All faiths. All people of good will. One act of kindness on the 25th of every month.
Welcome to The Kindness Movement.
Something is happening in this country and around the world that people of good will can see clearly — regardless of their tradition.
The hungry are being told to wait. The stranger is being turned away. The sick are losing care. Families are being separated from the lives they built. Aid that kept people alive was cut without warning. Programs that fed children are being dismantled. People with green cards are being sent back to countries at war. All religions are under assault by the powers that be — and to speak up is to invite more attack.
Every faith tradition on earth has a name for what is being done to these people.
In Christianity, Jesus called them the least of these — and said whatever we do to them, we do to him. Matthew 25:40.
In Islam, abandoning the poor violates Zakat — one of the five pillars of faith.
In Judaism, Tikkun Olam — repairing the world — is not optional. It is the obligation.
In Sikhism, Seva — selfless service — is the practice of faith itself, not an addition to it.
In Hinduism and Buddhism, service to the suffering is service to the divine.
Every tradition. The same instruction. The same people being harmed.
If you are from a different faith — or no faith at all — you see the confusion too. You see one group of people after another being harmed. You are tired of being lied to. You are tired of watching cruelty dressed up as conviction.
We are not here to argue about politics.
We are here because arguing has stopped working — and kindness hasn't.
Pointing fingers changes nothing. Showing up changes everything.
The answer is not more argument. It is more action. Visible, purposeful, publicized action — by all religions and people of good will, united under the banner of love and kindness, making it known every 25th of every month.
We must unite under the banner of love and kindness — not because we agree on everything, but because we agree on this: the vulnerable deserve protection. The hungry deserve food. The stranger deserves welcome. The oppressed deserve relief.
Scripture tells us to work out our own salvation. Each of us doing it the best we can, in our own faith, in our own way.
But what we agree upon — we all agree upon.
The commonality of our humanity. The shared purpose of our faiths. The simple, earth-shaking truth that kindness begets kindness — and illuminates the darkness not by pointing fingers, but by offering a kind alternative.
Scandinavian countries built societies around this idea. They decided that uplifting society matters more than uplifting fortunes. They are not a special people. They are people who decided the common good is worth organizing around.
Why not us? We have better instructions.
The Kindness Movement is not a protest. It is not a petition. It is not a complaint.
It is a declaration — that kindness is still possible, that people of good will still exist, and that on the 25th of every month, we will prove it. Together.
If you are Christian — you already know what Jesus said. We are here to do it.
If you are Muslim, Jewish, Sikh, Hindu, Buddhist — your tradition already gave you the instruction. We are here to do it together.
If you have no faith but believe in human decency — you belong here. The table was always meant for you too.
The 25th of every month. WE CARE DAY. One act of kindness. The one that makes you both feel good.
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