The Unitarian
Church in Westport serves as a beacon of justice in and beyond our community.
Founded in 2005, The Social Justice Council with the Social Justice Director
leads the congregation’s efforts and provides assistance to our social action
committees.
Time sensitive,
effective volunteer opportunities exist for those interested in advocating,
educating, organizing, serving and witnessing for social justice. All are
welcome.
FAITH in
ACTION: Social Justice e-mail
The best way to
stay “connected” with our Social Justice activities is to join our e-mail list, a
weekly posting of programs, events, films, advocacy, action alerts, committee
meetings, and other announcements. To join please contact David Vita, Director of Social Justice, or 203.227.7205 x14.
SOCIAL ACTION COMMITTEES
Beardsley School Committee: Contact Mary Beth Mollica - .
In the year 2000, our congregation voted
to adopt this struggling inner-city school in Bridgeport, CT. Since then,
church members have supported the staff and students of Beardsley Elementary
School through volunteer work and financial donations for special projects and
urgent needs. Most importantly, our volunteers become mentors, tutors and readers
for grades K-6. Over the past 9 years, our congregation has provided bi-annual
Read Aloud Days, opera and theater, job coaching, financial seminars, art, book
clubs, myriad school and teacher supplies, winter coats, backpacks, clothing,
many new and used books, scholarships, swimming lessons, musical instruments,
anti-violence training, Principal for a Day, speakers, participation in work
days, an annual Pot Luck Supper and a Teacher Appreciation Lunch.
Committee to
End the Death Penalty: Contact:
Marjolijn de Jager -
or Sunny Khadjavi - .
Legislation was passed in the 2009 Connecticut General Assembly
to abolish the death penalty in Connecticut. The Governor vetoed the bill and there weren’t enough votes
to override. Legislation will come
up again in 2011 so we’re embarked on an educational campaign- films, speakers,
reading groups, dramatic reading, and more-- to mobilize our congregation in
2011. We’re also coordinating with
other local and state-wide organizations. Execute Justice, Not People!
Environmental
Action Group / Green Sanctuary: Contact: Monique Bosch - .
In support of our 7th Universalist Principle, “to Honor
the Interdependent Web of All Existence” The Green Sanctuary Committee, after 4 years of work, acquired Green
Sanctuary status for our congregation in 2009. At that point the committee changed its name to the
Environmental Action Group.
Some of our environmental successes
include: establishment of a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture), a yearly
Earth Day Service, signing up 105 families within the congregation for “clean
energy”, an Inter-Religious Earth Day, active involvement in environmental
justice legislation in Hartford and banning the use of plastic bags in
Westport, and eliminating the use of paper and plastic dishes, cups, glasses,
cutlery from our kitchen.
The committee has also organized events
involving expert speakers, film showings, “healthy food” potluck dinners at the
church, and environmental programming for our children in Religious Education.
We work with GVI (Green Village Initiative), the Interreligious
Eco-Justice Network (Hartford), the Environmental Justice Coalition
(Bridgeport), and other local and state-wide organizations.
This
year we hope to create our own edible garden on the church grounds. This garden will be incorporated in the
Religious Education program for children to learn about growing food, nurturing
plants and sharing nature’s bounty.
Overall there is plenty of work still to do, and we can always use new
members. It’s good to see the
amount of activity generated from our small groups and heartening to see the
changes that have taken place. Won’t you join us?
Health Care
Task Force: Contact: Peter McKnight - .
The
Healthcare Task Force works to advocate for health care legislation in
Connecticut and on the federal level. We successfully worked to pass legislation (2009) in Hartford for a plan
to expand health care coverage, SustiNet, to all Connecticut citizens. We are now involved with fleshing out the
SustiNet Plan, passing a federal universal health care plan, and passing Paid
Sick Day legislation in the current Connecticut General Assembly.
The
Health Care Task Force is about advocacy. About educating our congregation and our community about health care
issues, about the legislation, and about how we can urge our elected
representatives to cast votes that reflect our values. We also work in coalition with other
local and statewide organizations. We meet monthly.
