NEW YORK — Buddhists, Christians, Jews, Muslims and people of other faiths prayed and sang together in post-election solidarity Wednesday afternoon in New York City, even as the outcome of the hotly contested and polarizing vote was still in doubt.
Gathering outside a church in Manhattan's Greenwich Village, they stamped their feet on the pavement, sang gospel hymns, looked skyward in prayer and chanted words of hope to the beat of a drum.
"We are here together as we figure out how to make a just and loving democracy — no matter the outcome of this election," said the Rev. Jacqui Lewis, pastor of Middle Collegiate Church in the East Village.
"We've been here before," Lewis said outside the Judson Memorial Church near Washington Square Park.
"We know how to wait for change; we know how to wait with hope."
It's a budding interfaith coalition ritual first held four years ago after Donald Trump was elected president. This year it came against a backdrop of not only the election but also protests over racial injustice and the ongoing coronavirus pandemic that has new cases spiking all across the country.
The group of about 20 broke into a call-and-response led by Lewis, who pumped her right fist in the air. At home, people watched remotely via Zoom and social media.
The Rev. Derrick McQueen of St. James Presbyterian Church in Harlem played a djembe drum and asked the crowd to reflect on the election.