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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Some on City Council are worried about 2028
    A person passes in front of two lit displays. Inside the display are two flags with multicolor rings and swooshes.
    The Olympic and Paralympic flags on display at Los Angeles City Hall on Sept. 12, 2024.

    Topline:

    Some members of the Los Angeles City Council are worried that countries might boycott the 2028 Olympics in response to President Donald Trump's policies, at home and abroad.

    The context: The killing of another protester by immigration agents in Minneapolis and Trump's ongoing threats against Greenland have fueled calls to boycott World Cup matches held in the U.S. this summer — including in Los Angeles. The suggestion from a former FIFA president and others led some in City Hall to worry that the coming 2028 Olympics could also get the cold shoulder.

    What City Council is saying: "We have a national government who is setting the stage for an environment where we could have a serious boycott," Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson said at a committee meeting on the Olympic Games Monday.

    What LA28 is saying: John Harper, an executive with private Olympics organizing committee LA28, said the organization had not discussed the possibility with the International Olympic Committee and that he was not concerned a boycott would take place in 2028.

    Read on...for more about the potential effects of a boycott.

    The killing of another protester by immigration agents in Minneapolis and President Trump's ongoing threats against Greenland have fueled calls to boycott World Cup matches held in the U.S. this summer — including in Los Angeles.

    The suggestion from a former FIFA president and others led some in City Hall to worry that the coming 2028 Olympics could also get the cold shoulder.

    "We have a national government who is setting the stage for an environment where we could have a serious boycott," Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson said during a committee meeting on the Olympic Games Monday.

    John Harper, an executive with private Olympics organizing committee LA28, said that the organization had not discussed the possibility with the International Olympic Committee and that he was not concerned a boycott would take place in 2028.

    City Council members did not seem convinced.

    "This conversation around FIFA, that's just a forewarning," said Councilmember Monica Rodriguez. "We need to have a Plan B."

    The city of Los Angeles stands to lose if spectators or countries opt out of the 2028 Olympics. L.A. is the financial guarantor of the Games, along with the state of California, and a significant boycott could affect the financial success of the massive sporting event.

    "We could be talking about a lot more irreparable harm, financially," Rodriguez said.

    Fresh concerns about a boycott also come as anxiety in City Hall has been growing about the role the federal government will play at the Games.

    The City Council recently passed a motion requesting that LA28 provide more details on the federal Olympics task force on security that Trump announced last year, citing the ICE agents who have descended on the streets of Los Angeles and other U.S. cities

    The Olympics have been a frequent arena of political protest over the decades, including in Los Angeles in 1984 when the Soviet Union led a boycott of the Games.

    "We never talk about the boycott of '84, but there was a significant boycott," Harris-Dawson said Monday. "It doesn't mean that you can't figure it out, but it also means we have to face it and face it directly."

  • What you should know about skunks in SoCal
    A close up of a small black and while mammal looking toward the camera while it walks in a field of grass. It's a baby skunk with a white stripe going down its back and head.
    A baby striped skunk.

    Topline:

    If you’ve been smelling skunks near your home, that could be because it’s baby skunk season. Here’s what you should know.

    Baby timeline: The babies are called kits. Mothers are usually pregnant with a litter of four to six kits for a couple of months, and give birth around late April.

    What kits are like: Kits are born blind, deaf and are generally pretty helpless. They can’t properly use that trademark spray until week three or four.

    Does kit season change behavior? Mothers can get more ornery while they’re lactating, which could mean more of that trademark smell. Otherwise, a skunk expert told LAist that it’s a misconception that the creatures are hostile overall.

    Read on…. to learn more about what you should do if you get sprayed.

    Skunks aren’t exactly the most adored mammals in Southern California, but there's a cute reason why they should be on your radar: It’s baby season right now.

    That also means some changes in skunk behavior. Here’s what you should know about skunk life and how they care for their young around L.A. County.

    Quick skunk facts

    The skunks most people encounter in California are the striped species, which have jet black fur and two bright white stripes that run from the back of their neck to the base of their tail. (Yes, like Pepé Le Pew if he were a little less groomed.)

    Ted Stankowich, a biological sciences professor at Cal State Long Beach, is a skunk expert. He said they’re nocturnal, omnivorous creatures that primarily come out around dusk or early evening to find food.

    “They eat bugs, eggs, grass, fruit and anything they can find,” he said. “A lot of scavenging for trash among humans.”

