Bridging the gap
Deirdre Newman
COSTA MESA -- Iman Bennabi wants to make sure the horrific events of
Sept. 11 are never repeated.
So, Bennabi, a Muslim, decided to participate in an informal
discussion group in Costa Mesa sponsored by Orange County Human
Relations.
Over the past month, about 30 groups have convened for what they call
living-room dialogue, discussing their responses to the terrorist attacks
and how they can increase understanding in the community among various
cultures.
“You can either dialogue or have a clash of civilizations. There is no
alternative,” Bennabi said. “The best thing to do is dialogue. The enemy
is ignorance.”
Dialogues in Orange County are not a novel idea. The Los Angeles riots
in 1992 provided the catalyst for the first group. The current discussion
groups were planned to ease tensions after the terrorist attacks, when 69
hate crimes were reported against Muslims and Arabs in Orange County
during the month of September, said Bob Cerince, human relations
specialist.
The Costa Mesa group included about a dozen religious leaders and
residents.
The first session enabled participants to share their cultural
experiences with each other. The second focused on personal responses to
Sept. 11.
The third, and final, dialogue session on Monday involved assessing
the community’s greatest needs as a result of the terrorist attacks and
the steps that must be taken to fulfill them.
Bill Gartner, pastor of Harbor Christian Fellowship, expressed concern
about the volatile environment on Costa Mesa’s Westside, which he said is
the result of a lack of understanding between residents of diverse ethnic
backgrounds.
“My community is like a ticking time bomb,” Gartner said. “It’s not
if, but when. If some concerted effort doesn’t happen soon, I can see
something that makes the L.A. riots seem like a Boy Scout jamboree.”
The Rev. Joseph Robillard, pastor at St. Joachim Church in Costa Mesa,
said he has witnessed friction within his own church.
“The tension between Newport Beach and Hispanics comes with a lot of
misunderstanding,” Robillard said. “The project we’ve been working on is
integration and unity. If you can get to know each other, you may
eventually like each other.”
After the last dialogue session, many of the participants said they
had gained new insight about what must be done to enhance awareness.
“We need to help America understand more about Muslims,” Bennabi said.
“We are the bridge.”
Ideally, the dialogue sessions should serve as springboards for
participants to take action in their communities, Cerince said.
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