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LAST-MODIFIED:20260325T152654Z
UID:6340-1776002400-1776007800@sticinterfaith.org
SUMMARY:Celebrating Passover Without Leaving Palestinians Behind | The Freedom Haggadah For A Liberatory Passover
DESCRIPTION:Ira Manhoff was born and raised in Westbury\, NY on Long Island. Both my parents had orthodox Jewish grandparents but were raised in fairly secular households. At one point they actually joined Christian Science due to the very severe health issues my brother suffered with. That did bring them some comfort but my mother admitted that superstition is what kept her on that path and years later when I was born they returned to reform Judaism. \n\n\n\nIra Manhoff. 2025.\n\n\n\nGrowing up I was very much into my Jewish identity\, more on a cultural level than a religious one but I did have a bar mitzvah and was the one who made sure we celebrated Jewish holidays in our home. I insisted we hold a Passover seder\, celebrate the High Holidays and Hanukkah each year in the Reform tradition. I also started reading about Jewish history and as I learned about the Holocaust I tried to understand how such a thing could happen. This combined with some of the antisemitism I experienced as a child (being beaten up by a neighborhood bully as he called me a “Christ Killer”) led me to seek out pro-Jewish activism.  \n\n\n\nAs a teenager I attended rallies for Soviet Jewry and ended up joining the Jewish Defense League where I learned karate and other forms of self defense. At 14 I was invited to spend the summer with my sister and her husband in Brussels where they were living and when I was told they were going for a weeks vacation in Yugoslavia I contacted a NYC organization that loaded me up with Jewish religious items that I smuggled into the country.  \n\n\n\nSoon after that I joined Betar which is a right wing Zionist youth movement. At first I looked at Zionism as a true movement for Jewish liberation but after two trips to Israel I could no longer deny what I saw with my own eyes. The oppression of Palestinians was not something I could live with and I parted ways with what at one time had given me so much hope for a Jewish future. At that time I did not know about the long proud history of anti-Zionism in Jewish history but finally learning about it helped me realize I could still be a proud Jew without being a Zionist.  \n\n\n\nRicardo Levins Morales. This Time. 2002.This hopeful poster featuring text by Aurora Levins Morales gives a contemporary take on the Exodus that encompasses people of all tribes.\n\n\n\n\n“They say that other country over there\, dim blue in the twilight\, farther than the orange stars exploding over our roofs\, is called peace\, but who can find the way? This time we cannot cross until we carry each other. All of us refugees\, all of us prophets. No more taking turns on history’s wheel\, trying to collect old debts no one can pay. The sea will not open that way. This time that country is what we promise each other\, our rage pressed cheek to cheek until tears flood the space between\, until there are no enemies left\, because this time no one will be left to drown and all of us must be chosen.  This time it’s all of us or none.” \nRicardo Levins Morales. This Time. 2002.\n\n\n\nI look forward to the opportunity of sharing with the Southern Tier Interfaith Coalition a way to celebrate Passover that is not contaminated by ideologies that distort what it really means to be a Jew. I have always been an activist\, be it during the AIDS crisis with ACTUP NY\, in my union demanding health coverage for same sex couples \, helping defend womens health clinics from anti choice protests and fighting attempts to label anti-Zionism as antisemitism. I have never felt more Jewish as I stand with Palestinians in their fight for justice.
URL:https://sticinterfaith.org/event/celebrating-passover-without-leaving-palestinians-behind/
LOCATION:Chemung County Democratic Headquarters\, 110 N. Main St.\, Elmira\, New York\, 14901\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sticinterfaith.org/app/uploads/2026/03/thistime-cropped.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260510T140000
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DTSTAMP:20260506T051717
CREATED:20260503T181318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260503T181322Z
UID:6385-1778421600-1778427000@sticinterfaith.org
SUMMARY:Revolutionary Mother’s Day
DESCRIPTION:The Southern Tier Interfaith Coalition invites you to join us for an exploration of Revolutionary Mother’s Day. Led by Minister Becca Forsyth\, we will talk about the origins of Mother’s Day.  \n\n\n\nRevolutionary Mothers Day. Provided.\n\n\n\n  In 1908\, in West Virginia\, Anna Marie Jarvis launched efforts to honor the legacy of her own mother\, a fighter for social justice and the mother of 12 children. Anna wanted to shine a light on mothers who care for their families but also for the larger communities. It wasn’t intended to be the Hallmark Holiday we currently see today.  \n\n\n\nMother Mary from the Christian Faith is another example of revolutionary mothering. She made her journey to protect the Christ child even in pregnancy\, traveling far on a donkey to avoid the empire bent on destroying him.  \n\n\n\n“Now…flee into Egypt\, and be thou there until I tell thee: for Herod will seek the young child to destroy him. And he arose and took the young child and his mother by night\, and departed into Egypt.” Matthew 2:13-14 ASV. Florida Center for Instructional Technology.\n\n\n\nThe Magnificat\, also known as Mary’s Song\, is a song of celebration and teaching. I will talk about how authoritarian regimes around the world have banned or restricted this passage\, claiming that it is politically dangerous.  \n\n\n\nWe will discuss Fannie Lou Hamer\, the community organizer and social justice warrior who started life as a Mississippi sharecropper. She was subjected to a horrific injustice known as the “Mississippi appendectomy”\, where doctors performed a hysterectomy during a surgery for a uterine tumor. She and her husband went on to adopt four girls and she fought for women’s rights\, voting rights\, and against police brutality.  \n\n\n\nFannie Lou Hamer. Couresy of The National Museum of African American History and Culture.\n\n\n\n  What does revolutionary mothering mean to us today. Minister Tanisha Logan Lattimore comes to us from OFHOPE Church (Our Fathers House of Prayer Eternal). She is a tireless activist in our community who fights for the needs of our community and children. She is an advocate for those suffering from Alzheimer’s and their families. She also operates Moving On Up Childcare\, a safe and loving space for our children. She has represented the New York State Poor People’s Campaign in Albany and Washington DC. Oh\, yeah! And she will proudly tell you about the eight Black men she has had the pleasure of raising right here at home.  \n\n\n\n  This will be a moving and powerful program. We encourage you to join us either in person or on Zoom. We will meet on May 10th at 2:00 PM in the Fellowship Hall at First Congregational United Church of Christ 171 West Pulteney Street\, Corning NY 14830.
URL:https://sticinterfaith.org/event/revolutionary-mothers-day/
LOCATION:First Congregational United Church of Christ\, 171 W. Pulteney St.\, Corning\, NY\, 14830\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sticinterfaith.org/app/uploads/2026/05/UCC-CorningNY.jpg
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