    These mammals are explorers that typically don’t venture that far. Females go up to a square mile away from home while males can traverse up to four square miles.

    They can have multiple dens with a particular favorite. Skunks can live in a variety of nooks and crannies, like rock piles, under homes or in bushes.

    The creatures tend to have a bad rap because of the spraying, but Stankowich said a lot of that is based on misconceptions. The mammals aren’t usually aggressive.

    “ I like to say that they have sort of a great attitude of the world — you leave me alone. I leave you alone,” he said. “But if you mess with me, I’m gonna come after you.”

    As for lifespan, they live about two to four years in the wild. That’s shorter in cities because they’re more likely to be killed by drivers.

    How baby season changes behavior

    Baby skunks are called kits.

    In warmer climates like ours, mating can start as early as January.  Mothers are pregnant for about two and a half months, so if they mate in February, they’ll likely give birth to a litter of four to six kits around April.

    These little ones are born blind, deaf and mostly hairless. They’re mostly helpless for the first few weeks of life and rely on their mother for milk.

    A kit’s little body can make a droplet of oily musk within about a week. However, Stankowich said they can’t spray it properly until week three or four.

     They’re not there to bother you. They’re not there to attack you. If they tell you to back up, you’ll know it.
    — Ted Stankowich, biological sciences professor at Cal State Long Beach

    While skunks aren’t normally aggressive, lactating mothers are the exception. They leave the den at night to forage, so they can eat and keep up with milk production. That can make them “a bit more ornery,” Stankowich said.

    “ They get more nervous, they get upset if they’re harassed,” he said. “Those animals are much more feisty than your normal non-lactating or pregnant skunk.”

    Kits can be a little feisty too. When they’re in the den, they’re developing defensive behaviors. Stankowich has seen kits do foot stomps and hiss to act aggressive and strong.

    The offspring start leaving the den and start exploring with the family at around two months old, meaning there are likely more skunks than usual around May to June.

    Kits turn into adults around late summer and early fall when they venture off on their own.

    What that means for you (and your pets)

    Since skunks aren’t as big as coyotes, it’s easy to miss the increased activity. But you could still spot a mother with her kits wandering around her in a big group.

    If you do see skunks out and about, Stankowich said you don’t need to turn tail and run. Instead, stay still, keep any pets on a leash and don’t try to feed the skunks.

    “ They’re not there to bother you. They’re not there to attack you,” he said. “If they tell you to back up, you’ll know it.”

    Now if you have the unfortunate gift of getting sprayed anyway, there are steps you can take to get rid of the smell on you or your pets.

    First off, tomato baths are a myth and water activates more of the smell, making it worse. Instead, use a combination of these three things:

    • A quart of hydrogen peroxide
    • A quarter cup of baking soda
    • Teaspoon of dish soap

    You’ll wash yourself or your pets with this. Depending on how long your pet’s hair is, you might need a couple of rounds. If spray gets in your household, bleach can be used to knock out the smell.

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  • Pomona venue marks milestone
    A group of people doing an LA hand sign standing in front of a wall pose for a photo.
    Members of the Los Angeles Knight Riders cricket team show their LA cred as they pose for a picture at the Pomona Fairplex

    Topline:

    On Wednesday, shovels hit the ground in Pomona, where construction has begun for a 10,000-plus capacity premier cricket stadium. It will serve as the venue for men’s and women’s games, played by six teams in each competition.

    More details: The stadium is being erected in the Fairplex fairgrounds as the home of the Los Angeles Knight Riders, a professional Major League Cricket team owned by the Mumbai-based Knight Riders Sports. The company is co-led by Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan.

    Why it matters: Cricket is already woven into the cultural fabric of U.S. diaspora communities from all over the world, particularly South Asia, where it is followed with religious fervor. In the U.S., cricket fans, coaches and players view a dedicated cricket stadium in a major sports market like Southern California as a huge milestone.

    Read on... for more on the new stadium.

    On Wednesday, shovels hit the ground in Pomona, a city in the eastern edge of Los Angeles County, where construction has begun for a 10,000-plus capacity premier cricket stadium. It will serve as the venue for men’s and women’s games, played by six teams in each competition.

    The stadium is being erected in the Fairplex fairgrounds as the home of the Los Angeles Knight Riders, a professional Major League Cricket team owned by the Mumbai-based Knight Riders Sports. The company is co-led by Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan.

