Post from Ashwini's Blog:
Faith in Flushing, Queens
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Having moved from my beloved Queens hood to a yuppified corner of Manhattan (you could say “The enemy of Avenue A”) my first blog entry after a rather long absence has to be on my most favorite borough, QNS. It is often stated that Queens County is the most diverse in the entire nation, which is indeed true. This is why, as the New York Times reports today, a professor named Albert Waters from Kuala Lumpur came to Flushing to learn more about the world’s religions: “This dizzyingly diverse corner of Queens is an urban showcase for the varieties of religious experience, where traditions brought over by Asian immigrants coexist alongside those of Catholics, Jews and mainline Protestants.”

The article is interesting as I, a non-religious person, never really considered the unique challenges and role of urban institutions of faith.  Particularly when working in social justice campaigns at the grassroots level, religion and places of worship are often at the center of a community, and a priority for individuals and families.  This is often even more apparent when working with working-class or immigrant communities in urban areas.  As Matt Weiner of the Interfaith Center of New York asserts, “If you want to work in the South Bronx or Chinatown, religion is a powerful social force that you have to understand.”

 

However, what role does diversity play in a geographic area such as Queens, and what does that mean for our organizing efforts?  If you were to visit Queens, you would see pockets of very distinct communities (i.e. ethnicities) in discrete neighborhoods.  Statistical diversity does not necessarily equal exposure to those unlike yourself and your close friends and relatives:  “People are living in the same community, but within little sections of their own,” [professor Waters] said.   “I find it very strange. I think it further solidifies their insecurities. Are you integrated into American society? Are you really part of the whole process?”

 

Decidedly, many campaigns in New York City affect a defined community which must be organized, such as tenants in Chinatown resisting gentrification and holding slumlords accountable.  However, gentrification affects all working-class people, and the only way to ensure residents aren’t pushed out en masse is to build a broad scale movement.  How can religious institutions help us to unite people facing similar issues, but who seem to have a valley of cultural difference between them?


Reader Comments
  
What's your answer to gentrification?
By Superduperficial Jul 2nd 2007 at 5:13 pm EDT
I've seen rent control up close and personal in Santa Monica, and that's not an answer. Nor is expecting communities not to grow in value over time.
  
don't be scared of religion
By Zach Marks Jul 3rd 2007 at 4:49 pm EDT
"The article is interesting as I, a non-religious person, never really considered the unique challenges and role of urban institutions of faith."

Your experience is representative of what a lot of young progressives go through, especially kids who grow up in the suburbs, go to liberal arts schools where they might decide that religion should be avoided like the plague, and then plop themselves down in an edgy, hip heavily-immigrant urban enclave where they lament the creeping gentrification all the while gentrifying the neighborhood themselves. (breathe)

You (the general you, not you ashwini...but maybe you ashwini) want to get involved in the local fight for social justice, you want to get to know your surroundings and improve your neighborhood, but religion freaks you out. Unfortunately, religious institutions seem to be the center of the local fight for social justice and they're a great established means to improve the neighborhood. It would be a shame not to make use of them simply because you got beef with Pat Robertson.
Re: don't be scared of religion
By ashwini Jul 4th 2007 at 12:32 am EDT
You hurl a ridiculous amount of assumptions and insults at me based on one blog entry. Don't assume that just because I choose not to be religious today that I was not raised in a religion or that I was not exposed to organized religion. Don't assume that I believe that it is "unfortunate" that religious institutions are sometimes at the center of a community. Don't assume that I have never worked intimately with a religious community on social justice issues. Don't assume that my "beef" with Pat Robertson and fundamentalism in any way relates to my opinions about religion or faith in general.

Bottom line is, I'm not "scared" of religion, I recognize and respect the rich history of religious institutions' role in social justice movements, and believe progressive religious communities can be just as important to the political left as evangelicalism is to the right. And I'm not "looking" to get involved in social justice issues, I am living it every day.
  
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