UUFA News October 2024
Our Hearts are with those affected by Hurricane Helene. The UUFA will take special collections to benefit the UUA Disaster Relief Fund. Donations can be made direclty here:
https://www.uua.org/giving/disaster-relief?_gl=1*1fpa4iq*_ga*NjU1ODg2OTYyLjE3Mjc4ODY3NDQ.*_ga_CN7F7RET4F*MTcyNzg4Njc0My4xLjAuMTcyNzg4Njc0My4wLjAuMA..
UUFA Choir Rehearsals have resumed – Singers Welcome
Please join us — Wednesdays at 5:30 – 6:30 for UUFA Choir weekly rehearsal. We met this past week and are hoping you’ll join us next week . Nellie James is our Choir Director this year . Thank you Nellie 🙂
October Sunday services – Please join us weekly at 11:00 AM at 184 Longview Hts., Athens, Ohio
September 29 – Poetry with Wendy McVicker, local Poet Laureate, Athens, Ohio – please join us as we welcome local poet Wendy McVicker who will share her poety. Service Leader ,Barb Harrison (stepping in for Anna)
October 6 – Animal Blessing – Please join us for this annual tradition where we focus on the blessings of our furry friends. We welcome you to bring your well behaved and people friendly pets from home. For folks who can’t bring their buds, please bring photos.
Also feel free to bring photos of pets who have crossed the rainbow bridge. Service Leader: Roberta Roberson
October 13 – Constitution Day – In a slightly delayed tribute to Constitution Day, Jessie Roberson will explore points of convergence and divergence between key points of Unitarian-Universalism and the history of, and some provisions of, the U.S. Constitution.
October 20 – Athens Photo Project – Service Leader: Anna Mather. Join us as we welcome the Athens Photo Project for a special service exploring the power of creativity and community in the healing journey. Through photography, members of the Athens Photo Project have found unique ways to express their personal stories, navigate mental health challenges, and embrace the fullness of their human experience. Guided by our UU values of the inherent worth and dignity of every person, and the call to justice, equity, and compassion, we will reflect on how creative expression can foster resilience, connection, and belonging. This service invites us to witness the transformative role art can play in mental health recovery, as we honor the courage and vulnerability of these photographers. Together, we will celebrate the power of art to inspire change, lift spirits, and deepen our understanding of one another. Come be part of a heartfelt and thoughtful conversation on how creativity aligns with our shared UU principles of spiritual growth and beloved community.
October 27 – We Remember Them – Samhain/All Souls Day observation – Please join us this Sunday as we remember those who have passed on. At this time of year temperatures cool and the leaves fall into a blanket of beautiful colors all around us. We are at a point in the calendar year where we are moving into the darker times, toward the slumber of winter. It has been common over centuries for many people to remember beloved ancestors through traditions like ; Dio de los muertos , Samhain and the Christian day of All Souls/Saints day. As UUs we support and welcome each to their own spiritual path and recognize that through sharing our sacred traditions with one another in community we are made stronger. Please bring a photo, memory or symbol of your loved one(s) and a brief memory or two. This has been part of our UUFA community tradition for some time and we look forward to honoring our loved ones in this sacred space. Roberta Roberson and Barb Harrison , service leaders.
November 3 – To Be Announced
November 10 – Veterans Day Tribute with Jessie Roberson followed by a potluck lunch ! Please bring a dish to share and if you would kindly label the ingredients on a notecard that is much appreciated by folks with specific dietary needs.
UUFA Board Updates – Board Meeting held September 14 – 10:30 AM via Zoom
Submitted by Marilyn Zwayer, Recorder
Board members in attendance for our September meeting were: Richard Thieret (president), Pete Mather (president-elect), Susan Westenbarger (Treasurer), Roberta Roberson, Jessie Roberson, Andy Ray, Nellie James, and Marilyn Zwayer (Recorder).
Our financial matters remain about the same.
Repairs to the fascia, soffits and gutters are nearly done, thanks to Fred Snell.
