Wet, light and prayerful
Dave Brooks
Consider it a sign from above. A very wet sign.
In between a performance of “Distant Land†by the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints vocal ensemble and a speech by Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher, a small drizzle that had been haunting attendees of this
year’s Procession of Light turned into a full scale downpour,
scattering dozens who had come to watch at the Huntington Beach Pier
Plaza on Sunday.
In the end, the short shower proved to a be a testament to the
group’s resolve: About three dozen stayed seated through the shower
and many more returned after the rain eased up to participate in a
somber march along the pier honoring the many creeds and faiths of
Huntington Beach.
“This was created as a message of faith and hope,†said Randy
Clifford who helped organize the inclusive event. “Regardless of your
ethnicity or religion, we are all from the human family and we should
face each other as brothers and sisters.â€
First created as a way to usher in 2000 over fears of an impeding
Y2K meltdown, the annual event that falls on the first Sunday of the
year includes clerics from most major religions including Judaism,
Islam and Christianity.
“Our unity today is beautiful, but our diversity is also
beautiful,†said Imam Muzammil Siddiqi of the Islamic Society of
Orange County. “Beauty will come when we begin to care for one
another as brothers and sisters. We belong to one and the same
family.â€
The two-hour ceremony included speeches from political and
religious dignitaries, and a series of musical performances including
an Islamic religious homage by a group of young Corona men called
Al-Noor.
To close the ceremony, audience members submitted small prayer
notes into a portable fireplace burning in the middle of the Pier
Plaza, then held hands and sang while two volunteers released several
dozen doves into the air.
The Procession of Light was ended with a march down the Huntington
Beach Pier led by Rev. Peggy Price, who carried a small lantern
ignited from the World Peace Flame, a religious eternal flame that
burns in several different continents as a symbol of mutual
cooperation.
“Working together, we can be a cause of peace,†Price said. “May
the power of this light touch all those hearts.â€
Sunday’s event was sponsored by the Greater Huntington Beach
Interfaith Council, the city’s unofficial citizen committee on
religious affairs.
Founded in 1996 with the help of former mayors Shirley Detloff and
Ralph Bauer following several instances of hate crime, the council
was created as a means of fostering communication between the city’s
various churches and places of worship. Besides the procession, the
council also hosts an annual prayer breakfast and Sept. 11
observance.
The group has even taken on a political role as an advocate of the
sometimes controversial prayer said before City Council meetings.
Known as the invocation, the practice was temporarily halted in 2002
by then Mayor Debbie Cook. To protest her decision, members of the
Interfaith Council sent delegates to City Council meetings to read
prayers during the public comment period. When the prayer was
returned in 2004 by former Mayor Cathy Green, the Interfaith Council
coordinated clergy to give the invocation.
“Our whole theme is working together to reach out to others,†said
Jack Allen, a member of the Interfaith Council.
Many of the participants in Sunday’s march brought their family
members and children.
“It’s a wonderful way to start the year,†said Fred Gallucio of
Huntington Beach who attended the event with his two daughters. “We
must keep calling for peace and understanding.â€
* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
966-4609 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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