Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Tim ReidyMarch 06, 2012

The Reinhold Niebuhr Professor of Social Ethics at Union Theological Seminary talks about the future of the Occupy movement in this Web exclusive:

What are the ethical roots of the Occupy movement?

The ethical roots of the Occupy movement are as various as the widely various individuals and groups that identify with the movement. Many of the Occupy organizers are young anarchist activists, or anarchist veterans of the anti-globalization movement. Others are new or longtime proponents of Alinsky-style community organizing or other grassroots radical democracy organizations. Others, who came in a bit late, but who gave the movement a real surge when they did, come from traditional progressive organizations and unions involved in electoral politics. Others come from the peace and social justice fellowships that exist in most American religious denominations.

The moral language that you speak is always influenced by the community of memory to which you belong. If you don't have one, it is harder to fight off the dominant culture that commodifies everything that it touches. Many people in the Occupy movement have been deeply wounded by the nihilistic commercial society in which they have grown up, and they are searching for a community of meaning.

Read the rest of the interview here. And check out Professor Dorrien's article in the current issue, "Occupy the Future."

Tim Reidy

 

 

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
Vince Killoran
13 years 3 months ago
I don't think that grassroots community activism with an open-ended call for participatory democracy is exactly "interest group politics."

I'm pleased to find this post-thoughtful and one that addresses faith and social activism. The media and conservatives have moved on to the primaries and the HHS guidelines but I know from my own community that the Occupy Movement is quietly going about the hard work of organizing.

The latest from america

Pope Leo told his ecumenical audience: “By celebrating together this Nicene faith and by proclaiming it together, we will also advance towards the restoration of full communion among us.”
Gerard O’ConnellJune 07, 2025
Blessed Carlo Acutis offers a counterexample for our digital age: a teenager who embraced technology not as an escape, but as a tool for communion—with others, and with God.
Grace LenahanJune 06, 2025
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney attends an event at the Liberal Party election night headquarters in Ottawa April 29, 2025. (OSV News photo/Jennifer Gauthier, Reuters)
“Carney is responding to the [immigration] backlash but also to the Trump effect, which is placing more pressure on Canada to tighten its border.”
Grace CoppsJune 06, 2025
The war in Gaza has become one in which “the heart-rending price is being paid by children, the elderly and the sick.” Israel, along with its allies, especially including the United States, must reckon that cost as well.
The EditorsJune 06, 2025