We hope to expand our connection with retired UU minister Rev. Hilary Krivchenia by having her preach on a regular basis. Roberta, of the Worship Team, will reach out to her and set dates. Roberta has served on this team for 20 years! and plans to step down as chair of the group.
Rentals and use of the building remain strong. Thanks, Richard, for all your time spent organizing this.
Rather than a fall fundraiser, we’re thinking about a fall Fun-Raiser/ 50+ year anniversary of our beautiful building.
Another happening that Nellie would like to see is a Cookie exchange/ decorating/ carol singing event.
All members and friends of the UUFA are encouraged to become involved in these and any other things that people would like to see happening.
Our next meeting will be Oct. 12, by Zoom
Update from our Treasurer, Susan Westenbarger
The “Helping Hands” Fund
We approved this line item as part of our new budget for the 2025 fiscal year which started on July 1, but in case you didn’t take note of it, here’s a deeper dive:
The UU Fellowship receives calls–usually a few a month–from local individuals or organizations asking for emergency financial assistance. These folks are usually calling a lot of faith communities and other organizations and we happen to be on the list. In years past we have always turned people away as we are a small congregation with limited resources. However, earlier this year, the UUFA Board (aka Executive Committee)
agreed to set aside up to $100 per month for a “Helping Hands” Fund so that we can respond affirmatively to future requests. It’s not a lot but people are very appreciative of our assistance.
In September, for example, we provided one night in a local motel to a family of two adults and three children (including a newborn) who had lost their apartment in Jackson and were sleeping in their car.
In previous months we have helped a neighbor rent a U-Haul to move their belongings from a storage unit in Albany to their new apartment in Athens. We’ve helped with rent or security deposits up to our $100/month limit. We’ve bought groceries for folks at the end of the month when SNAP balances run low.
As your Treasurer and the person who receives and handles these calls, I am proud to be part of a congregation that takes seriously that part of our mission statement calling us to “serve the wider community.”
UUFA Fall Party Held
Thanks to everyone who attended the fall outing at Barb Harrison & Pat Gordon’s Saturday, September 21
Membership Committee Re-Forming – Volunteers Needed – First meeting in November 2024
Volunteers are needed to be a part of the UUFA Membership & Welcoming Committee . The life of our congregation needs support in the area of ministry to one another. The membership committee will address concerns of the congregation, organize events for members to engage in community service and social justice work as the need arises. Please let Barb Harrison know if you are interested. barbunday@gmail.com
News from our Denomination – Unitarian Universalist Association
Living Our Shared Values Amid Ongoing Violence
This statement was developed by the Office of the President and other senior national staff of the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA), grounded in the values of Unitarian Universalism and in conversation with previous resolutions, statements, and actions passed by General Assembly, the UUA’s democratically-elected governing body.
Raghad Ezzat Hamouda, a 19-year-old English literature student currently sheltering in Northern Gaza, registered for classes in September of 2023. Her aspiration was to finish her studies quickly so that she could get a job that would help sustain her family. In her words, “The war destroyed all my ambitions and there was nothing left.”
One year later, the few schoolbooks that remained accessible to students in the weeks after Hamas’ attacks on October 7th are now scattered and burned. With the death of parents, caregivers, and siblings across generations, many Palestinian children do not remember, or have never known, the feeling of security or predictability. This fall, Gaza’s 625,000 schoolchildren have virtually no access to their classes.
24-year-old Eden Yerushalmi was studying to become a Pilates instructor and worked as a bartender at the Nova Music Festival before she was abducted on October 7th. Her body was returned to her family in Israel in late August, along with those of five other hostages who had been held for over 300 days. Her death means that she will never finish her classes, nor teach others in the way she was called to do. The profound trauma of her loved ones and those who wait for word of hostages still held in captivity is beyond measure.
As air strikes and targeted attacks now alarmingly escalate along the Lebanese border, the high human cost of this conflict cannot be ignored. Mounting civilian casualties and further displacement push any negotiation of ceasefire further away, even as Israeli citizens take to the streets to demand the return of the hostages and full accountability from their elected leaders. Protest movements around the world — including those led by students, who have so often represented the conscience of nations – continue to demand basic human rights for the Palestinian people and an immediate end to the ongoing bloodshed. As obvious and fundamental as it may seem, those basic human rights must always be at the center of our commitments as we work toward global recognition of the humanity of all those involved.