    The groundbreaking kicked off with a “bhumi pujan,” a ritual rooted in Hindu tradition, which often marks the start of a construction project as a way of seeking divine blessings and forgiveness for disturbing the earth.

    Cricket is already woven into the cultural fabric of U.S. diaspora communities from all over the world, particularly South Asia, where it is followed with religious fervor. In the U.S., cricket fans, coaches and players view a dedicated cricket stadium in a major sports market like Southern California as a huge milestone.

    Investors hope momentum from local major league cricket games carries into the Olympics, taking the sport to a mainstream American sports audience. Many also believe that this newfound visibility will help carve out promising pathways for homegrown cricketing talent.

    Olympics could make cricket mainstream in America

    Venky Mysore, CEO of Knight Riders Sports, said establishing the Knight Riders Cricket Field is just the first step in getting the average American fan engaged. Mysore is convinced of the sport’s commercial potential.

    “People who watch the Olympics are not necessarily cricket fans,” Mysore said. “When cricket becomes an Olympic sport, that takes interest and awareness to the next level.”

    Knight Riders Sports operates multiple teams worldwide — in India, the Caribbean and the United Arab Emirates. But the Pomona venue is the only stadium they’ve built from scratch, Mysore said. Only three international-level cricket stadiums operate in the U.S. — in Texas, Florida and North Carolina. The sport is also played in other multi-purpose venues like the Oakland Coliseum.

    L.A. is one of a handful of dedicated US cricket venues

    Peter Della Penna, who has been covering cricket in the U.S. for the past two decades, says this is the first time an international cricket event in the U.S. will have a dedicated venue. In 2024, a high-capacity modular stadium was specifically built for the T20 World Cup in New York, but was dismantled after the event.

    But during the L.A. Olympics, it would not be ideal to hold the cricket matches in another part of the country, he said.

    “Cricket players would want to be in the Olympic Village, walk shoulder to shoulder with U.S. track and field athletes, swimmers and basketball players,” he said. “Cricketers in America have not had such prominence and U.S. cricket really needs that.”

    Cricket has had a long, rich history in the U.S. The first international cricket match was played between the U.S. and Canada in 1844 at St. George’s Cricket Club in Manhattan, New York. Canada beat the U.S. by a slim margin before thousands of spectators, with large wagers placed on the event.

    A high point came in 2024, when the U.S. national team achieved a stunning upset over Pakistan in a T20 World Cup match.

    Debjit Lahiri, a Wisconsin-based cricket historian, said Olympic cricket was last played in 1900 in Paris where the Summer Games were a chaotic sideshow to the World’s Fair, featuring events like live pigeon shooting. Cricket never made it to the 1904 Olympic Games held in St. Louis.

    Cricket in Los Angeles began around 1900 with local clubs. It gained prominence in the 1930s with the Hollywood Cricket Club formed by expat British actors, drawing big names like Errol Flynn, Laurence Olivier, Cary Grant and Boris Karloff. The club’s original home at Griffith Park was torn down to build an equestrian center for the 1984 Olympics. It moved to Woodley Park in the San Fernando Valley, where several aspiring cricketers learned to play the game, including Ayan Desai, a 22-year-old rising star who hopes to play for Team USA in 2028.

    Desai, whose family owns a motel near the future Knight Riders stadium, said he was thrilled to hear about a world-class cricket venue almost in his backyard.

    “To play the Olympics is special, but to do it in front of your home crowd, in your home city, that would be amazing,” he said.

    Desai, a left-arm fast bowler, plays for the Seattle Orcas major league team and has competed in four international games as part of the U.S. national team.

    “This is what we’ve needed to grow cricket in Los Angeles,” he said.

    Questions remain about cricket’s sustainability

    Antigua native Reggie Benjamin, a former U.S. cricketer and longtime coach based in Los Angeles, remains skeptical.

    “I’m happy to see cricket get an opportunity to showcase itself here,” he said. “But if you can’t get average Americans to come to a game and sit in the stands for three hours, or if you can’t get American kids to play cricket, the game is not going to grow.”

    Benjamin said he’s been disappointed to see homegrown talent and grassroots efforts cast aside as players from other countries are brought in to play for major league teams and the national team. He also points to poor management that has beset U.S. cricket and raised concerns about cricket’s inclusion in the 2028 Olympics.

