Many faces plan to come together
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Michele Marr
Religious leaders from various faith communities in Huntington
Beach will gather at 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 5, at the Pier Plaza for the
fourth annual Procession of Light.
The event, which has drawn thousands of Huntington Beach residents
and visitors from across the country in previous years, is meant to
promote understanding and respect for others regardless of their
faith, ethnicity or culture. It is sponsored by the Greater
Huntington Beach Interfaith Council.
“The theme this year is ‘Many Faces, One Family’ because, even
though our skins may be a different color, and we may speak different
languages and believe in different religions, we can still work
together for the good of all mankind,” said Jack Allen, treasurer for
the council and a member of the planning team for the event.
“Everyone is invited,” emphasized Father Bruce Patterson of St.
Bonaventure Church, president of the council. “This is an
interchurch, inter-religious event intended to bring us all together
as members of the greater Huntington Beach-area community, to listen
to some good, inspiring music and to share a prayer of blessing for
the new year.”
The Rev. Peggy Price of the Huntington Beach Church of Religious
Science will lead the gathering in a prayer of unity, while each
religious leader will answer with a response, such as “Amen,” from
their own faith’s tradition.
Those who attend need only to bring with them “their hopes,
concerns and wishes for themselves, their families for 2003,”
Patterson said. Everyone who attends will have the chance to offer a
personal prayer.
The program for the event will include a sheet of paper marked “my
prayer” for each participant to write a prayer on. The prayers will
be collected during the program and, at one point, set on fire.
The ritual was inspired by the World Peace Flame, a perpetual
flame first lighted by an international group of peacemakers in a
show of goodwill and cooperation in July of 1999.
Debi Wheeler-Ure, chairwoman for the organizing committee for the
Procession of Light, said the group decided to burn the prayers in a
local peace flame as a gesture of unification.
“In some of our meetings, we laughed over the thought that we were
uniting our prayers and turning them into ‘holy smoke,’” she said.
“That thought makes me smile. I think God is smiling, too.”
For Lourdes Gutierrez, who helped Wheeler-Ure organize this year’s
event, the flame is a reflection of shared aspirations for peace, “a
reminder that the greatest of achievements have small beginnings and
that it is individuals who create change.” As the smoke rises to the
heavens, 80 white doves will be released.
During the Sunday afternoon event, the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints Stake President Bruce E. Miller will give the
invocation.
An honor guard from the Huntington Beach Police Department will
present the colors, and Mayor Connie Boardman will lead the Pledge of
Allegiance.
A musical prelude featuring Nancy Linder, the South Coast Klezmer
Band and the Sts. Simon and Jude Church Youth Band will be given at
2:30 p.m.
Gravity, a popular local trio that plays a blend of jazz, pop and
Caribbean rhythms and Crescendo, and a group of singers from The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will provide music,
including “We Are One” and “The Lord’s Prayer,” for the main program.
Wheeler-Ure will sing its closing song.
“I want people to take home with them a renewed sense of unity and
peace among our fellow citizens,” Patterson said.
As the sun starts to set, bagpipers will lead the gathering in a
procession to the end of the Huntington Beach Pier and back to Pier
Plaza.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer from Huntington Beach. She
can be reached at [email protected].
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