Four-Thousand Gather for NCC Get Out the Vote Effort
Faith communities work against hunger, poverty and economic justice
More than 4,000 people from across the states gathered in Columbia, S.C., for the National Council of Churches sponsored effort end poverty, Jan. 30-31. Grassroots and faith-based groups partook in a face-to-face forum between poverty families and a half-dozen of the presidential candidates. Other events included a worship service featuring interfaith testimonies by people working to end poverty, a passive get-out-the-vote effort in Columbia and a day-long NCC planning meeting to organize the faith communitys work against hunger, poverty and economic justice.
The following are the specifics on the events as posted by the NCC website:
Jan. 30: People's Agenda for Economic Justice, Featuring Dialogue with Presidential Candidates.
An 8:30 a.m. march from the Adams Mark Hotel, 1200 Hampton St., to The Township Auditorium, 1803 Taylor St., will kick off the morning's activities. Grassroots and faith-based groups will carry banners and signs. R&B artist Will Downing and screenwriter James Kearns are confirmed to be among the national and local celebrities and officials who will open the forum -- fully expected to overflow the 3,200-seat auditorium, organizers said. Admission is free, but please note: this is a ticketed event, and most tickets are committed. (More information: 212-870-2298.)
Beginning at 11 a.m., nationally syndicated radio personality Tom Joyner will moderate the "Presidential Dialogue with America's Working Families," during which people living in poverty will share their stories and post questions one on one to candidates, marking the first time a dialogue with the candidates will be held directly with working poor people. All the Democratic candidates for President are expected; President Bush has been invited but has not yet replied. Candidates will be challenged to place issues of poverty and economic justice high on their campaign agendas.
The candidates' forum is sponsored by the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Community Change, a national nonprofit organization that provides technical assistance, training and policy support to low-income community groups. The National Council of Churches (the nation's leading ecumenical organization, whose 36 member denominations count 50 million adherents in 140,000 local congregations nationwide) and other bodies are participating in the forum.
The Center for Community Change reports that the "Presidential Dialogue with America's Working Families" will be aired live on the Columbia, S.C., NBC-TV affiliate, WIS-TV, which reaches 70 percent of the state. SCE-TV's digital subscribers also will be able to watch live; SCE-TV also plans to tape the dialogue for later airing, as does C-SPAN. MSNBC.com is planning to Webcast segments.
Jan. 30: "Get on the Bus and Get Out the Vote" Effort.
Friday afternoon (12:30 to 4 p.m.) will feature a massive get-out-the-vote effort in Columbia, S.C., and beyond. Volunteers will go door to door and to high-traffic areas, staff phone banks and participate in issue forums, then regroup around 4 p.m. at the Adams Mark Hotel for debriefing.
Jan. 30: Interfaith Worship Service, 7:30 p.m., Washington Street United Methodist Church
At 7 p.m., religious leaders in liturgical attire will gather at the Adams Mark Hotel and lead a procession to Washington Street United Methodist Church, 1401 Washington St., for an interfaith worship service focused on poverty and economic justice. The 7:30 p.m. service will feature participation by several religious traditions, including Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist and Unitarian, with readings, liturgy and prayers from their traditions on economic justice. The Rev. Daryl Jackson of Bibleway Church will preach. Special music will be offered by the Benedict College Choir and by social activist and performer Si Kahn from North Carolina. The service will include testimonies by people of faith living in poverty -- and working to end it.
The service is sponsored by the National Council of Churches and being planned in collaboration with local groups. Said the Rev. Paul Sherry, Coordinator of the NCC's Poverty Mobilization, "What we hope to do is demonstrate the deep commitment within the major faiths for economic justice and for ending poverty in this land -- in other words, to demonstrate the spiritual basis for working to end poverty. You can't be a committed person of faith and not be committed to ending poverty and working for economic justice. Spirituality without this commitment is a weak spirituality."
Jan. 31: Day-Long Meeting to Plan Faith Community Follow Up Against Poverty.
From 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Adams Mark Hotel, at least 80-100 people will meet for "Faith Mobilization Against Poverty," to plan future work to end hunger, poverty and economic injustice in the United States. The meeting is being planned by the National Council of Churches Mobilization to Overcome Poverty and the Center for Community Change.
The opening will be followed by a panel conversation moderated by the Rev. Sherry on "why we are losing on issues of poverty, how to reclaim the moral ground on issues of poverty and how our faith demands that we engage these issues." There will be specific presentations on voter education and registration, state tax and budget fairness, living and minimum wages and more. The Rev. Sherry will lead the concluding discussion (1:40 to 2:40 p.m.) on "Where do we go from here? The role of the National Council of Churches and its Poverty Mobilization." The meeting will conclude with worship.