    Last year, those challenges came to a head as USA Cricket, a nonprofit tasked with developing the sport in the United States, filed for federal bankruptcy protection after ending a contract with American Cricket Enterprises, the group that created Major League Cricket. Since then, the International Cricket Council, which oversees cricket worldwide, has been temporarily running the U.S. national cricket team. ACE also filed a lawsuit alleging wrongful termination of the contract.

    Yet big investors like Mysore are optimistic that a cooperative relationship is possible between USA Cricket and Major League Cricket. Both feed off each other, he said. National selectors often look to major league teams for star players.

    “A strong national team is important because it keeps interest alive in the sport,” he said.

    Walter Marquez, CEO of the Fairplex, says he believes in cricket’s future. A diehard baseball fan, Marquez said he’s been boning up on cricket recently. He now knows what a “yorker” means, and he sees real potential for the game to grow.

    “For those who don’t know cricket, given an opportunity, they will learn what an exciting game it is, especially the T20 format,” said Marquez, referring to the truncated format the Olympics will use in 2028.

    “We like home runs. We love the long ball. Cricket has a lot of those. American sports fans just don’t know they’re cricket fans yet.”

    ___

    Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

    This story first appeared on The LA Local.

  • Long Beach residents can apply today
    A press conference occurs in front of Long Beach City Hall.
    Mayor Rex Richardson speaks at a press conference outside City Hall as Long Beach announces a new housing assistance program on Thursday, April 23, 2026.

    Topline:

    Long Beach residents at risk of losing their housing can now apply for short-term rental assistance to help them stabilize their finances and, hopefully, stay in their homes.

    Who qualifies: To qualify, renters must be making 50% or less of the area’s annual median income. That amounts to $53,000 or lower for a household of one and increases for each household member — for instance, $75,750 for four, $100,000 for eight.

    The backstory: It’s among the first programs being funded by Los Angeles County Measure A, a half-cent sales tax increase approved by voters in 2024 and specifically earmarked for programs to prevent homelessness in the region.

    Read on... for more on how to apply.

    Long Beach residents at risk of losing their housing can now apply for short-term rental assistance to help them stabilize their finances and, hopefully, stay in their homes.

    The city says it’s rolling the program out quickly. Qualified renters could start receiving funds as early as the second week of May.

    It’s among the first programs being funded by Los Angeles County Measure A, a half-cent sales tax increase approved by voters in 2024 and specifically earmarked for programs to prevent homelessness in the region.

    Long Beach’s program, called Long Beach Renter Aid, got $2.7 million in Measure A dollars. Officials estimated that’s enough to help between 175 and 250 households with up to 6 months of rental assistance or up to $9,000 per household, whichever is less.

    The funds can also be used to pay for overdue rent, past-due utilities, moving expenses and/or security deposits.

    To qualify, renters must be making 50% or less of the area’s annual median income. That amounts to $53,000 or lower for a household of one and increases for each household member — for instance, $75,750 for four, $100,000 for eight.

    Long Beach residents can see if they qualify and apply online here or in person Monday through Thursday at the Multi-Service Center or on Friday at the city’s Housing Authority.

    The application window closes on May 8. The financial assistance should start going out that same day, said Deputy City Manager Teresa Chandler.

    There will be a new application window each month starting in June. The city plans to accept new applicants between the 5th and 12th of each month until funds are exhausted.

    The program will prioritize applicants who are 55 and older, at imminent risk of eviction or are impacted by the loss of federal benefits, policy changes or immigration enforcement actions.

    Long Beach is the first city to roll out such a program using county Measure A funds.

    Another program funded by Measure A is also paying for legal aid to help renters stave off wrongful evictions. Two more planned to launch soon are aimed at preventing homelessness for Long Beach residents aged 55 and older and residents aged 18-25. Details will be announced in the coming months.

    “These resources are a lifeline,” Mayor Rex Richardson said at a news conference on Wednesday.

    Long Beach Mayor Rex Richardson, a man with dark skin tone, wearing a gray checkered suit, red tie, and glasses, speaks behind a podium with signage that reads "City of Long Beach." There are people standing behind him in front of flags.
    Mayor Rex Richardson speaks at a press conference outside City Hall as Long Beach announces a new housing assistance program on Thursday, April 23, 2026.
    (
    Thomas R. Cordova
    /
    Long Beach Post
    )

    It will also be a huge help for families who have suffered financial hardship as a result of aggressive immigration enforcement tactics that began last May, said Susannah Sngiem, executive director of the nonprofit United Cambodian Community.

