justice (PSJ), a move that was prompted by the overlap in membership and shared interests of the two committees. The PSJ is one of several committees of the Faith in Action Commission, which also includes the Green Committee, the Hunger Task Force, and Interweave.

During 2012, the activities of the two committees that now compose the Peace and Social Justice committee were focused on four areas: 

Peace, including opposition to the war in Afghanistan and support for various initiatives on behalf of peace and alternatives to war. Among other activities, the PSJ holds bi-monthly peace vigils between 6 and 7 p.m. on the first and third Fridays of each month at the corner of Barrington and National. Members of PSJ also participated in the May Day Westside Caravan from Santa Monica, one of four caravans that paraded into downtown Los Angeles.

Anti-racism and promotion of racial and ethnic diversity. These themes have informed various activities, including the commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, the annual Seder, and the program of the Thanksgiving feast. During the spring the committee sponsored a book discussion based on Michelle Alexander’s “The New Jim Crow.” Members also participated in monthly meetings of the Santa Monica Committee for Racial Justice (initially formed in the aftermath of a racist event at Santa Monica High School), which has expanded its scope to oppose racism in various institutions.

Economic justice, with a particular emphasis on labor issues. The committee (as well as other members of UUCCSM) has supported various campaigns on behalf of workers’ efforts to organize and obtain fair wages and benefits. During 2012, PSJ continued its collaboration with Los Angeles Clergy and Laity United (CLUE) and other groups in the Clean Carwash Campaign in an effort to organize carwash facilities in the Los Angeles area, including Santa Monica. Members of UUCCSM have participated  in demonstrations, pickets, prayer vigils, and meetings with various carwash owners on behalf of car washers. In 2011, Bonus Carwash on Lincoln in
Santa Monica became the first U.S. carwash facility to recognize a union; subsequent activities have been
focused on the Santa Monica Carwash on Pico and 25th and the Millennium Carwash in Venice. Members
of the UUCCSM also spoke at a Santa Monica City Council meeting to urge the City to stop contracting with carwashes that violate labor laws. The Council agreed to strictly adhere to policies requiring those contracting with the city to respect the law, and stated that the City Attorney would investigate practices at carwashes in Santa Monica. 

PSJ has also supported organizing efforts of hotel workers. On March 20, members of the PSJ committee attended another Santa Monica City Council meeting with hotel workers regarding a living wage
and benefits provision in the Development Agency for a new hotel at 710 Wilshire Boulevard. While the
Council did not adopt the proposals as part of the Development Agency, pressures on the developers
resulted in their signing a card check agreement with UNITE-HERE for that hotel.

Immigration, particularly issues related to immigrant detention. PSJ members have protested “Secure Communities,” an initiative of Immigration Control and Enforcement (ICE) which requests that police officials send the fingerprints of those they pick up to ICE, which may then request that anyone suspected of being undocumented be held an additional 48 hours to enable ICE to check their status.

In September, three PSJ members joined five others in a visit sponsored by the Detention Watch Network (DWN) to the Theo Lacey prison in Orange County, a maximum security prison that in 2010 contracted with ICE to house approximately 430 immigrant detainees. The visit included a briefing by officials of the facility and ICE, a tour of the area where immigrant detainees are held, and interviews with some 130 detainees to assess their treatment. Detainees had numerous complaints, ranging from monotonous food to cases of verbal and even physical abuse. Many of the detainees are confronting indefinite stays, due to delays in hearings or lack of legal assistance. In its final report, the DWN listed Theo Lacey as one of twelve detention centers that should be closed down. The PSJ is currently looking into setting up a program of regular visits to immigrants in detention in collaboration with CIVIC, the Community Initiative for Visiting Immigrants in Confinement.

PSJ also worked with the UU Legislative Ministry to support the TRUST Act, a California legislative initiative that would require that police officials issue ICE detainers only for immigrants accused of serious or violent crimes. The initiative was passed by the California Assembly and Senate but was vetoed by Governor Jerry Brown, who said that he would revisit the initiative in order to correct some flaws.

In the meantime, Attorney General Kamala Harris issued a statement to the effect that ICE detainers are not mandatory; subsequently Sheriff Lee Baca concurred with this position, which L.A. Police Chief Charlie Beck has already agreed to. The California legislature is working on a revised version of the TRUST Act in the hope that it will meet Governor Brown’s requirements.

PSJ Events in 2012

January 8. UUCCSM program on U.S.- sponsored torture and solitary confinement (recognized as a form of torture by NRCAT), including a video, “Ending U.S.- Sponsored Torture Forever”; a speaker on the three-strikes law; and a report by a mother whose son was in solitary confinement at Pelican Bay.

