Monday, April 22, 2019

May 12 topic - Death Penalty in Japan


Dear friends and members of the Fellowship,



Next Meeting:

Date Sunday May 12

Time 3:00-5:00pm

Usual place: International House of Japan (国際文化会館)


Call for directions. Near Azabu-Juban and Roppongi stations.



☆Our speaker will be Kasia (Katarzyna) Mamczarz, a graduate student at Waseda and volunteer at Amnesty International, Japan.


She will talk about the Death Penalty in Japan, both the history and present  situation, and in the larger global context of abolishing the penalty as well.


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💐At our April  14 meeting we celebrated the "Flower Ceremony," based on the idea and writings of Norbert Capeck, the first Unitarian minister in Prague, who was killed by the Nazis in 1942.


The main themes were (1) appreciating all our individual differences (background, culture, language, race ) by celebrating diversity and our inclusive community.



We quoted from his wife Maja's letter to the American Unitarian Ass. in 1961 where she wrote:


Capek's only motivation for the "flower ceremony" was to stress and bring about BROTHERHOOD [in his Prague church in the 1920' and 30's where people came from different backgrounds and religions--Catholicism, Judaism, atheists.etc.]. As a symbol he used flowers because in the name of a flower no wars were waged as had been the case of the Cross or the Chalice. The flowers are used as symbols of the fgifts which each person can make to the church and thru the church to other persons. Because of the large variety [of flowers people are]able to express their individuality with flowers. the exhcange of flowers means that i shall walk,without reservation, with anyone--regrdless of their social status, or former religious affiliation,[or background, of ancestry or nationality,] as log as they are ready and willing to go along in search of truth and service for all of humankind.



We tried to examine some of the prejudice or racism we encounter (and foster ourselves) in our past or in daily lives now.



Another theme (2) was not to give up hope and compassion/love for others despite our own mortality or the dire  circumstances we find ourselves in.


We quoted Capek's poem from Dresden prison in 19401 and words of forgiveness left stuck in a wall by a murdered woman at the concentration camp of Ravensbruch.



Then we moved on to considering the (3) ideas of the Rev. Nancy Ladd in her new book, about religious liberals and progressives letting go of perfectionism. No matter the problems and our limited power and imperfections we must  NOT give up hope in our community and our  work that we do for social change.


Ladd, "After the Good News:Progressive Faith Beyond Optimism,"2019.



And we ended with the empowering essay of our fellowship's founder, Kenneth Woodrooffe:


"Life at Seventy: Reflections of a Septuagenarian." Available on request.


Essentially  (and put much more interestingly) he said that theme (4)  we must love someone  and be loved and have a purpose or work to give hope and meaning to our lives. "In moments of  discouragement, defeat or despair it is what one has deeply felt or dearly loved that sustains us, for no one can take it away from us."


Peggy Kanada, moderator

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