    In many cases, “those that are detained are the breadwinners of these families,” Sngiem said.

  • Christians, Muslims and Jews share one space
    People sit at pews in the bottom level of a church. The choir is seated in the front. Stained glass windows let light in.
    Easter Sunday at First United Methodist Church in Pasadena capped a Christian Holy Week that also saw Islamic Friday prayers and a Jewish Passover celebration on the same campus.

    Topline:

    The First United Methodist Church has been in its ornate home in Pasadena for 101 years. For about 10 years, it has also been the home of a satellite location of the Islamic Center of Southern California, a large mosque in the downtown area. And for a little over a year, the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center has also used space at the Colorado Boulevard church. The congregation lost their worship space to the Eaton Fire in January 2025.

    The backstory: The three congregations are using the church at a time when religion is an inescapable fact in conflicts around the world. Global tensions in Israel, the Palestinian territories and Iran are hitting close to home for communities with ties to the region. And in America, President Donald Trump is in a war of words with an unlikely combatant: the pope.

    How that is playing out in Pasadena: Pastor Amy Aitken views First United Methodist as “an island of hope and grace in the middle of a world that is really divided.”

    Read on ... to experience a weekend in which all three Abrahamic faiths worshiped at one church.

    The First United Methodist Church has been in its ornate home in Pasadena for 101 years. For about 10 years, it has also been the home of a satellite location of the Islamic Center of Southern California, a large mosque in the downtown area. And for a little over a year, the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center has also used space at the Colorado Boulevard church. The congregation lost their worship space to the Eaton Fire in January 2025.

    That means that First United Methodist Church in Pasadena is today the site of bar mitzvahs and Shabbat services, iftar meals and Friday prayers and Christian Holy Week services.

    Sometimes, within hours of each other.

    “I'm not aware of any other church in the country that has all three Abrahamic faiths worshiping under one roof. It's pretty phenomenal,” said Pastor Amy Aitken of the First United Methodist Church.

    The three congregations are using the church at a time when religion is an inescapable fact in conflicts around the world. Global tensions in Israel, the Palestinian territories and Iran are hitting close to home for communities with ties to the region. And in America, President Donald Trump is in a war of words with an unlikely combatant: the pope.

    A woman with light skin tone and short brown hair clasps her hands. She is wearing black pants and a salmon pink blazer.
    Pastor Amy Aitken sees First United Methodist as "an island of hope and grace in the middle of a world that is really divided."
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    But Aitken views First United Methodist as “an island of hope and grace in the middle of a world that is really divided.”

    “We're offering a place for people to gather, to worship, to connect, to be in community with one another,” Aitken said. “We don't have to agree on everything, and we come from different worldviews, and that's OK.”

    I recently attended Friday prayers, Shabbat and Easter Sunday service at First United Methodist — and found quite a bit more common ground than you might expect.

    Friday, April 3: Assalamu Alaykum

    12:30 p.m.

    People are streaming into a church hall on the First United Methodist campus through a side entrance.

    Rizwan Bhatti, a doctor and volunteer who helps manage the mosque’s partnership with the church, pulls out colorful woven mats from a supply closet and lays them on the gray carpeted floor.

    Two large wooden crosses hang on the wall at the front of the room, but the orientation is about to change. As people take their places and lay out their thick prayer mats, they face the back of the room — east, toward Mecca.

    Women wearing headscarves sit on ornate prayer rugs. A cross hangs on the wall behind them.
    Muslim women listen to the Friday Jummah sermon in a church hall at First United Methodist in Pasadena.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    “ Honestly, it's the second best place that you could pray in,” Farah Bhatti said about the church hall, “because there's a spiritual feeling here, no matter what faith it originates from.”

    Aitken said the previous pastor at the church had lived in the Palestinian territories for about 10 years and had deep ties to the Muslim community. When Rizwan Bhatti, who was connected with some of the parishioners, asked if the church had space for the Muslims to worship on Fridays, the pastor was determined to make it happen.

    Two men -- one wearing a blue shirt and blue pants and another wearing a blue polo and khaki pants -- interlink arms and look ahead smiling.
    Mohamad Saleh Kholaki and Rizwan Bhatti.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    Mohamad Saleh Kholaki, a dentist who also serves as the khatib or imam on some Fridays, said the congregation is “lucky enough to have this location.”

