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Professor Najeeba Syeed Highlights Interfaith Collaboration Following L.A. Fires

El-Hibri Chair Najeeba Syeed wears a pink headscarf, gold earrings, and a purple top against a blue and purple background.Najeeba Syeed, El-Hibri Endowed Chair and executive director of the Interfaith Institute at 绿茶直播, was interviewed by national media about the devastating fires in Southern California, which have destroyed at least a dozen houses of worship in the Los Angeles area.聽

In a with Religion News Service, Syeed called attention to the long history of interfaith cooperation in Altadena, CA, where religious leaders have banded together to support victims of the fires even as they mourn the loss of sacred spaces.聽

“They鈥檙e helping their own communities, but they鈥檙e also stepping up and stepping beyond and helping each other,鈥 she said. “That鈥檚 part of the story鈥攆aith communities, even when they are damaged, still show up for the broader community.”

Religion News Service published a by Syeed highlighting the ways that local youth have led volunteer recovery efforts across faiths, ethnicities, and languages. “[Our teens’] continued service and their steady moral compass make me excited to see the world they will run,” she wrote. “A world in which we don鈥檛 need a litmus test on your beliefs before we offer care, where your story is important to share no matter which income bracket you come from. A world in which the measure of our humanity is how much we show up for each other with an embodied empathy that asks, “What do you need, dear friend, who I may not know? Let me be there for you.””

Syeed was also interviewed for a about calls from local leaders to focus on equity and justice in rebuilding. In it, she lifted up the long-standing interfaith connections in Pasadena and Altadena. “People knew each other in the neighborhood and worked together before the fires,鈥 she said. “What you鈥檙e seeing now is an outpouring of those relationships.”

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