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Faith leaders urge White House to work toward peace in Sudan.

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  • Faith leaders urge White House to work toward peace in Sudan.

    Jewish Telegraphic Agency

    Faith leaders urge White House to work toward peace in Sudan.

    By Eric Fingerhut · October 2, 2009

    American Jewish World Service president Ruth Messinger was among 14
    faith community leaders who met with White House Office of Faith-Based
    and Neighborhood Partnerships director Joshua DuBois on Friday to urge
    the Obama administration to continue to work hard for peace in
    Sudan. They presented a letter, which can be read here, which asks the
    White House to ask the administration to work with multilateral
    coalitions "to help bring a sustainable peace agreement that will
    restore security and allow the Darfuri people to freely return to
    their homes and rebuild their lives" and urges the White House to
    ensure that "all aspects" of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement
    "are fully implemented to help achieve a just and lasting peace." It
    also urges the administration to play a role in making sure that the
    2006 agreement in Eastern Sudan is upheld.

    There has been some controversy over the administration's Sudan policy
    -- envoy J. Scott Gration had indicated he would support a policy of
    engagement and possibly even normalized relations with the Sudanese
    government, while Darfur advocates have called him naive and the White
    House has said Gration's remarks are being misinterpreted -- but on a
    conference call, Messinger said the meeting Friday focused on the
    overall goal of achieving comprehensive peace in Sudan and did not
    deal with specific strategies. The White House is scheduled to reveal
    more details on their policy in the region in the coming days.

    Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism director Rabbi David
    Saperstein was originally scheduled to be part of the group but could
    not attend.

    After the jump, the press release from the Interfaith Sudan Working
    Group and Save Darfur Coaltion:

    Today, representatives from faith communities nationwide met with
    Reverend Joshua DuBois, Director of the White House Office of Faith
    Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, to discuss the ongoing vi
    e leaders are members of the Interfaith Sudan Working Group, a
    coalition of faith-based organizations working for lasting peace in
    Sudan. During the meeting, Rev. DuBois expressed that Sudan is a
    critical issue for President Obama and that faith groups play an
    important role in drawing attention to the ongoing tragedy there.

    At the meeting, Dr. Stephen Colecchi, director of the Office of
    International Justice and Peace for the U.S. Conference of Catholic
    Bishops delivered the Interfaith Sudan Working Group letter signed by
    1,410 Christian, Jewish and Muslim Clergy. The letter asks the Obama
    administration to work with multilateral coalitions to ensure that the
    Darfuri people can return safely to their homes and begin to rebuild
    their lives. It also asks the United States to continue to lead for
    justice and lasting peace in Sudan and work toward full implementation
    of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement. Furthermore, the letter asks for
    a resolution in the lesser-known conflict in Eastern Sudan.

    The faith leaders asked Rev. DuBois to convey their message to
    President Obama that Sudan should be a priority for his
    administration. Ruth Messinger, president of the American Jewish World
    Service stressed that, `Full engagement and leadership now is critical
    as we move toward elections and the referendum.' Bishop David Jones
    from the Episcopal Church in Virginia added, `When the U.S. pays
    attention, the government of Sudan responds. We need the U.S. to take
    an interest.'

    The group also asked administration officials to incorporate important
    policy recommendations from the Interfaith Sudan Working Group when
    they convene regular meetings prior to the 2010 Sudanese elections and
    2011 referendum. Imam Mohamed Magid, the vice president for the
    Islamic Society of North America and director of the VA-based ADAMS
    Center noted that it is important to `reach out to religious leaders
    on the ground in Sudan to bring peace.' He added that we must `work to
    empower civil society and advocacy groups in Sudan.
    the National Association of Evangelicals said, `The Comprehensive
    Peace Agreement was a major achievement, but it is an asset that is
    being wasted. The next few months are critical to moving things
    forward.'

    Violence against women, which has been reported in staggering numbers
    recently, was also an area of concern for the faith
    leaders. Rev. DuBois stated that addressing gender-based violence was
    a priority for the President. AME Pastor and Co-Founder of My Sister's
    Keeper Reverend Gloria White-Hammond articulated that `the impact of
    gender-based violence lasts long after the assault and effects the
    entire fabric of the society.'

    Archbishop Vicken Aykazian for the Armenian Church of America conveyed
    a broader message regarding genocide prevention and history. `If
    justice is not found in Sudan, there will be more genocide. We would
    like to find ways to end genocide in the 21st century.'

    David Saperstein, director of the Religious Action Center, who was not
    able to attend the meeting said, "Activists around the world,
    including many within the North American Jewish community, have
    committed to continuously raising awareness of and being a voice for
    Darfur. But this critical issue is not just a call to the Jewish
    conscience - rather, it is a call to the conscience of all humanity,
    as genocide knows no religious or ethnic borders. For this reason, we
    are pleased that a number of prominent faith leaders across the
    religious spectrum met today with Joshua DuBois to underscore the
    importance of an interfaith alliance advocating for peace and security
    in Darfur and Sudan."
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