On the morning of September 11, 2001 terrorists commandeered four
jetliners destined for the West Coast of the United States. Two crashed
into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, one hit
the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and one crashed into the rural
countryside of Western Pennsylvania. Thousands of people from many
nations and all walks of life were killed. The world was shocked into
disbelief and grief over the hateful attacks, the incredible
devastation, and the tragic loss of life. In the wake of such horrific
events, life took on a new hue; for many life would change, never to be
the same again.
Among the victims on Flight 11, the first to crash into the World Trade
Center, was Al Filipov, a beloved and dedicated member of Trinitarian
Congregational Church and husband of Loretta Filipov, who would later
become an active member of September 11th Families for Peaceful
Tomorrows. Al was an engineer by training, but his family, friends, and
fellow parishioners knew him as a family man, a true servant of the
church, a human rights activist, painter, inventor, and a storyteller.
He sought out the best in people and cared passionately about the world
in its beauty and pain. Al earnestly believed in the power of the
individual to make a positive difference in life. To his memory as well
as to the fullness and faithfulness of his vision we dedicate the Al
Filipov Peace & Justice Forum.
The Al Filipov Peace & Justice Forum was established to articulate those
issues about which Al cared deeply and to demonstrate how one person can
make a profound impact on the lives of those in his or her community.
The goal of the Forum is to invite a distinguished speaker and person of
faith; someone deeply committed to the prophetic tradition and the
compassionate caring of our Judeo-Christian roots, to speak/preach on
issues of peace and justice from a faith perspective.
Guest speakers have included : The Rev. Dr. David R. Smock, Director of
the United States Institute of Peace, Religion and Peacemaking
Initiative (2005); Loung Ung, who escaped Cambodia in 1980 by boat,
spent five months in a refugee camp in Thailand before resettling in
Vermont, and is the author of "And First They Killed My Father" as well
as a national spokesperson for the Campaign For A Landmine Free World
(2004); Jim Wallis, executive director and editor-in-chief of Sojourners
in Washington, D.C., and author of "God's Politics" (2003); and Paul
Loeb, author of the book, "Soul of a Citizen: Living with Conviction in
a Cynical Time," described as "the how-to book for activism at the turn
of the century." (2002). |