Interfaith Sacred Activism
/ The Peace Labyrinth and the Dances of Universal Peace: Contact: Marjorie Partch - .
We offer
chants, dances, and labyrinths, uniting people to promote peace around the world.
The
Peace Labyrinth - Unlike a maze,
which is designed to confuse the walker, the labyrinth's single,
spiral pathway leads us inevitably to our own Center, to a place of deep Inner
Peace and Communion with the Divine. Many people receive profound insights
about their life's journeys as they traverse the labyrinth's twists and turns,
in what can be a "full-body metaphor" experience.
The
Dances of Universal Peace come out of the Sufi tradition, which is the
mystical branch of Islam. However, they embrace all faiths and cultures
around the world. When he founded the dances 40 years ago, Samuel Lewis
(an American Sufi who came from a Jewish background) reasoned that when
people hold hands, sing and dance to one another's sacred chants and
prayers, we simply cannot go on being enemies. These special dances are now
practiced around the world by people of all faiths, even in Israel-Palestine,
where interfaith groups use them as part of their work for peace. It is in this
spirit that the Unitarian Church in Westport is offering this peaceful
"meditation in motion" to the Interfaith Community of Fairfield
County, as a program in its Social Justice work.
Join
us on the quarterly Solstices, Equinoxes, and other occasions.
KIVA Microfinance
Committee: Contact: Michael Cadden - or Julie Kennedy - .
The
Microfinance Committee lends funds to entrepreneurs in developing nations
through a web-based organization called KIVA. On their website, the founders of KIVA describe the service
as, “the world's first person-to-person micro-lending website, empowering
individuals to lend to unique entrepreneurs around the globe.” Its mission is “to connect people
through lending for the sake of alleviating poverty.”
The
loans made through KIVA are uniquely risk-free and transparent. We can track exactly who receives our
loans, what they are doing with the funding, and when they pay it back. The KIVA website deducts no fees so all
loans have 100% pass-through to recipients, whose repayment rates are
exceptionally high, averaging 98%.
You can join the UU Westport KIVA
lending team by going to the website: kiva.org. Once you are on the site, select the
“Community” box then enter “Westport” in the box entitled “Search for a lending
team”. The site will then prompt
you to request to join the “KIVA/Social Justice Council--Unitarian Church in Westport CT”. From
there, you can make donations as part of our team. Alternatively, you can make funds available to the committee
to lend for you. You may also want
to join the KIVA Committee, which meets on the first Tuesday each month, and help
us raise and distribute funds.
The
Racial Justice Committee plans and implements initiatives to make the Unitarian
Church in Westport more welcoming to people of all races.
Members
of the committee prepare and present a special service for Martin Luther King
Sunday and help to expand the congregation’s awareness of the real and harmful
effects of racism through ongoing reading and discussion groups, film showings,
and speakers. We are also
connecting with community groups working on racial justice.
For
starters, please join our e-mail list and we’ll keep you updated on area
events, book discussions, and other awareness raising projects.
Rainbow Task Force: Contact: David Vita - or 203.227.7205 x14.
The Rainbow Task Force was formed in
1990, to establish our congregation as an actively welcoming place for gay,
lesbian, bisexual and trans-gendered (GLBT) people. We became a Welcoming
Congregation in 1994 and serve Fairfield County as a voice of fairness for all
people and a force against discrimination based on gender orientation.
The Task Force has organized the
congregation to advocate for marriage equality in Connecticut and has hosted activities
and events, including concerts, Fairfield County Gay Pride and political
conversations on issues such as gay marriage and civil rights for gays and
lesbians, often working in conjunction with Love Makes a Family, Parents and
Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG), and other local groups.
United Nations
Committee: Contact: David Vita - or 203.227.7205 x14.
The
United Nations Committee supports the work of the Unitarian Universalist United
Nations Office (UU-UNO) in educating
UUs about the structure, function, and actions of the United Nations. We attend briefings at the United
Nations, participate in the Annual Intergenerational Spring Seminar, promote
membership in the UU-UNO, and organize a yearly UN Sunday Service. We also take up UU-UNO initiatives like
Every Child is Our Child and opposing the genocide in Darfur.
