BY
JESSE ZAPATA
The twelfth Annual Interfaith Dinner was
held last Wednesday in the Marvin Center to highlight the various faith
organizations on campus. Students who attended were treated to live music,
food, guest speakers, and more during the annual event. Started after 9/11, the
dinner strives to bring together students in solidarity against prejudice.
Overall, the event was focused on examining faith’s common role in social
justice and freedom.
Tim
Kane, associate director for inclusion initiatives, introduced the various
performers and guests. Each campus faith organization was represented, and they
also chose the speakers. The Voice Gospel Choir began the program with several
hymns.
Speakers
for the event included Muslim Student Association student Aabid Mohiuddin,
Satyam representative Pavithra Chidambaram, Intervarsity Christian Fellowship
choice Jon Yu, Allied in Pride representative Nicholas Gumas, GW Catholic
student Olivia Bee, Jewish Student Association representative Joey Saban, and
Kabir Gumer from the Sikh Student Association.
Each
original speech was unique, yet they all taught lessons. Some were deeply
rooted in the biblical tradition and quoted passages from the New Testament
while others focused on a secular morality. Another defined the term “Tikkun
Olam” as the Jewish faith's "one common goal of a better place for those
who follow". A fellow speaker focused on the Sikh traditions of identity
and scholastic petition. Each address, though different from the others,
represented the night’s theme of the involvement of faith in freedom and social
justice.
In
closing, GW President Steven Knapp gave a brief history of the Interfaith
Dinner and the university’s history of student led interfaith initiative. He
also shared an excerpt of a letter written by George Washington to a Rhode
Island Synagogue's congregation. The letter contained not just the theme quote
of the evening, " to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no
assistance," but a larger statement about the power of diversity in
bringing wisdom and prosperity to those who embrace it.
Interfaith Director for Satyam, the school's Hindu awareness
organization and planner of the event Priya Yadav said she was happy with the
dinner’s turnout. She added that the school had been working to “re-excite
interest in interfaith and multicultural events.”
“We have so many [students] dedicated to their faith who want to
let others know,” she said.
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