OpinionOctober 11, 2017

We, members of the faith-based community of the Palouse, stand firmly with the Rohingya people. According to a Human Rights Watch report, this crisis is underreported due to the complicity of the Burmese government, which does not allow human rights groups to verify the number of those killed, ethnically cleansed and displaced in clear and accurate numbers. With de facto leader Suu Kyi denying the atrocities, the struggle of the Rohingya Muslims continues unabated. The Burmese military has blocked both the media and international humanitarian organizations from the region. We join the Network of Spiritual Progressives in committing to the following steps:

1. Stop the military's firing on and forced displacement of the Rohingya.

2. Allow media, relief agencies and human rights organizations immediate access to the region.

3. Pressure Bangladesh to allow Rohingya Muslims full access to humanitarian agencies on their own soil.

4. Support the U.N. investigation into mass rape, killing, and other abuses and permit the U.N. investigation team to enter the region.

Rabbi Michael Lerner, leader of the Network of Spiritual Progressives, has called for secular humanists, spiritual progressives and every religious believer in the Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, and other religious communities, as well as human rights supporters, to speak out loudly and clearly against the destruction of the Rohingya. We ask the members of the Palouse religious communities as well as secular humanists and human rights supporters to discern how we can, working together, resist the destruction of the Rohingya. Today it is the Rohingya facing displacement and death. Tomorrow it will be another group, and our religious, secular and human rights commitments can collectively make a difference in affirming the total humanity of a disrespected and oppressed group of vulnerable people. The next oppressed group might one day include any of us.

Raed Alsawaier, imam

Mohammed Islam, president

Robert Eddy, member

Pullman Islamic Association

Larry Fox, member

Jewish Community of the Palouse

Annie Reneau, member

Bahá'í community of Pullman

The Rev. C. Shane Moore

Simpson United Methodist Church

A. Stephen Van Kuiken, minister

Community Congregational United Church of Christ

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Linda Young, rector

Patrick Siler, member

Elizabeth A. Siler, member

St. James Episcopal Church,

Kelly Shattuck, director

Interfaith House, WSU

Pullman

The Rev. Elizabeth Stevens, minister

Pat Rathmann, member

Unitarian Universalist Church of the Palouse

The Rev. Robin Biffle, rector

St. Mark's Episcopal Church

Rula Awwad-Rafferty,

Muslim and Interfaith communities

Moscow

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