YOU ARE INVITED!
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Info about Fair Housing in Maryland - including housing discrimination, hate crimes, affordable housing, disabilities, segregation, mortgage lending, & others. http://www.gbchrb.org. 443.347.3701.
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This Wednesday, June 8, 2022 at Noon-1 p.m. via Zoom
Islam is a religion that nourishes body, heart, mind and soul. The word Islam literally means peace, surrender and submission. A Muslim is one who has made a conscious decision to freely surrender and submit to the one and only God, the creator of every thing and every being.
ICJS Muslim Scholar Zeyneb Sayilgan will explain how Muslims try to embody these ideals in everyday life.
Zeyneb Sayilgan, Ph.D., is the Muslim Scholar at ICJS, where her research centers around Islamic theology and spirituality, Christian-Muslim relations, and the intersection of religion and migration. Her personal experience of growing up in Germany as a child of Kurdish Muslim immigrants from Turkey informs her academic work and engagement in interreligious learning.
She is the host of the On Being Muslim podcast.
Institute for Islamic, Christian, and Jewish Studies
956 Dulaney Valley Rd
Baltimore, Maryland 21204
410.494.7161|icjs.org
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Source: ICJS email newsletter, June 6, 2022.
On May 5, 2022, the Federal banking regulators - the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Board - announced proposed rules to revise and modernize the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). The major elements are:
In response to the proposed rules, the president of the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL) commented:
Federal banking regulators today issued a notice of proposed rulemaking to modernize the rules that implement the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). This represents a significant step forward in ensuring that financial institutions address the credit needs of Asian, Black, Latino, Native American, rural and other underserved communities. The Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation both unanimously approved the proposal, and they were joined by Michael Shu, Acting Comptroller of the OCC.
Low-income communities and people of color continue to be underserved by the nation’s financial system when seeking a wide range of financial services, whether for mortgages, automobile financing, or small business lending. Previous policies helped create today’s racial wealth gap by allowing lenders to use abusive and predatory lending practices for systemic exploitation and exclusion of these borrowers.
When 98 percent of US financial institutions receive passing scores in their CRA evaluations, yet the racial wealth and homeownership gaps are the same, if not wider, than they were 50 years ago, it is not enough for regulators to just tell financial institutions to ‘do better.’
The proposed rule both increases the effectiveness of CRA and enhances its implementation and compliance for banks. We look forward to working with regulators to further improve the rule as it goes through review and final adoption.
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Source: https://www.responsiblelending.org/media/bank-regulators-proposal-modernize-cra-rules.
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20220505a.htm.
In its just-released 2021 civil rights report, Protecting Our Community: 2021 Civil Rights Report, the Massachusetts chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-MA), the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, found that there were more than 1,000 calls to CAIR-MA for assistance from members of the Muslim community since 2016. In that year, its legal department began operations.
CAIR-MA Legal Director Barbara J. Dougan, Esq. commented:
“In 2021, our chapter’s legal department received over a thousand complaints since its establishment in 2016. This is bittersweet because although we are eager to be a champion for Massachusetts Muslims when they need us, we are driven by the fact that too many people need help to secure the basic human right of freedom of religion. Massachusetts has good laws on the books. Our state officials must be committed to enforcing them.”
CAIR-MA prioritizes providing help in hate crimes and harassment, bullying, education discrimination, employment discrimination, FBI and police harassment, housing discrimination, prisoners’ religious freedoms, public accommodations, and travel abuses. For immigration, family law, and criminal defense, they refer callers to other lawyers or legal groups, state or federal agencies, and non-legal service providers.
Regarding housing discrimination, CAIR-MA in 2019 filed a case with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (MCAD) against a man whose religiously-based harassment forced a Muslim family from their apartment. He maliciously reported the family to the police, falsely accusing them of poisoning his dog (saying “Muslims hate dogs”), and filed an unsuccessful court care against them. In one action, he claimed that the Muslim family was monitoring his movements inside his apartment and that they wanted his large dog to bite their young children. In 2020, MCAD issued a “probable cause” finding in the family's favor leading to a 2021 settlement. The former neighbor had to pay the family for their moving expenses and emotional distress, watch a documentary on Islam, and then report about five things he had learned from the film.
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Source: https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-massachusetts-releases-new-report-documenting-1000-calls-for-civil-rights-assistance-since-2016/, May 11, 2022.
On May 4, 2022 at 7 p.m. EST Baltimore-based singer/multi-instrumentalist/producer John Tyler and his band will perform in support of Baltimore’s Nomu Nomu, an artist collaborative and resource center. John Tyler is also a founder of the Love Groove Festival. Tyler has released four albums, produced dozens of artists in the DMV area, and appeared at the Rams Head, Firefly Festival and Baltimore’s Artscape.
NoMüNoMü is an intersectional arts collaborative working to challenge the perpetual systems of oppression within and beyond the art world. “We work collaboratively with artists + grassroots organizations at the intersections of race, age, gender and orientation. We curate radical exhibitions; provide space and resources for local artists to create; and work with activist and cultural grassroots movements to organize through the use of screen printing, resource sharing, and art production.”
The performance will be streamed live via Youtube from Baltimore’s Creative Alliance.
Tickets for this FREE performance are available through Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/328164357427
The month of May is National Asian-American and Pacific Heritage Month. This year's theme, selected by the Federal Asian Pacific American Council, is "Advancing Leaders Through Collaboration."
To Cynthia Choi, co-executive director of Chinese for Affirmative Action and co-founder of Stop AAPI Hate, the month is "a time to speak out, share stories and debunk myths about Asian communities, she said. But it's not the only time to celebrate Asian culture or diversity. Our history is also filled with incredible stories of resilience, of persistence, of determination, to fight for our basic rights. This is a celebration of our history, of our culture... and all the different ways in which our community has really demonstrated that we're not only here to stay, we are a part of this fabric - a part of this country."
History of the Month
According to NPR, the month was the brainchild of Jeanie Jew, a former Capitol Hill staffer, who shared the idea with U.S. Rep. Frank Horton, who introduced the legislation that formed it. In 1977, Horton introduced a resolution that would establish Pacific/Asian American Heritage Week. Sen. Daniel Inouye introduced similar legislation to the U.S. Senate. In the following year, Horton, with cosponsor Rep. Norman Mineta, introduced another related resolution that passed. President Jimmy Carter signed it in October, 1978. The resolution "authorized and requested" the president to proclaim the 7-day period beginning May 4, 1979 as Asian Pacific American Heritage Week.
Congress later passed legislation to extend the observance to a month in 1990. In 1992, Congress passed a law to annually designate May as Asian Pacific American Heritage Month. The legislation to annually designate May was due to two events that happened during that month in U.S. history: May 7 and May 10. On May 7, 1843, the first Japanese immigrants to the United States arrived. On May 10, 1869, or Golden Spike Day, the first transcontinental railroad in the U.S. - which had significant contributions from Chinese workers - was completed.
In Baltimore
The Baltimore Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs (MIMA) is hosting many events during this month. Stay tuned for a special edition of "The 410 Report" with Mayor Scott on May 19th at 6:00 p.m.
The Library of Congress, National Archives and Records Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum joining in several events to pay "tribute to the generations of Asian and Pacific Islanders who have enriched America's history and are instrumental in its future success."
The Smithsonian's Stand site has several very interesting and informative virtual exhibits and presentations.
There follows some very useful links. The source of this information is here. It is part of the Teacher's Guide, which "offers a collection of lessons and resources for K-12 social studies, literature, and arts classrooms that center around the experiences, achievements, and perspectives of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders across U.S. history" (Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, 2022).