Sorrow for one compounding tragedy does not imply lack of solidarity with another. There are tears enough to go around, and enough compassion to see us through.
Having condemned the horror of the initial 2023 attacks, called for cease-fire, spoken against the rise of antisemitism, anti-Arabism, and Islamophobia in the United States and passed both an Action of Immediate Witness in solidarity with the Palestinian people and a Responsive Resolution calling for the immediate release of the hostages, we Unitarian Universalists know we must reach out for further action to enact the values we have put into words. Our commitment, in partnership with all those who value basic human rights, only grows more urgent as the escalation of the conflict into Lebanon threatens to engulf the entire region.
As our Action of Immediate Witness articulates, Unitarian Universalists and our partners call for a robust international commitment to ending continued settler advancement and military occupation of the Palestinian territories, along with an end to unconditional military aid to the State of Israel until that goal is realized. Along with the Apartheid Free Communities Network, sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee and other people of faith, we have pledged to align ourselves with the goals of freedom, justice, and equality for the Palestinian people and all people.
We further recognize that hostage-taking inherently violates those basic human rights, and that the release of hostages who have survived their long ordeal is an essential component of an end to this current phase of conflict.
The reality is that no statement is as powerful as the actions you can take to help stop this devastating and escalating conflict. Your vote. Your commitment to live out your values in public space. Democracy does not thrive in silence but is strengthened through faithful witness and collective action. In November, voters will choose leaders who have the power to change course on current governmental policy. No party or candidate is exempt from the accountability that is inherent in democracy.
Unitarian Universalists believe in creating a world centered in love, manifested through pluralism, justice and interdependence. Over generations, we have witnessed the courage and moral clarity of protest movements as they shape the conscience of this country and our world. History teaches us that responding to such voices with violence comes with tragic consequences to both its enactors and its victims.
This fall, as Unitarian Universalists regather in community for another congregational year, let us remember that we do not need to ration our tears. Sorrow for one compounding tragedy does not imply lack of solidarity with another. There are tears enough to go around, and enough compassion to see us through. The issues that we face together are existential, centered around the very survival of peoples and of nations.
Such existential issues can feel like an impossible gulf to bridge, not just halfway around the world, but present right in our own neighborhoods. Pluralism, justice, and interdependence are the shared values by which we affirm basic dignity and human rights in our own community, even when it feels as if our perspectives can never be reconciled.
Together, we are called to create and nurture sustainable relationships of care and respect, mutuality and justice. We work to repair harm and damaged relationships. Let us allow our values to guide us and recommit to learning as we go so that we may live in a world where violence does not beget violence, and all our children and young people can once again enter their classrooms in peace.
UUFA Monthly Member Recognition
Roberta Roberson leading Sunday service, April 23, 2-23
Each month we will recognize a member of our congregation for their various “good works” for our congregation. Please submit your ideas to Barb Harrison – barbunday@gmail.com
This month the UUFA is proud to recognize Roberta Roberson. Roberta and Jessie are long time members of UUFA but did you know that Roberta has been leading our Sunday services team for 20+ years? If you have experienced a Sunday service with Roberta as service leader you’ll know that she makes one feel welcomed, supported and enlightened. Her skill as a lay leader stands out and she has set the bar high for all of us. Thank you Roberta for your heartfelt and motivational services. We know we will still see you in the pulpit from time to time but hope you know that your leadership on this committee is appreciated and valued.
Many thanks to Nellie James for stepping up to lead the worship team.
Tithely.com makes it possible for members and friends to donate on-line.
Giving To UUFA Made Easy through Tithely:
Click on the link below to be directed to the UUFA Giving Page on Tithely.com: Thank you for your contributions.
Have an Idea for the Newsletter? Please don’t be shy and let Barb Harrison know what you’d like to see. Many thanks to those who submitted items for October.