A time comes when silence is betrayal . . . We must speak with all the humility that is appropriate to our limited vision, but we must speak.  For we are deeply in need of a new way beyond the darkness so close around us.  
            Martin Luther King, Jr.

Washington Region Religious Campaign Against Torture

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PHILADELPHIA

In Philadelphia on September 18, 1789, a Mrs. Powel anxiously stood outside the Constitutional Convention.  As Benjamin Franklin emerged from the last session, she asked him: "Well Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?" "A republic--if you can keep it," said Franklin.

In  Philadelphia today, October 17, 2006, in a cold and driving rain, on 24 hours notice, at noon on a workday, 44 people came to the Federal courthouse to mourn the signing of the Act to Legalize Torture and Suspend Habeas Corpus. We don’t know yet whether it is also the Act to Suspend the Republic. It certainly puts the tools to do so in the hands of any President who chooses to use them.

We had been gathered by The Shalom Center and the Brandywine Peace Community. There were Veterans for Peace,  clergypersons, congregants, teachers, lawyers. 

We read passages from the legal brief filed on behalf of Jose Padilla, a native-born US citizen arrested in 2002 on American soil (Chicago), charged with no crime, named an enemy combatant by the President of the United States,  and then held for  ALMOST TWO YEARS in total isolation: no lawyers, no family, no one in the same cell block,  manacled for hours, in his 9‘ x 7’ cell. no windows, no  sunshine,  no books, no radio, no mattress to cover a cold steel bed, even electronic locks so there were not even guards for human contact — except for interrogations. Deprived of sleep by loud sounds, bright lights.   Forced into stress positions for hours at a time.  First contact with lawyers, 20 months after imprisonment. And even then, most of these forms of torture continued.

For a full text of the legal brief, click here.

This is one person. Under the new law, it could be anyone. Any number.  Citizen or foreigner, abroad or in the US, WITH NO RECOURSE TO THE COURTS.

At the Courthouse, we remembered that we are taught that every human being is created in the Image of God. That torture shatters God. That on the most solemn day of Christian tradition, Good Friday, Christians mourn the torture unto death by the Roman Empire of a human being suffused with God. That on the most solemn day of Jewish tradition, Yom Kippur, Jews recall the death by torture of ten great rabbis, carried out by the Roman Empire. That this is not only our memory of the past but also our warning for the future: Empires torture.

If you wish to end torture, dissolve empires. Gently, firmly.

We signed letters to Members of Congress, urging them to begin working to repeal provisions of the Act that dirty  our souls, debase our nation, and trample on our Constitution.

We beat a drum slowly, tolled a bell lowly. With aching hearts, we held high the American Flag --   with a black cloth of mourning draped across its stars and stripes.  We poured ashes on the black sash and vowed to "bring to birth a new world from the ashes of the old."

Shalom, Arthur

Rabbi Arthur Waskow

  • the courts have no power to review any aspect of this new system, except verdicts by military tribunals;
  • the act limits appeals and bars legal actions based on the Geneva Conventions;
  • and coerced evidence—evidence obtained through torture—is now permissible.

Rabbi Brian Walt, executive director of Rabbis for Human Rights North America, a national organization with its office here on the Vineyard said, “This is a very sad day for America.  Today the President abrogated a core principle of our democracy, the right of a person accused of any crime to a court of law.  The President was also given the power to violate the Geneva Conventions by deciding what cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment is permissible.  People of faith affirm that human beings are created in the image of God.  Torture shatters that image of God in the victim and the perpetrator.”

Rabbis for Human Rights and the National Religious Campaign against Torture are engaged in a campaign to end torture and to make sure that it is accepted as a moral “never” like slavery, racism and other forms of abuse. 

Rabbi Brian Walt


VINEYARD HAVEN, MASSACHUSSETTS

In Vineyard Haven, we organized a vigil at which we handed out leaflets to passers-by explaining the reasons for our rejection of the Military Commissions Act of 2006.  We oppose the Act because:

  • it subjects legal residents of the United States, as well as foreign citizens living in their own countries, to summary arrest and indefinite detention with no hope of appeal;
  • it gives the President the power to apply the label of "enemy combatant" to anyone he wants;
  • it  repudiates a half-century of international precedent by allowing the President to decide on his own what abusive interrogation methods he considers permissible and his decision can stay secret;
  • detainees in U.S. military prisons lose the basic right to challenge their imprisonment and can be held forever, with no access to a lawyer or to the courts;
Alan Ganapol signs the NRCAT petition against torture.  Left to Right: Rabbi Caryn Broitman, Rabbi Brian Walt, Rev. Vicky Hanjian, Rev. Armen Hanjian and Elana Robinson-Lynch.


Protests of the Military Commissions Act Around the Nation
October 17, 2006
CONNECTICUT:  Interfaith Clergy Bear Witness Against Legislators Supporting Military Commissions Act

An interfaith group of Connecticut clergy gathered alongside I-95 in Stratford on October 16, 2006, to unveil a highway billboard which protests the support of four Connecticut legislators—all of whom are running for re-election—in bringing the Military Commissions Act of 2006 to President Bush's desk for signature on October 17.

The highly controversial bill will, in their view, allow torture and in so doing, puts "America's soul at risk." Reclaiming the Prophetic Voice, a statewide interfaith network of religious leaders and people of faith established in 2002, launched the publicity campaign to make sure Connecticut residents know which members of the state's congressional delegation voted for the bill.

The billboard is expected to be seen by 100,000 motorists a day. A second billboard has been placed on I-84 in another heavily-traveled area of the state.  Click here to view an op-ed written by members of Reclaiming the Prophetic Voice.