A celebration of Interfaith Iftar meals this Ramadan

During this holy month of Ramadan, we have witnessed the love and hospitality of the Muslim community across Cape Town, who have opened their doors and dinner tables to host non-muslim friends for Iftar, the evening meal that breaks the day’s fast. These dinners have been opportunities for connecting, sharing and learning about our different traditions, and particularly the significance of Ramadan.

As Stuart Diamond, Director of the Cape SA Jewish Board of Deputies and CTII Board Member said, speaking at the Turquoise Harmony Institute’s annual Friendship and Dialogue Iftar on the 28th May,

“When we share bread and break bread, and we start to speak as people, over something as simple as food, we break down the boundaries and the walls that keep us apart” 

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Here we have a collection of photographs from various Interfaith Iftar meals hosted during this holy month.

Berry Behr and Mary Frost join members of the Turquoise Harmony Institute for the Home Iftar
Berry Behr and Mary Frost join members of the Turquoise Harmony Institute for the Home Iftar
Interfaith Iftar at the Ahlul Bait Islamic Centre, 19th May.
Interfaith Iftar at the Ahlul Bait Islamic Centre, 19th May.
A special interfaith young women's Iftar with students from the THI Star College student house
A special young women’s Iftar with students from the THI Star College student house 
The Unitarian Church opens their doors to an Iftar meal
The Unitarian Church opens their doors to an Iftar meal
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The NGK in town, also hosted an Iftar Dinner 
A huge turn out for the Shabbat Chessed Ramadan Iftar at Temple Israel in Wynberg
A wonderful turn out for the Shabbat Chessed Ramadan Iftar at Temple Israel in Wynberg

Receiving the WIHW Prize in Jordan

 

Group with King WIHW

The unexpected blessing of winning the 2019 HM King Abdullah II prize for our work during the UN World Interfaith Harmony Week will help us to amplify the message of Interfaith Harmony in the world and will give us a platform for meaningful partnership on so many levels with those who work equally hard for the common purpose of peace on Earth.

Our Chairperson, Berry Behr, and the founder of Faith Hope Love Communities of Elsie’s River, James Ellman, travelled to Jordan to accept the prize. James is also a founding member of Cape Town Interfaith Initiative and is a current member of our Advisory Council.

Prayers for the City was started by Cape Town Interfaith Initiative some years ago, and in 2015 was anchored on the first Sunday in February by then Chairman Rev Gordon Oliver, in order to bring it into line with World Interfaith Harmony Week.

This year, instead of holding the Prayers in the City Centre we decided at the invitation of Faith Hope Love Communities to take the Prayers to the people. We chose a site in Elsie’s River that had been recently reclaimed by the community after it had become a crime hotspot. We walked from the Mosque to the site, symbolically supporting the people of Elsie’s River in their bid to take back their streets, and to bless the land that had been reclaimed. It was a humble event, held under a cloudy Cape Town sky, and we never for a moment expected it to receive such wonderful international attention.

The trip to Jordan was extraordinary.

For both Berry and James, spending Holy Week in the Holy Land was beyond anything we could have imagined. Every person we met was a gift, every new day was an anointing. There were so many moments of pure reverence, such as standing at the Citadel on top of one of Amman’s seven hills, listening to the call to prayer reverberate around the city. We felt as if we could almost touch the collective prayers rising up from the city of Amman, to heaven. How appropriate, seeing as the event that won us the prize was entitled Love of the neighbour – Our Prayers for our city. We visited the sacred site of the Baptism of Jesus, and the cave in which John the Baptist lived… We went to Petra, the legendary city carved into the pink sandstone rock and home to a series of powerful civilisations in its 3000 year history.

And then, of course, we went to the Palace. His Majesty was a warm and gracious host, encouraging us to continue our work and to keep talking about the message of interfaith harmony and its importance in the world today.

We returned home inspired, motivated and determined to redouble our efforts. Our earnest prayer is that we will be able to use our voice and our prize to create a sustainable platform for our own continued interfaith mission, and also that we will be able to encourage the many, many other grassroots organisations in our region to keep up their amazing, heart-centred work.

