7 minute read
Faith-Based Leaders Unite to Serve Newark
Newark’s Superpower: City-Wide Faith-Based Leaders Unite to Serve Newark Families
By Kaylyn Kendall Dines
Advertisement
Long before COVID-19 impacted the City of Newark, clergy from various religious and cultural beliefs joined forces to uplift families, support individuals, and improve neighborhoods. Together, they are the Newark Interfaith Alliance. “Our mission is to organize, mobilize, and unite faith-based leaders and individuals regardless of their religious background,”’ said Rev.Louise Scott-Rountree, manager of the Mayor’s Office of Clergy Affairs and chair of the Newark Interfaith Alliance.
In July 2014, Newark Mayor Ras J. Baraka established the Mayor’s Office of Clergy Affairs/Newark Interfaith Alliance. With Rountree at the helm, members gravitated toward the grassroots mission because they recognized the collective power and strength that existed, in part, because of their differences.
You could call them advocates for humanity, servant leaders, or citizens following the commandments of their faith. They engage in a wide range of activities including pastoral care, bereavement support, hospital visits, educational information and scholarship distribution, access to resources that address housing needs, and food insecurity. Alliance members host events and show up to support people facing challenges around the clock.
Ask Newark resident Gevone Johnson, whose 29 year- old daughter was shot. At 1:00 AM, Rountree and alliance members arrived at University Hospital. “She made it her business to find me,” said Johnson. “When I saw her, it lifted me up. She always looks out for people.” Johnson remembers seeing members of the alliance servicing the community in the past. “Anybody who has a situation, they are always coming to the somebody’s rescue. You don’t find too many people reaching out.”
Rountree said, “It’s important to address families on either side of a tragedy. I go to families for the Mayor and sit with them, no matter what their kid did.” This is part of her role in the Mayor’s Office of Clergy Affairs. “They still have grandmas and mamas who need to hear, ‘I’m here for you.’”
At not quite 5-feet tall Rountree, known to sport six-inch heels, has a giant presence in her hometown. She is also known for her high energy and determination to help make life better for residents. “Faith plays a big part,” said Rountree, a reverend at Good Neighbor Baptist Church in Newark. “They say, ‘faith without works is dead,’ so many of us are doing the work because we have the faith. We know it is impossible to please God without faith. Our aim is to please God.” She often says, “My religion is personal, but my mission is humanity.”
With more than 500 members in the alliance, she is not alone. In spite of the pandemic, the Interfaith Alliance pressed on with their mission. Clergy walked the streets, distributed masks, and urged local residents to stay home as coronavirus cases soared. Their seventh annual
NEWARK’S SUPERPOWER cont’d from previous page
prayer breakfast was held virtually with alliance members using the occasion to pray for families, business owners, elected officials, the state of the country, and the world. They also decided to increase the cadence of their prayer calls and they have been praying on a conference call every night since March. During the Thanksgiving holiday, those in need will not be forgotten. This year, the alliance has made arrangements for a Thanksgiving meal to be picked up from Applebee’s restaurant on Springfield Avenue.
When a New Jersey bill was passed to reduce the spread of COVID-19 by granting early release to inmates, a pastor in the group organized a campaign to collect donated toiletries, clothes, and shoes for women who were being released. According to Pamela Jones, senior pastor at Liberating Word Ministries in the North Ward, there’s no way the alliance would have the wide-spread impact it does if it wasn’t for Rountree. She leads and forges special bonds among the members. “That’s what makes Rev. Rountree so outstanding,’’ said Jones, who facilitates a program for incarcerated women and the effort to create “care packages” for women who are being released. “She knows how to achieve a goal. “She’s such a pace setter.”
And, she is a spiritual force who has the ability to unite rabbis, imams, pastors, bishops, and ministers in Newark, which has an estimated population of 300,000 residents.
