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Indiana Faith Leaders Say Unfair Redistricting Is 'Sin'

A group of Indiana faith leaders who rallied at the Statehouse say they want new legislative district maps that encourage voting and competitive races.
Brandon Smith/IPB News
A group of Indiana faith leaders who rallied at the Statehouse say they want new legislative district maps that encourage voting and competitive races.

Indiana faith leaders say that Republican lawmakers drawing unfair legislative maps would be "sin." Gerrymandering, they argue, is "political and theological idolatry."

Leaders in Indiana Christian, Muslim and Jewish faith communities gathered at the Statehouse to make a plea to legislators.

Rev. Patrick Burke, from St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Indianapolis, didn't mince words. Indiana’s current political system, he said, is "egregious and completely unjust."

"If we don’t redraw these maps to be equitable, none of the injustices that we see in our system are ever going to change," Burke said.

READ MORE: Redistricting 101: Who Draws Indiana's Legislative District Maps, And How


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Burke and his fellow faith leaders said they want new legislative district maps that encourage voting and competitive races.

Imam Michael Saahir from the Nur-Allah Islamic Center in Indianapolis said any effort to draw unfair maps is "an act against the will of our creator."

"As people of faith, we must protect the sacredness of the voice and vote of every Hoosier," Saahir said.

Lawmakers return to the Statehouse to draw new districts in the coming weeks.

Contact reporter Brandon at  bsmith@ipbs.org or follow him on Twitter at @brandonjsmith5.

Brandon Smith has covered the Statehouse for Indiana Public Broadcasting for more than a decade, spanning three governors and a dozen legislative sessions. He's also the host of Indiana Week in Review, a weekly political and policy discussion program seen and heard across the state.
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