Saturday, January 16, 2021

Jim Jones - Muhammad Mosque No. 30: Kansas City Times, October 4, 1976

The Kansas City Times. Monday, October 4, 1976.  Page 42

Jubilee Unites Faiths for ‘Human Service’
By Richard A. Serrano a member of the staff.


Jubilee For Unity.  Black and White Christians, Jews and Muslims attended a (Spiritual) Life Jubilee yesterday afternoon at the Muhammad Mosque No. 30, 2715 Swope Parkway, where speakers such as the Rev. Jim Jones, leader of the Peoples Temple Church, urged that God, in whatever form, can best be found in the good works of man to man.  

(Staff photos by William H. Batson)



About 2,000 persons, members of different religions with different view points, joined forces yesterday afternoon for prayer, a barrage of talks and a display of camaraderie.  

The speakers, from Jewish, Christian, and Islamic faiths meeting for the (spiritual) Life Jubilee at Muhammad Mosque No. 30, 2715 Swope Parkway, agreed that in whatever way man envisions God, brotherly love is the way to seek that vision.  

“Human service itself is the highest worship to God,” said the Rev. Jim Jones, leader of the Peoples Temple Church.  In fact, his church, based in San Francisco, is made up of persons- the poor, the rich, minorities- who have different religious beliefs but who seek God in man’s compassion for man.

About 1,200 members of the church arrived in Kansas City yesterday morning for the jubilee, traveling here by bus caravan.  They later are to attend meetings in St. Louis and Detroit before returning to their homes in Kansas, Oklahoma, Wyoming and California.

As Michael Prokes, a church spokesman, said, many of the church members are lawyers, teachers, and medical workers.  Prokes was a CBS bureau chief who four years ago, while producing a documentary on the church, resigned and joined.  And as another spokesman said, “People must work together, regardless of religion.  This takes preference over anything else, so we all must choose programs to benefit the good of man.”


Mr. Jones echoed those views, calling for better drug reform programs, fewer politicians and more statesmen and defense of the freedom of the press.  

“It’s sad that even after Watergate, the press is not loved,” he said.

Wallace D. Muhammad, chief minister of the Nation of Islam, who was unable to attend the jubilee, told the group in a telephone conversation from Chicago that he was “very, very encouraged” at the meeting of minds in Kansas City yesterday.  

“I can’t help but feel good,” he said.  “We can forget about our religious labors and accept each other as brothers whenever people come together for the common good.”  

His brother, Nathaniel Muhammad, minister of the mosque here, which has about 600 members, said he was delighted at the success of the jubilee and said the mosque had not been so crowded in a long time.   
“Why the life?” he asked the congregation, referring to the title of the jubilee.  “Life is to be alive.  Let us come together and give the body a shot of truth and put it back on the right path.  Let us then wake up this community with the spirit of truth.”

He said he never dreamed this meeting would happen, “especially here in Kansas City.”

Another speaker was the Rev. James Leffingwell, executive director of the Metropolitan Inter-Church Agency, who said, “I’m for a world where liberty and justice for all means liberty and justice for all.”

Lorie Newhouse, executive director of the Religion and Culture United for Peace, said that he hoped that Muhammad(1) “will be treated in all fairness and decency in the days ahead” in his appeal of a drug conviction(2).  Newhouse also introduced his daughters, one an orthodox Jew, and the other a Moslem. 

City Councilman Bruce Watkins, speaking on behalf of the mayor, proclaimed yesterday Life Jubilee Day in Kansas City, saying “I am proud to be part of a city that recognizes all of its people.”  

A dinner was held after the meeting at the Salaam Cuisine Restaurant.  
 


1.  Nathaniel Muhammad - police informant:  https://www.newspapers.com/image/?clipping_id=1597009&fcfToken=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJmcmVlLXZpZXctaWQiOjU1ODc0NjU1LCJpYXQiOjE2MTA4MTk0NTgsImV4cCI6MTYxMDkwNTg1OH0.u1VBJ3sW1EPZET9OYmA8GMF5V_vh0-Tafq7k7_3ePkM

2.  https://www.nytimes.com/1976/01/25/archives/islamic-leader-sentenced-to-8-years-on-drug-charge.html

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