Every Child
is Our Child: Contact: Stephen
Axthelm - .
Every Child is Our Child educates children in Ghana who have lost one or
both parents to AIDS. The program operates through a UU-UNO partnership with a local
community organization, the Queen Mother’s
Organization. Our Youth Group is connecting with children
there to share life’s experiences, hopes and dreams.
Volunteer
to help raise funds and form relationships between our sponsored children in the Manya Krobo area of Ghana and our own
youth.
Or you can donate
funds - $80 provides support for a one-year education for
one child while $800 provides a complete 10-year basic education for a child. In addition, students and their foster
families receive free healthcare.
Darfur: Contact: Jocelyn Keith - .
Raises
awareness in our local communities, puts pressure on the U.S. and Sudanese
government to end the atrocities and, funds support for the refugees.
You
can volunteer to participate in demonstrations, rallies and “teach-ins” as partof the “Save Darfur” coalition, contact
US and state legislators to demand mandatory
UN peacekeeping forces in Darfur and the divestment of funds from companies
that work with the Sudanese regime.
Raise funds for “solar cookers” to
provide safe food preparation in refugee camps.
Westbridge is a friendly coalition of six local churches and synagogues that repair and renovate homes and community buildings for families and organizations that cannot afford to or are otherwise incapable of having the work done. We work with ReBuilding Together in this effort to maintain existing housing.
Volunteers, teenagers and adults, no matter what skill level, are welcome. We have skilled crafts people who are excellent teachers. You’re guaranteed to leave knowing more than when you started. We primarily work on Saturdays.
We can always use your help in construction, family and beneficiary selection, telephone and e-mail communication, photography, and fundraising. Or you can donate materials (or money to by them) including windows, doors, insulation, programmable thermostats, grab rails, paint, CFL light bulbs, lumber, plumbing and electrical supplies.
Youth Outreach: Contact: Jamie Forbes - or 203.227.7205 x22.
The Religious
Education Program at The Unitarian Church in Westport supports social justice
initiatives for youth, including maintaining homes of neighbors in need;
working on community gardens in Bridgeport; participating in an annual
multigenerational service trip (New Orleans for Gulf Coast relief, program for
the homeless and hungry in Washington DC) cleaning up Long Island Sound,
toiletry kits for shelters, and much more. Youth Outreach supports these
initiatives through Sunday Soup Lunch sales and other fundraisers.
ADDITIONAL PROGRAMS: Please contact
David Vita - or 203.227.7205 x14 if you’re interested in more information regarding these
programs.
Cell Phone Recycling: Everyonewho has a cell phone eventually gets a new one. Why not recycle your old phone and
generate income for our youth social action programs?
Connecticut Food Bank: We
collect food every Sunday for the Connecticut Food Bank, over 3,000 pounds last
year.
REEL Justice Film series: The REEL Justice Film Series began in December, 2007 and continues
to offer thought provoking, award-winning feature, foreign, indy, and
documentary social justice films every month. The films are often connected with the work of our social
action committees.
Share the Plate: The
first Sunday of the month we split our collection plate with a local social
service organization. What could
be better than selecting a local community organization that is the recipient
of funds that literally “drop from the sky?”
Covenant for Care: Covenant to Care for Children’s ‘Adopt a Social Worker
Program’ matches our congregation with a child protection social worker.
The purpose is to assist that social worker in providing for the unmet needs of
abused, neglected, and severely impoverished children in the local community.
The social workers who opt for this program do so on a volunteer basis, above
and beyond their job requirements. This is a unique opportunity to donate goods and services without being
asked for cash contributions.
Homes with Hope: Monthly
food preparation for the Homes with Hope soup kitchen.
Project ReEntry: November/December toy and clothing collection for
children of inmates.
Unitarian
Universalist Service Committee: Started
in 1939 to help rescue victims of Nazi oppression, the Unitarian Universalist
Service Committee (UUSC) (www.uusc.org) continues
to work for human rights and social justice throughout the world by protecting
civil liberties and democratic processes, defending the rights of vulnerable
people affected by disasters; protecting the right to safe, affordable drinking
water and advancing workers’ rights, including the right to a living wage.