    “It serves a lot of community members that live around this area and their businesses around this area instead of going to the downtown,” he said.

    And he said, the congregations haven’t had to compromise any aspects of their faiths. Kholaki said the Muslim congregation acknowledges Methodist Christian celebrations and that in turn is also reciprocated.

    1:15 p.m.

    After the call to prayer, Kholaki begins his sermon. Being Muslim, he says, is all-encompassing.

     ”If we deal with others when they show us some aggression with kindness and we smile and wave it off, I think we'll be in a better shape,” he says.

    “ The act of transformation of discipline from Islamic teachings into regular life is the key word here,” Kholaki continues. “We have to transform ourselves from the time where we are on the rug to pray into regular life, to transfer that attitude to public.”

    Worshippers sit on rugs and chairs in a large room.
    Muslim Jummah prayers at Pasadena's First United Methodist Church.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    After the sermon, the congregation faces Mecca and turns to the left and right. “Assalamualaikum warahmatullah,” they say — may the peace of God be with you.

    Then, the worshipers neatly fold their mats and clear the space.

    In two days’ time, tables will be set out in this hall for an Easter lunch.

    5 p.m.

    The church parking lot looks very different on Friday evening compared with this afternoon. Gone are the people with hijabs and fezzes.

    Now, staffers from the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center pin kippahs to their heads and help transform a chapel at First United Methodist into a temporary Jewish prayer space.

    Different colored kippahs in a basket on a table covered with a white cloth.
    Kippahs are ready for worshipers.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    They wheel a wooden ark from a storage room through the church’s courtyard, passing the Fellowship Hall where Muslims prayed earlier, into the chapel. A cross on a stand is put away. The organ is pushed to a corner.

    The ark is then set up in the front of the chapel and prayer scrolls laid out. Soft dark blue fabric lines the ark, and it is opened during specific times of the service. A table is set up for the rabbi and cantor. Members of the band are setting up their instruments and sound system.

    7 p.m.

    Hanging above the altar, an ornate lamp emits a red glow. The light in the chapel is called the perpetual light: For the Methodist congregation, it signifies God's everlasting presence with us.

    It reminds Lawrence Harris, a member of the congregation of the ner tamid, or eternal light, which is found in all synagogues.

     ”When you walk into any synagogue, there's the feeling of the light of God,” Harris said. “And it's wonderful that they have here in the church the same symbolic light, whether it's the same God, it's just practiced slightly differently.”

    A wooden prayer ark on a table covered in black cloth is in the front of the chapel.
    The Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center's ark is placed under the chapel's perpetual light.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    Using the church as a temporary home for the temple, Harris said, has allowed him to reflect on the connections between Christianity and Judaism. And it has forced this congregation out of their cocoons.

    This reporting trip has forced me out of my cocoon too. I am Muslim and wear a hijab. I’m also a radio reporter, carrying bulky recording equipment, a phone for pictures and backup sound and a notebook. Out of respect for Jewish practice, I put the tools of my trade away and become an observer.

    That allows me to really listen and understand the prayers being sung. The rabbi and cantor begin by praising and thanking God. Then they ask for blessings for children and safety in this world. And because it is Passover, Rabbi Josh Ratner recounts the story of the Exodus, how Moses led the Israelites through the Red Sea to the promised land.

    The echoes with that afternoon’s prayers praising God and asking for guidance are clear.

    8:30 p.m. 

    When the service ends, the rabbi and cantor lead the congregation into a small room, which years ago served as the Muslim prayer space, for a simple Passover observance with matzo crackers and grape juice.

    And as the congregation begins to clear out, staffers restart the dance to put the ark, prayer books and tables back in storage. The cross is returned to its place and the chapel transforms back into a Christian worship space.

    Tips from the cantor and rabbi

    • “Be flexible,” Cantor Ruth Berman Harris said. “ The strongest trees are the ones that bend. I think flexibility, assessing your reality and understanding that sometimes the journey is not as easy or as straightforward, but you know exactly where you are going.”
    • “Trying to focus on the good and not focus on the perfect,” said Rabbi Josh Ratner. “There's so much good that we can do and bring and share even if it isn't necessarily ideal. I'd rather spend more of my time in the 80% zone than very little time trying to get to the 100% zone.”
    •  ”Having a general sense of conviction of where you're at and where other groups are at and always sort of defaulting to try to find common ground, but also knowing sometimes there are certain red lines,” Ratner said. “It's important to articulate them from a place of mutual understanding and respect.” He added that it's important to hold on to your beliefs and values and have tough conversations, but have them from a place of respect and understanding versus insinuation.

