Joint Multi-faith Commitment to Counter Anti-Muslim and Anti-Jewish Hate in the United States

Dozens of prominent national faith leaders add their names to joint sign-on declaration

December 19, 2023

Press Release: Muslim, Jewish, Christian Leaders Commit to Countering Anti-Jewish, Anti-Muslim Bigotry

The Shoulder to Shoulder Campaign, a multifaith coalition of religious denominations and faith-based organizations committed to ending anti-Muslim hatred, discrimination, and violence in the United States of America, expresses concern and stands together against the alarming increase in Islamophobia and in antisemitism across the United States in recent weeks. 

In the context of a major escalation of violence in the Middle East, we stand firm in our founding conviction that “We bear a sacred responsibility to honor America’s varied faith traditions and to promote a culture of mutual respect and the assurance of religious freedom for all.” We will continue to speak out against incidents brought to our attention that negatively impact the freedom, safety, and integrity of the religious and cultural communities we care and represent.

In communities, on campuses, and on social and commercial media, incitement against Muslims and Jews is explicit and spreading. Muslim, Jewish, and all other communities targeted in this escalating climate of hate, including Palestinian, Arab, and Sikh Americans in the US have experienced heightened fear and violence and increased threats at places of worship and community gatherings. No one should fear for their lives and safety because of their religious or cultural identity.  As we asserted in our founding statement, the United States “Constitution guarantees religious liberty for all. Our freedom to worship in congregations of our own choosing, to give witness to our moral convictions in the public square, and to maintain institutions that carry out our respective missions—all of these are bedrock American freedoms that must be vigorously guarded and defended lest they be placed at peril.”

The Middle East is a place of religious diversity in which Jews, Christians, Muslims, Druze, and others have lived for centuries.  The conflict in Israel/Palestine is often oversimplified, reduced to a clash of religions in which Jews and Muslims are pitted against one another.  Not only does such an understanding ignore the vibrant presence and witness of Middle Eastern Christians, but it also ignores many of the fundamental issues that must be resolved to reach a just and lasting peace.  It exacerbates the blame and targeting of Jews and Muslims there and elsewhere in a way that diminishes the values of their faith, violates the rights and dignity of individual adherents, and feeds the antisemitism and Islamophobia we abhor and work to counter in this country.  We acknowledge that religion is an inseparable aspect of the conflict, but we reject a framing that focuses exclusively on oppositional religious narratives.

As we stated at our founding in 2010, “We are committed to building a future in which religious differences no longer lead to hostility or division between communities. Rather, we believe such diversity can enrich our public discourse about the great moral challenges facing our nation and our planet,” including the Middle East.  We stand firm in this commitment.

As leaders and individual communities committed to the work of the Shoulder to Shoulder Campaign, we acknowledge that we have not always done all we can to counter both anti-Muslim and anti-Jewish discrimination within our communities. We have sometimes failed to interrupt harmful and dangerous myths and stereotypes, and we have sometimes failed to call out overgeneralization and collective labeling in our midst.  We recognize that we have sometimes failed to love our neighbors as we should. 

Each of our faith traditions values the life and dignity of each person. We cannot stand idly by when human life is at stake. We repeat what we have said before: Silence or inaction in the face of hate, discrimination, and violence is not an option.  As religious and spiritual leaders representing the various faiths in the United States, we accept and reaffirm our moral responsibility to stand together and denounce the hate, violence, ridicule, misinformation, and outright bigotry directed against any religious or cultural group in this country. Only by taking this stand can we fulfill the highest calling of our respective faiths and thereby help to create a safer and stronger society for all people.

We, the undersigned, recommit ourselves to addressing hate and discrimination in our communities, congregations, and organizations through and beyond the Shoulder to Shoulder Campaign.

Faith leaders read the joint declaration at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., on December 19, 2023.

we invite Faith leaders to Add your name to this pledge and take action today to counter anti-Muslim and Anti-jewish discrimination in your own community

We take seriously the responsibility and necessity to speak up and take action, especially when the voice of hate and exclusion comes from our own communities.

Faith Leaders and Organizations who have signed in support

The Shoulder to Shoulder Campaign is a coalition of 37 national members and more than 75 local community and congregational network members who affirm the commitment to build a more inclusive and pluralistic society. In light of this moment, the organizations and individuals listed below express concern and work together against the alarming increase in Islamophobia and in antisemitism across the United States in recent weeks.

