Tuesday, December 6, 2016
This Sunday, I’ll be praying with my feet to #CLOSErikers from Jacqui Lewis via Groundswell of Auburn Theological Seminary in New York, New York, United States
This Sunday, I’ll be praying with my feet to #CLOSErikers from Jacqui Lewis via Groundswell of Auburn Theological Seminary in New York, New York, United States
New York City's Mayor Bill de Blasio recently spoke about our city being a sanctuary for immigrants. But we can't talk about immigration and race without talking about the systematic way immigrants and people of color are criminalized in our country and our city.
Deportation centers mirror the jail and prison environment. NYC's largest jail complex, Rikers, is a place of violence, torture, and rape. It is unacceptable for anyone to be held in this environment, particularly when 8 out of 10 people being detained at Rikers are pre-trial detainees, many of whom cannot afford bail.
This Sunday, I'm joining clergy and people of faith and moral courage to surround the Mayor's mansion and demand he #CLOSErikers. Over 2,800 people have signed our petition so far - will you add your name and share it with your network before delivery?
In Revolutionary Love,
The Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis
P.S. If you're in NYC, join us to deliver the petition at the Mayor's Gracie Mansion home this Sunday, Dec. 4 at 3:30pm. We'll be sending digital actions for those who can't make it in person.
Mayor Bill de Blasio: #CLOSErikers and Invest in Restorative Justice
Sign the petition before delivery.
As clergy and people of faith and conscience, we call on NYC's Mayor to close Rikers, and redirect the $208,500/year it costs to house each inmate into restorative criminal justice programs across New York City's five boroughs.
The newly elected administration has proposed extreme "law and order" policies that will increase the racial profiling and incarceration of people of color.1
It is critical that we put those on the margins at the center of our activism.
Kalief Browder was a 16-year-old sent to Rikers Island Jail in May 2010 for allegedly stealing a backpack - his family could not afford the $10,000 bail. He spent nearly three years awaiting trial with no conviction, two of them in solitary confinement, fighting for his life in a place notorious for rampant violence by inmates and correction officers alike.
At age 22, this innocent young black man committed suicide.2
Nearly 8 out of 10 people at Rikers have not been convicted of a crime - they are waiting for a trial. And the majority of those held cannot afford bail.
Will you join clergy, and people of faith and conscience to demand NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio #CLOSErikers?
Rikers is a place dangerous to the flesh, a place where surviving turns you inside out and erodes your soul. In the new Bill Moyers documentary, RIKERS, former detainee Ralph Nuñez says, "It's gladiator school for real. If you get there and you don't have a weapon to defend yourself, you have an issue."
As people of faith, it is our moral responsibility to stand for the marginalized, to care for the poor, to have compassion for the children of God who are behind bars, whose lives are shattered, and who live in danger every day.
New York City has a history of failed reforms for Rikers. Though Governor Cuomo and City Council President Melissa Mark-Viverito have both called for Rikers to be closed, Mayor de Blasio has said it would be too complicated and too expensive to do so.3
Locking up just one person at Rikers costs $208,500 a year. Imagine those funds redirected to more just systems and centers in the five boroughs. And as we think about comprehensive solutions, we must create bail reform, "speedy trial" reform and alternatives to incarceration.
Watch the RIKERS documentary, and add your name to our petition before delivery on December 4. I'll be delivering your name to the Mayor at a prayer vigil surrounding his Gracie Mansion home that day with other clergy and concerned citizens - find the Facebook event in the petition to join us in New York City.
Kalief's tragic story is not unique. Over 70,000 New Yorkers cycle through Rikers every year, most of them poor people of color, many of them young, struggling with mental health issues, substance use, and housing instability.
"It's madness," says Tariq Barness, a formerly incarcerated Rikers detainee.
Our tax dollars fund this madness, and it will only get worse under the new administration. We cannot stay silent. Let's #CLOSErikers now.
In solidarity,
The Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis
1. "Fact Check: Donald Trump's First 100 Days Action Plan." NPR. Nov. 10, 2016.
2. "The Brief and Tragic Life of Kalief Browder." The Atlantic, June 8, 2015.
3. "Cuomo Backs City Council speaker's plans to close Rikers." New York Post, Feb. 15, 2016.
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New York, New York 10115 United States
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