Rountree has the caring spirit of her mother, the late Louise Scott-Rountree, a trailblazing entrepreneur who is believed to be Newark’s first Black, female millionaire. Her spirituality was influenced by her Baptist minister father, the Rev. Dr. Malachi D. Rountree. Her mother made sure members of the Nation of Islam had a place to meet in the late 1950s and early 1960s when some people thought Muslims were too radical. “The best way to serve God is to be of service to the people,’’ said Aqeel Mateen, president and imam at United Muslim, Inc., in Newark. Like her parents, Mateen said, “Rev. Rountree is loved by the Muslims.’’
Having grown up in Krueger-Scott Mansion, a grandiose Central Ward home her mother purchased in the 1950s, she learned valuable life and leadership lessons from her parents. This is the place where, as a child, her love for Newark began. Rountree said, “When you’re born somewhere and it has been good to you, you have no choice but to want to love it. I love Newark.”
thepositivecommunity.com Come to the Website. Featuring TPC Radio.
THE POSITIVE COMMUNITY MAGAZINE PRESENTS THE POSITIVE COMMUNITY MAGAZINE PRESENTS THE POSITIVE COMMUNITY MAGAZINE PRESENTS THE POSITIVE COMMUNITY MAGAZINE PRESENTS A TOTAL MUSIC EXPERIENCE A TOTAL MUSIC EXPERIENCE A TOTAL MUSIC EXPERIENCE A TOTAL MUSIC EXPERIENCE
Positive Community Positive Community Positive Community Positive Community RadioRadioRadio Radio In Classic Black!In Classic Black! In Classic Black! In Classic Black!
Welcome home . . . Welcome home . . . Welcome home . . . Welcome home . . . The Best of Everything—Soul Music for the Soul!The Best of Everything—Soul Music for the Soul!The Best of Everything—Soul Music for the Soul!The Best of Everything—Soul Music for the Soul!
MWANDIKAJI K. MWANAFUNZI THE WAY AHEAD
Coping With the Coronavirus Pandemic
The coronavirus continues to impact huge numbers of people around the world. Thankfully, large numbers of uninfected people wisely wear face masks and practice social distancing in order to protect themselves from becoming infected.
Because of the pandemic, New York State presently prohibits large gatherings of people within houses of worship and other places that usually host worship services and related events. In “normal” times, typical churches, synagogues, and mosques host worship services and other gatherings from once a week to several times a week. I suspect most of you reading this already know that.
I hope we, as Christians, diligently strive to safely and legally resume and enhance congregational gatherings to worship God. Governments’ objective in currently prohibiting large gatherings, including worship services, is to limit spread of the coronavirus. That is a good objective. Prior to resuming large worship services and gatherings, leaders and members of church congregations should, with professional medical help, strive to routinely and effectively disinfect their houses of worship. Additionally, they should strive to effectively identify, isolate, and facilitate healing of congregation members and other church attendees who are or become infected by the virus. And all who attend church services should wear face masks, which can protect us from breathing in airborne coronavirus germs exhaled by those infected.
Is all of this possible? All good things are possible through God. Proverbs 3:5-6 states: “Trust in the Lord with thyne heart; and lean not to thyne own understanding…In all thy ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.” So, we should pray to God for protection, and trust His ability and willingness to direct and enable us people of faith to avoid unnecessary exposure to coronavirus, and to direct infected believers to sources of healing and survival. Simultaneously, we should not test God by risking unnecessary exposure of ourselves to the coronavirus or other infectious germs and illnesses. “Do not put the LORD your God to the test…” — Deuteronomy 6:16
Let’s be more God-centered than coronavirus-centered, but let’s wisely acknowledge the extremely dangerous pandemic exists. And, accordingly, let’s protect ourselves and others from the pandemic. Let’s purposely stay at home as much as pragmatically possible. And when we do leave our homes, let’s consistently wear face-masks and “social distance” as much as possible.
You may be tired of reading and hearing about the coronavirus crisis. But fatigue does not make it go away. So, for now, let’s continue pray, and follow the CDC’s COVID-19 guidelines. And let’s seek medical help if and when needed in order to protect or heal ourselves, our families, or others from the corona virus.
“The King will reply, ‘I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.’ —Matthew 25:40 New International Version