Alliance event marks Religious Freedom Day at Peninsula College

PORT ANGELES — When Vladimir Paraik was 6 years old in his hometown of Prievidza, in what was then Czechoslovakia, the principal of his elementary school gathered everyone in the gymnasium and told them the Soviet Union no longer exists.

“I remember it like it was yesterday,” the Peninsula College sophomore and Roman Catholic said at Tuesday night’s public forum commemorating National Religious Freedom Day, which was Jan. 16.

“For 60 years people had been waiting for religious freedom.”

Sponsored by the Community Multi-Cultural Alliance, the presentation at Peninsula College’s Little Theater featured young and old, students and judges reading excerpts from documents extolling religious freedom.

Documents ranged from the Bill of Rights to the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Among those speaking were Christians, a Quaker and a Buddhist.

“There is no one-size-fits-all,” said former Port Angeles Mayor Glenn Wiggins, a founding member of the alliance’s first incarnation.

The Community Multi-Cultural Alliance grew out of the Port Angeles Multicultural Task Force, a City Council advisory group created in the spring of 2002 to handle racism complaints from personnel at Coast Guard Group/Air Station Port Angeles.

No longer tied to the Port Angeles City Council, it has reconstituted itself to be a broader-based, countywide group focused on improving diversity, equality and cultural awareness.

Its members include community, governmental, religious, educational and business leaders, and representatives from the Coast Guard and Lower Elwha Klallam tribe.

70 people attend forum

Francis Kyle, youth minister of Port Angeles’ First United Methodist and Congregational Church, moderated the forum, which drew about 70 people.

After the formal presentations, audience members took turns reflecting on their own religious beliefs.

Although the Community Multi-Cultural Alliance was originally founded to deal with issues of race and ethnicity in the Port Angeles area, Kyle said the group’s definition of tolerance was extended to include religious freedom and diversity.

“If you want peace, you have to deal sometime with religion,” Kyle said.

Washington is second only to Oregon in low religious participation, Kyle said, and in Clallam County about one out of three people regularly attends religious services.

More in News

Police and rescue workers surround the scene of a disturbance on Friday morning at Chase Bank at Front and Laurel streets in downtown Port Angeles that resulted in a fatal shooting and the closure of much of the downtown area. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
One person dead in officer-involved shooting

Police activity blocks intersection in downtown Port Angeles

May Day celebration in Sequim

The Puget Sound WA Branch of the Party for Socialism… Continue reading

A mountain goat dangles from a helicopter in Olympic National Park south of Port Angeles on Sept. 13, 2018. Helicopters and trucks relocated hundreds of mountain goats from Olympic National Park in an effort officials said will protect natural resources, reduce visitor safety issues and boost native goat populations elsewhere in Washington state. (Jesse Major /Peninsula Daily News)
Few survivors remain after relocation to North Cascades

Tracking data show most died within five years

Clallam to pause on trust land request

Lack of sales could impact taxing districts

Hospital to ask for levy lid lift

OMC seeking first hike since 2008

Paving to begin on North Sequim Avenue

Work crews from Interwest Construction and Agate Asphalt will begin… Continue reading

Kyle Zimmerman, co-owner of The Hub at Front and Lincoln streets in downtown Port Angeles, adds a new coat of paint on Wednesday to an advertising sign on the back of his building that was uncovered during the demolition of a derelict building that once hid the sign from view. Zimmerman said The Hub, formerly Mathews Glass and Howe's Garage before that, is being converted to an artist's workspace and entertainment venue with an opening set for late May or early June. Although The Hub will have no control over any new construction that might later hide the automotive signs, Zimmerman said restoring the paint is an interesting addition to the downtown area for as long as it lasts. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Paint restoration in Port Angeles

Kyle Zimmerman, co-owner of The Hub at Front and Lincoln streets in… Continue reading

Open house set for estuary project

Representatives will be at Brinnon Community Center

Port of Port Townsend considers moorage exemptions

Effort to preserve maritime heritage

Anderson Lake closed due to Anatoxin-A

The state Parks and Recreation Commission has closed Anderson… Continue reading

John Brewer.
Remembrance event set next month for John Brewer

Former publisher, editor was in charge of Peninsula Daily News for 17 years