January 15. The annual Martin Luther King service featured a presentation by Victoria Gray, the mother of a student who was the victim of a racist event at Santa Monica High School. We learned about the failure of the school authorities to report or even recognize the seriousness of the event. Victoria Gray is a leader of the Santa Monica Committee for Racial Justice which grew out of these events and meets monthly at the Church in Ocean Park.

January 16. The Multiracial Development Committee had a table at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Westside Coalition Community Celebration. Will Coley videotaped interviews with participants, which are posted on our
UUCCSM website.

April 14. We sponsored our second Seder this year, with a celebration of the deliverance of the Children of Israel from slavery and an emphasis on eliminating modern slavery.

April 18. UUA Pacific Southwest District Assembly, held at First Unitarian Church and attended by several members of PSJ, included an update on legislative initiatives and action; information on the Esperanza
Project, an initiative to provide legal assistance to detained immigrants; and information on the bail fund, which raises funds for detained immigrants eligible for bonding out.

June 20 to 24. Several members of the PSJ/MRDC as well as other members of UUCCSM, including four YRUU teenagers, participated in the UUA General Assembly in Arizona. The Assembly focused on immigration
issues, including the Arizona anti-immigrant law (SB 1070), and featured several workshops on how to combat
anti-immigrant legislation. Rick Rhoads of FIA participated in a panel “Partnering Congregations and Community Organizations” where he spoke of UUCCSM support for grocery workers during their strike in 2011 and ongoing collaboration with CLUE in organizing carwash workers. On Saturday night of GA, UUCCSM members participated with others in a demonstration in front of Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s Tent City, where undocumented immigrants are being held in horrendous conditions.

July. FIA sponsored the monthly art wall, “Put your faith in action,” which featured photographs and brief descriptions of events and activities sponsored by member committees.

September 29. In conjunction with efforts to organize carwash workers, the PSJ committee screened the film “Salt of the Earth,” which focuses on a 1951 miners’ strike in New Mexico; a discussion followed. Forty people attended, including six carwash workers.

October 13. A visit to the Great Wall of Los Angeles, a half-mile mural that documents the cultural and ethnic diversity of Los Angeles, was sponsored by the MRDC as a Dining for Dollars event for the third year in a row.

November 17. The PSJ presented the annual Thanksgiving Feast program, based on a service by the Rev. John F. Hayward. The program recognizes the efforts of those who have suffered persecution and oppression and have sought to find a place in American society, and gives thanks for the contributions of the diverse racial, ethnic, and cultural groups that have helped to build the country.

December 1. Presentation of the film “He Who Must Die,” based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, which focuses on plans of a Greek village for their annual Passion Play; their faith and humanity is tested when refugees from a neighboring village that has been destroyed solicit their help. 

The PSJ has collaborated with the UU  legislative Ministry of California (UULMCA) on various issues, including support for the TRUST Act, the Sustainable Communities campaign, and the Assembly Bill promoting the Human Right to Water. In 2012 the UULMCA organized its activities into a series of clusters; UUCCSM is a member of the cluster which also includes First Church and Pacific Unitarian Church. The PSJ has also supported other initiatives, such as efforts of the California Nurses’ Association to obtain Medicare for All for the State of California (formerly passed by the California legislature but vetoed by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger); the anti-death penalty ballot initiative (Proposition 34); and efforts of NRCAT to end torture and solitary confinement, which are currently focused on efforts to close Guantanamo, eliminate indefinite detention, and ratify the Optional Protocol to the Convention Against Torture.

Upcoming PSJ Events

January 6, 13; February 3, 10. Book discussion of Michelle Alexander’s “The New Jim Crow,” the UUA Common Read for 2012-13.

January 19. Martin Luther King, Jr. Westside Coalition Celebration. PSJ will again have a table at the event.

January 20. Commemoration of Martin Luther King, Jr., at Sunday service.

February 10 (tentative date). FIA crafts fair fundraising event. The next meeting of the Peace and Social Justice committee will take place on Sunday, January 20, at 12:30 p.m. Please join us.

Nora Hamilton

January, 8, 2008

NOTE: This agenda reflects items to be considered at a regular meeting of the Board of Directors. Additional items of new business may be added at the board meeting. An updated agenda is available from the Church Office on the day of the board meeting.

1. Check-in [6:30 p.m.]

2. Call to order & identification of new business items: [6:45 p.m.]

3. Discussion and approval of minutes: Dayla McDonald