Peter Digitale Anderson, Executive Director, Peace Catalyst International

Carol Bremer-Bennett, US Director, World Renew

Laurie Berkowitz

Dr. Tarunjit Singh Butalia
, Executive Director, Religions for Peace USA

Fr. Carl Chudy, Coordinator, Metrowest Interfaith Community

Bishop Sally Dyck, Ecumenical Officer, The United Methodist Church

The Rev. Elizabeth A. Eaton, Presiding Bishop, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Kenneth C Feinour Jr., Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA)

Alice Foltz, Wellspring United Church of Christ

Shariq Abdul Ghani, Executive Director, Minaret Foundation

Rev. Dr. Jean Hawxhurst, Ecumenical Staff Officer, The United Methodist Church

Valarie Kaur, Executive Director, The Revolutionary Love Project

Rev. Richard Killmer, Co-Founder, Shoulder to Shoulder Campaign

Jeanné Lewis, CEO, Faith in Public Life Action

Salam Al-Marayati, President, Muslim Public Affairs Councils

Bridget Moix, General Secretary, Friends Committee on National Legislation

Rev. Teresa Hord Owens, General Minister and President, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

Rabbi Jonah Dov Pesner, Director, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism

Rev. Margaret Rose, Deputy to the Presiding Bishop for Ecumenical and Interreligious Relations, The Episcopal Church

Basharat Saleem, Executive Director, Islamic Society of North America

Amy Spitalnick, CEO, Jewish Council for Public Affairs

Rabbi Daniel Swartz, Executive Director, Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life

Rev. Adam Russell Taylor, President, Sojourners

Sara Trumm, Director, A Center of Christian-Muslim Engagement for Peace and Justice

Rabbi Burton Visotzky, PhD, Director, Milstein Center for Interreligious Dialogue / Jewish Theological Seminary

Rabbi Elyse Wechterman, CEO, Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association

Martin Wells, Collegeville Institute

Rev. Dr. C. Jeff Woods, Interim General Secretary, American Baptist Churches USA

Rabbi Melinda Zalma

Most Rev. Joseph Bambera, Bishop of Scranton, Chair, Committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

Sister Dominica Lo Bianco, Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia

Rev. Bronwen Boswell, Acting Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, Presbyterian Church (USA)

The Most Rev. Michael B. Curry, Presiding Bishop, The Episcopal Church

Maha Elgenaidi
, Executive Director, Islamic Networks Group

Dr. Kai Horn El-Amin

Rabbi Jonathan Freirich, Open Door Judaism

David D. Grafton, Hartford International University for Religion and Peace

Imam Kareem M. Irfan, Esq.
, V.P., Islamic Society of North America

Rabbi Rick Jacobs
, President, Union for Reform Judaism

Rabbi Jill Jacobs
, CEO, T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights

Rabbi Nancy Fuchs Kreimer
, Association Professor Emerita, Reconstructionist Rabbinical College

Leslie Leff

Dustin Longmire, Messiah Lutheran Church

Imam Mohamed Magid
, Executive Imam, The ADAMS Center

Bishop Vashti Murphy McKenzie
, President and General Secretary, National Council of Churches

James O’Hanlon,
St. Paul’s Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA)

Rev. Laura Osborne
, Coordinator for Interreligious Relations, Reformed Church In America

Rev. Paul Brandeis Raushenbush, President and CEO, Interfaith Alliance

Gary Sampliner, Director at JAMAAT (Jews and Muslims and Allies Acting Together)

Richard L. Santos, President & CEO, Church World Service

Betsy Sitkoff

Rev. Ron Stief, Executive Director, National Religious Campaign Against Torture

JJ TenClay, Reformed Church in America Global Mission

Rev. Dr. Karen Georgia Thompson, General Minister and President, United Church of Christ

Tahija Vikalo, Executive Director, Sisterhood of Salaam Shalom

Rev. Valerie Webster, Moderator, Gallatin Valley Interfaith Association (Episcopal Priest, Diocese of MT)

Rev. Dr. Stacey Cole Wilson, Executive Minister of Beloved Community, Baltimore-Washington Conference, United Methodist Church

Rabbi Lina Zerbarini