    Saturday, April 4: Shabbat Shalom

    6:30 p.m.

    How do you know when Shabbat is over?

    Some say it’s when you see three stars in the sky. Others say it can be planets and stars.

    I chuckle a little inside: It’s a similar predicament for Muslims determining the end of Ramadan — some rely on calculations; others say you have to see the new moon.

    People stand in a circle holding their hands up towards a candle.
    Emily Catalano, assistant director of youth engagement and education, leads worshipers in Havdalah to mark the end of Shabbat.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    As the sky darkens on Saturday evening at a private ceremony at a home in Arcadia, the congregants of the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center gather in a circle, link arms and sing “Blessed are You, God, our Lord, King of the universe, Creator of the fruit of the vine.”

    With the sabbath over, Stacey Miller, a member of the congregation, reflects on practicing Judaism in a Christian church.

     ”What I find so easy about going to a church, though I still call it my temple, is that the Jesus that is up at this beautiful First United Methodist church in Pasadena is very abstract,” she said. “I don't feel like I'm looking at Jesus the Savior while I'm doing all my prayers with Moses.”

    Stained glass windows in a chapel.
    The stained glass windows of the chapel.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    The group of about 20 then settle in front of a projector to watch The Prince of Egypt, armed guards keeping watch outside.

    That’s the reality of being Jewish in America right now, said Stuart Miller, a physician and Stacey Miller’s husband.

    “ We call it a Jewish tax because we have an added expense of security,” he said.

    Rising antisemitism has led local chapters of the Jewish Federation to partner to offer security at temples and other community spaces across Southern California.

    The presence of armed guards at First United Methodist was unnerving at first, said Aitken, the Methodist pastor. It also helped teach empathy, she said.

     ”It's been a sobering teaching moment for our congregation as well to kind of see that,” she said.

    Sunday, April 5: The peace of Christ be with you

    9:30 a.m. 

    The main sanctuary at First United Methodist is bathed in colorful light from huge stained glass windows. I watch from the balcony as parishioners come in wearing soft pastels on Christianity’s most important day. They are celebrating Easter after observing the solemn Maundy Thursday, which marks the Last Supper, and Good Friday, commemorating the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.

    A large sanctuary with beautiful, ornate ceilings and an altar.
    Worshipers takes their seats before Easter Sunday service at First United Methodist.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    Aitken said I was welcome to use my recording equipment and phone, but wanting to immerse myself again, I place it all on the pew.

    The hymn “Christ the Lord is Risen Today” echoes through the church, and the joy people feel after the solemn week is palpable.

    “The peace of Christ be with you,” they say, hugging.

    In her sermon, Aitken draws out the similarities between Christ’s resurrection and the message of Passover.

    The Exodus, she says, “is a story of liberation, and it is, of course, the story that is at the crux of Judaism — the sense that God comes, that God redeems, that God sees suffering, injustice and despair, and God intervenes to bring people freedom.”

    Similarly with Easter — the celebration of Jesus’ resurrection after his crucifixion and death.

    “ No matter how dark the tombs of despair and sorrow are in the world, we follow a Risen Christ, one who comes to bring into the world a new story, a story of a world transformed by the power of love.”

    Stained glass windows depict the life of Christ.
    Stained glass windows depicting the life of Christ at Pasadena's First United Methodist Church.
    (
    Yusra Farzan
    /
    LAist
    )

    10:30 a.m.

    As I sit in the pew reflecting on the weekend, I think back to Kholaki’s sermon at Friday Jummah prayers — about transforming ourselves not just “on this rug to pray,” but also out in the world.

    Cantor Ruth Berman Harris of the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center had the same thought.

     ”For Judaism I am very concerned with finding a path, a bridge between what we do when we are at synagogue and what we do when we leave the synagogue,” she told LAist in an interview.

    Rabbi Josh Ratner added,  ”How do we make it so it's not just empty words that we're saying, but for words to live by?”

    Aitken and her congregation see welcoming their Muslim and Jewish neighbors as living their faith.

    “ We don't view this as anything heroic,” she said. “We are blessed with incredible buildings and beautiful sacred spaces. We are grateful to be able to use them in ways that I don't think our founders quite imagined, but that are perfectly fitting with the way the church understands its mission now.”