Friday, October 18, 2013

"Breaking Bread, Building Bridges" October 29.

Gainesville's Interfaith Alliance for Immigrant Justice and Westminster Presbyterian Church will work together to introduce a new program to encourage dialogue about immigration issues in local faith communities.  Church members and student activists from IAIJ and CHISPAS will share their stories and talk about the pressing human need for comprehensive immigration reform.

The supper will begin at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday October 29 in the Community Building of Westminster Presbyterian Church, 1525 NW 34th Street, Gainesville, Florida.

Everyone is invited – please bring a dish to share. There will be a discussion on immigrant issues and sharing how our families immigrated to this country. Please contact the Westminster Church Office at 352-378-4032 or email gail.acree@wpcgainesville.org if you will be attending.

We hope this pilot project will be taken up by other faith communities in Gainesville and Alachua County.
Alachua County Migrants Share Their Stories in New Documentary Film First Screened October 1

"Siempre Adelante" a documentary film about recent immigrants in Alachua County, Florida had its world premiere at Pugh Hall on the University of Florida campus October 1.  Rev. Jaime Zelaya had the idea for a film that could be used in faith communities and other settings to help local residents better understand their new neighbors.  The Samuel Proctor Oral History Program at UF helped him bring the project to completion.
"Siempre Adelante" will be available for screening as copies were made for all IAIJ congregations.
CIW TRUTH TOUR OF SOUTHEAST BEGINS IN GAINESVILLE SEPTEMBER 22



                                        Candy Herrera and Marihelen Wheeler lead the march down NW 34th Street

We began with a rally at Westminster Presbyterian Church, where Rev. Larry Green is pastor.  Westminster youth led by Rev. Paige Porter-Buhl and United Church of Gainesville (UCC) led by Rev. Andy Bachmann made signs and banners. 


 We heard speakers challenge us to hear the Florida farm workers' cry for justice.

                                              Lupe Gonzalo and Oscar Otzoy from the Coalition of Immokalee Workers

                                                            Rev. Eve MacMaster of Emmanuel Mennonite Church 
                                                               Dr. Sam Trickey of National Farm Worker Ministry
                                       Father Les Singleton of the Episcopal Church of the Mediator, Micanopy, FL

A heavy rain doesn't stop youth


or age



from demonstrating for fair food at Publix



Monday, October 14, 2013

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers Appreciate Gainesville 

Tropical downpour only whets Fair Food activists’ appetite for action on big first day of Southeast tour…

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The Publix Truth Tour launched yesterday with a dramatic send-off from some of the CIW’s most stalwart allies in Gainesville. The partnership between Immokalee and Gainesville is so strong, in fact, that the day’s activities marked not only the beginning of the Truth Tour, but also the culmination of the city’s annual “CIW week,” a full seven days of local education, activities and action to call for fairness in the fields.
The Tour crew filed its report from the field early this morning, so here it is below, hot off the presses:
After spending the morning with the adult Sunday School class of Trinity United Methodist Church and the combined youth groups of United Church of Gainesville — followed by an official welcome to Gainesville with a thirty-person potluck hosted by the indefatigable Interfaith Alliance for Immigrant Justice at the Emmanuel Mennonite Church — the Fair Food community of Gainesville gathered for a press conference and march to a nearby Publix.
Eighty five supporters packed the foyer of Westminster Presbyterian Church as the CIW’s Lupe Gonzalo and Oscar Otzoy began by explaining what had propelled them to undertake this two-week tour. In a tone steadfast and resolute, Lupe underscored the power of the Fair Food Program in addressing the sexual harassment that has for decades been the “daily bread” of women in the fields. ”Women finally have an effective mechanism to report abuses without fear of retaliation,” she stressed. “But not only that, they can be assured that an assailant will be banned from the industry” — a dramatic departure from a culture long thought to be too deeply entrenched to uproot. This, she explained, is what Publix actively chooses to undermine.
Sam Trickey (below) of the National Farm Worker Ministry took the mic next, addressing the biblical passage, “the poor will always be with you.” The poor will be always with us, he explained, because it will always in someone’s short-term interest to exploit others. But over the long-term, the oppressor can never come out ahead, as their actions fly in the face of the “biblical witness of justice.”
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Next up was Father Les Singleton (below) of the Church of the Mediator, who brought with him a purchase he had just made at Publix: a bag of Publix Fair Trade coffee. Reading directly from the side of the bag, he let the hypocrisy of the written statement speak for itself: “Fair trade is only fair. Fair trade prices help small farmers provide employees with liveable wages and working conditions, which fosters the same values that we do: community, wellbeing and a nicer world.”
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And then, just as the press conference closed, the skies opened and a downpour commenced. But the now-100 gathered didn’t skip a beat, setting out toward Publix almost as though they hadn’t noticed the heavy rain. With a sizable contingent from UF’s CHISPAS leading chants, the intrepid marchers kept on for over a mile before arriving at the high-traffic Publix and forming their roving picket. Though colors of newly hand-painted signs bled together and t-shirts soaked through, not even the relentless showers could dampen the crew’s animo.
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In fact, resolve only intensified as a delegation of community leaders attempted to speak to Publix management and — in an even harsher than usual variation on the typical snub — management refused to allow even a single emissary to speak. Publix would only accept a letter, they said, knowing very well that a paper letter would have already been turned to pulp beneath the rain. According to a clergy member, they kept cutting off the community leaders and simply repeating, “Thank you for shopping at Publix.”
Upon returning, Rev. Larry Green of Westminster Presbyterian Church addressed the crowd and shared his exasperation with the management’s lack of respect for the delegation. ”They don’t appreciate us as individuals, they don’t appreciate you as workers, and I don’t think they deserve our money any longer.” Agreement rippled through the crowd.
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Lupe (below) brought the action to an end with a final appropriate chant: “Ni lluvia, ni viento, detendra este movemiento!” (Neither rain nor wind can deter our movement.)
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And as the day came to a close, Gainesville community members congratulated each other on a CIW Week well done and wished the Tour crew well on the rest of the two-week Publix Truth Tour.
You can watch a very nice local TV report on the protest here. And check back soon for the next update from the road, as the Publix Truth Tour hits Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill, North Carolina!

CIW TRUTH TOUR OF SOUTHEAST BEGINS IN GAINESVILLE SEPTEMBER 22



                                        Candy Herrera and Marihelen Wheeler lead the march down NW 34th Street

We began with a rally at Westminster Presbyterian Church, where Rev. Larry Green is pastor.  Westminster youth led by Rev. Paige Porter-Buhl and United Church of Gainesville (UCC) led by Rev. Andy Bachmann made signs and banners. 




 We heard speakers challenge us to hear the Florida farm workers' cry for justice.


                                              Lupe Gonzalo and Oscar Otzoy from the Coalition of Immokalee Workers


                                                            Rev. Eve MacMaster of Emmanuel Mennonite Church 
                                                               Dr. Sam Trickey of National Farm Worker Ministry
                                       Father Les Singleton of the Episcopal Church of the Mediator, Micanopy, FL

A heavy rain doesn't stop youth




or age





from demonstrating for fair food at Publix