An Experience of Lifetime

In Cape Town, Prayers for the City Leads to 1st Place Recognition for UN World Interfaith Harmony Week – Parliament of the World’s Religions, Blog, 22 April 2019

Elsie’s River Man wins royal peace prize – Cape Argus, 7 May 2019

Winners’ Speech at World Interfaith Harmony Prize Giving Ceremony

 

CTII AGM 2019

The CTII Annual General Meeting was held on the 15th May 2019,at the Cape Town Unitarian Church in Cape Town. To open the occasion, interfaith prayers were shared by different members of the community. This was followed by a special presentation from Berry and James about their experience in Jordan, where they represented CTII and Faith Hope Love Communities to receive the first prize for World Interfaith Harmony Week, from the King of Jordan himself. (Read more about this experience here)

Berry Behr then presented the Chairperson’s Report, followed by the Financial Report, presented by CTII Treasurer Mark Bind. Read the Chairperson’s Report here – Chairperson’s Report 2018-2019 (Final Version)

We were also blessed with a musical performance by Nic, Anne and Ruby Paton, in collaboration with Nur Felix.

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We closed the evening with a sacred water ceremony, merging together water from the River Jordan, which Berry and James had brought back from their World Interfaith Harmony Week Prize ceremony, with water from Zeekoevlei, one of Cape Town’s nature reserves. Members of the CTII community were invited up to connect these two bodies of water both physically and spiritually, marking the significant connection of building peace across the world.

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We are very pleased to announce our new Executive Board members for the year. Berry Behr, Sarah Oliver and Kirtanya Lutchminarayan, who have all already served one year on the Board, will be joined by Uzair Ben Ebrahim and Stuart Diamond. Photographed below, from left to right, is Sarah, Berry, Kirtanya and Uzair.

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Thank you to all who attended, and contributed in celebrating a successful year with CTII. 

The Radiant Current of Interfaith – Interfaith Indaba 2019

In Collaboration with Novalis Ubuntu Institute, The Gatehouse Community and URI, we co-hosted a highly successful Interfaith Indaba from 26-28 April.

The three day bonanza started with a workshop at which David Karchere, Spiritual Director of Emissaries of Divine Light, shared some of the teachings expressed in his recently published book, Becoming a Sun. The morning session was followed by an Intergenerational workshop facilitated by Sarah Oliver and Uzair Ben Ebrahim, during which we engaged with learners from New Eisleben School in Crossroads received insights into how young people experience the concept of Freedom. We looked at how perceptions and ideas have changed over the years since the euphoria and hopes of 1994.

Exploring our understandings of freedom, through creativity and intergenerational dialogue
Exploring our understandings of freedom, through creativity and intergenerational dialogue
Playing interfaith bingo!
Playing interfaith bingo!

Our Freedom Day Bus Tour took our intergenerational group to Tana Baru, the Slave Lodge, Groote Kerk and finally, to the Planetarium where we watched an amazing presentation on the role of the Sun in  caring for our planet.

Mohammad Groenewald briefing the group at the entrance of Tanu Baru
Mohammad Groenewald briefing the group at the entrance of Tanu Baru
Visiting the Groote Kerk
Visiting the Groote Kerk
Students from the MSYIIP joined in the fun for the Freedom Day Bus Tour
Students from the MSYIIP joined in the fun for the Freedom Day Bus Tour

The Interfaith Indaba concluded on Sunday 28 April with Sacred Connections. Novalis Ubuntu hosted it this time and between Anne-Lise Bure and Howard Goodman an enriching programme was presented. We were treated to a Hawaian dance, Khoi San poetry, drumming and musical gifting from Nic Paton and friends. Berry Behr and David Karchere shared messages from their heart… concluding that Interfaith as a movement has the power to save all our religions by creating a safe space where we watch out for each other.

The Role of Religion in Developing a Nation

A speech for the Ahmadiyya Conference at Chrysalis Academy, Tokai – Saturday 13 April 2019

Murrabi, honoured guests and friends in Interfaith Assalamu alaykum, I greet you in the name of all that is Good and True and Holy. Thank you for giving us this opportunity to share our hearts.

South Africa, the rainbow nation, is a place of rich diversity. We have so much of it, from our varied
landscapes to our animal life to our beaches, our seasons, our food. And our people.

We speak about Diversity as something we have. As if it were a thing you could put in a wheelbarrow
or an illness that could be cured. It’s a thing that politicians say they do; but we have learned that
sometimes what people say, and what they do and what they think they do, are three different
things. Our Nation is particularly Diverse, which is why Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu called it
the Rainbow Nation. The most diverse garden is often the most beautiful, so our diversity is a good
thing.

But on the other hand, we also have this thing called Religion. Very often, our religion informs our
idea of what diversity is and how we should do it. We can become quite defensive around our
religions and we tend to stick with like minded people. It becomes a very important part of our identity.

Politicians like Religion when it wins them votes.

But the same Religion that was their friend in voting season becomes the enemy of the politician
when it stands up and calls out our elected leaders for behaviour that is not compatible with the
morals and values taught in all of our Sacred Texts.

