• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Beautiful Story Behind This Viral Photo From A Chicago Airport Protest

Sakeenah

Well-Known Member
Power of Humanity
The Beautiful Story Behind This Viral Photo From A Chicago Airport Protest
These two dads were strangers, but quickly became friends.
Jan 31, 2017 | Updated 5 days ago

Caroline Bologna Parents Editor, The Huffington Post

As protesters gather at airports and public spaces to oppose President Donald Trump’s executive order restricting immigration and travel from seven predominantly Muslim countries, one powerful image has emerged to spread a message of empathy and hope.


On Jan. 30, Chicago Tribune photographer Nuccio DiNuzzo captured a moment between two fathers and their children at a protest at O’Hare International Airport. gettyimages-633174316-e1485969945354.jpg


CHICAGO TRIBUNE VIA GETTY IMAGES
Chicago Tribune photographer Nuccio DiNuzzo captured a powerful moment between two fathers and their children at a protest at O’Hare International Airport.

The photo shows Rabbi Jordan Bendat-Appell of Deerfield, Illinois talking to a Muslim father named Fatih Yildirim, who lives in the Chicago suburb of Schaumburg. Both men’s children ― 9-year-old Adin and 7-year-old Meryem ― sit on their shoulders.

Bendat-Appell, who works for the Institute for Jewish Spirituality and Orot: Center for New Jewish Learning, told The Huffington Post that he only just met Yildirim and his family that day at the protest.

“My son, Adin, wanted to move closer to the front of the crowd so he could see people better when they passed by,” the rabbi recalled. “He was very excited to be there! He asked to go on my shoulders and we found ourselves next to Fatih and his family.”

Bendat-Appell said they had a “lovely conversation,” and when the photo was taken, Yildirim was asking him where to find a kosher steakhouse.

“What was wonderful was that it was a very human interaction ― not a Jew and Muslim, but two human beings (who look enough alike to be brothers!), standing up for what is right,” the rabbi said.
DiNuzzo tweeted the photo with the caption “Untitled,” and it received over 10,000 likes.

The photo also appeared on the front page of Reddit with the caption, “Empathy (noun): the ability to understand and share the feelings of another.”

Bendat-Appell and Yildirim exchanged information and connected after the protest. The rabbi invited his family over for Shabbat dinner. “I’m making steak, he is bringing baklava,” Bendat-Appell said.

The rabbi told HuffPost he believed it was important to go to the airport that day. “We feel that as Jews it is our obligation to stand up for the oppressed; our history of persecution comes to teach us that we must not be silent in the face of injustice,” he said.

“I hope that when people see this photo ― and I believe Fatih is with me on this ― that people see that we can come together, that we are all human beings and even children can understand that we have a simple choice to make as human beings: We can choose to be loving and kind even if we have reason to fear and mistrust,” he added. “We are happy if this photograph can bring a bit more love and light into this world.”
 

BSM1

What? Me worry?
So why should this be surprising? How else would you expect civilized people to interact? Suppose it went to the other extreme?
 

Kilgore Trout

Misanthropic Humanist
It's nice to see people acting like human beings to each other. Then again, I see this on a daily basis. I live in an area that is highly mixed: Muslims, Indians, East Asians, Blacks, and Latinos, as well as Whites, and I've rarely seen any type of interaction between people of the various groups that was anything but normal, civilized behavior.

The narratives pushed through media, and social media, always take themselves way too seriously and seem to be based on some type of assumption that people of different races, religions, or cultures default to incivility or violence. This just isn't the norm - at least not in the US.
 

Sakeenah

Well-Known Member
So why should this be surprising? How else would you expect civilized people to interact? Suppose it went to the other extreme?

This isn't suprising and this how majority of people ( religious/ non religious) interact in society, but majority of the time the media doesn't focus on the positives.
 
Top