Faith, Freedom and One’s Fellow Man

After seven hours of a passionate but civil public dialogue, more than 170 Americans came together to decide the future of their community. They went for openness, inclusion and religious freedom, granting approval for a new mosque to be built in suburban Virginia.

Town Hall meeting

The town meeting that started at 7:30 p.m. and went past 3 a.m. was a safe forum where every opinion was allowed to be voiced, regardless of who it belonged to or what they had to say. It was democracy in action as I think our Founding Fathers intended. The details can be found here.

As a devout member of a minority religion that has experienced prejudice and discrimination across the globe, I appreciate this statement from a Muslim-American who attended the meeting: “We love U.S.A… We migrated to this country with the notion that this is the best place in the world, and we find out this is the best place in the world.”

Having faith in one’s fellow man is the hallmark of a truly free society.
Prince William County courthouse

He is right. America has long stood as a beacon of hope, decency, generosity and fairness. It’s considered by many to be the custodian of human rights, a vitally important role in a world where human rights are routinely violated with impunity.

In these turbulent times, we are encouraged again and again to find the reason why violence, war and general discord are so prevalent, which usually means finding a group or individual to blame. It never works.

But successes like the one above give me hope that sanity will yet prevail despite all indications to the contrary. And it reminds me that politics and headlines may profit from dividing us into categories that pundits can throw around, but the great American experiment lives on every day in the courage and respect that individual citizens show one other when we come together.

We are reminded every time we do, that having faith in one’s fellow man is the hallmark of a truly free society.

You’ll never see news like this on the front page but that’s where it belongs. We need to hear it now more than ever.

Photos by: Erika J Mitchell / Shutterstock.com

AUTHOR
Wil Seabrook
Musician, writer, business owner, human rights advocate, aspiring Renaissance Man.