And so Religion, by which we mean those who practice it in all its many sacred forms, needs to be
very careful to maintain its integrity, its independence and its clarity. Religion can easily be
manipulated by those who would like to use it for their own ends. We do not have to look too far
into the past for a prime example. White Afrikaaners used their Religion to justify their domination
and subversion of other races in Apartheid South Africa and the truly sad thing is that many
followers believed the lie with every fibre of their being. For them, it was a truth. And that is how far
they were from the truth, that they could not even recognise its face. Ours is not the only example
of an ideology gone rogue and carrying an entire people with it. Every nation that has experienced
genocide can say the same – we look at Nazi Germany, we look at America, Australia. There are so
many others.

And all of them believed they could justify their inhuman behaviour because they were building a
nation and God was on their side. And so religion was the foundational theology of this kind of
nation building.

How on earth are we going to put that right and create a new paradigm? Barbara Marx Hubbard
who passed to Spirit this week spent years teaching about the New World and the New Humanity
that needed to be birthed out of the pain of the past. I wonder what that could look like? It is up to
us to start to create something new, not only for our children but for our own sakes.

I have heard it said again and again that politics and religion do not mix. But nobody has ever told
me how to separate them. While human politicians serve a human proletariate, separation of the two seems impossible. Some years ago, ANC politician Pallo Jordan was quoted in the Sunday Times
as saying that he saw no value in spiritual leadership. The issue at hand was the denial of a visa to
the Dalai Lama, who wanted to visit Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu for his 80 th Birthday. It was
one of the saddest statements I had ever read and I was afraid then that our leadership had become
spiritually bankrupt.

Just last month my faith in a system of aligned political and spiritual leadership was restored when
we watched with the rest of the world as NZ Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern fearlessly showed us
how it is done.

And that is how we will do it.

The nation that we are building now cannot be built on the tears and blood and broken hearts of any
part of us. We are one nation. All people here belong to this nation – and that includes those who
have taken shelter within our borders when they found themselves unsafe within their own. All life
here belongs to this nation. That includes our mountains and rivers, our beaches, our wildlife from
lions to crayfish. They do not belong to us, they are part of us. They are us.

Nation building demands that we look to who we are, who we want to be and to what it is that we
want. We look to our sacred texts to inform us, but we know in our hearts what is right.
How do we express the very best of our religious spirit in the building of our nation? A nation is
always a work in progress, it is never a done thing. I am so grateful for new, clear religious leaders
like Rev Riaan De Villiers of Groote Kerk who not only has the moral courage to stand up for an
inclusive way of thinking and being, but also has the clarity to stand firm and guide his congregation
into a new world. This is where political and spiritual leadership are showing up in our country and it
is powerful! It asks only: Where is the Love, and then it is completely loyal to the answer.
Religion has often, in the past, been practiced in communities away from the prying eyes of other
communities. We have been a mystery to each other, and we all know that mystery can breed
amazing urban tales because the human imagination has space, in a place of not knowing, to really
be very creative.

Our greatest asset, in this world, is each other. Let us make friends, let us meet each other and share
our joys and our challenges in our lives and in our traditions. Religion is not easy. It sometimes has
rough edges that challenge us in our changing times. Our work is to keep it relevant and alive and
dynamic so that these are the courageous, lion hearted attributes we bring to our nation. Our
religion informs everything we do and everything we are, not only in the sanctuary of our mosques
and temples but also in our schools and in our parks and in our places of work.

Our religion is not only about us, in our specific communities. It is about us, all of us, in the broader
sense and I urge you with all my heart to guard it carefully so that it may remain a positive and
bright, illuminating force of compassion and unity and never a dark and heavy force of repression.
Let us be true to our religions, our God, our hearts and let us never allow the curse of unnatural
separation to push us apart from each other and allow one to cause pain to any other. And when we
are in doubt, let us simply ask: “Where is the Love?”

I end with this prayer which was created by Alice Bailey in the mid 1930’s, but which seems so
relevant today:

The Great Invocation

From the point of Light within the Mind of God
Let light stream forth into the minds of men.
Let Light descend on Earth.
From the point of Love within the Heart of God
Let love stream forth into the hearts of men.
May The One return to Earth.
From the centre where the Will of God is known
Let purpose guide the little wills of men –
The purpose which the Masters know and serve.
From the centre which we call the race of men
Let the Plan of Love and Light work out
And may it seal the door where evil dwells.
Let Light and Love and Power restore the Plan on Earth

Berry
April 2019