Ethical Society of Austin

Mario Cuomo on Religion

September 2003

In a recent PBS program on the World Trade Center, former New York State Governor Mario Cuomo said the following concerning the memorial that is being planned:

I would like to see some depiction of all the religions - list them all: atheism, Ethical Humanism, Catholicism, etc. etc. - all of them. And you notice that each of those religions, these value systems, have two principles they share in common: tzedakah and tikkun olam, and the two principles started with monotheism and the Jews. Tzedakah means generally that we must treat each other as brother and sister. We should show one another respect and dignity because we are like things; we are human beings in a world that has nothing else like us, and we ought to treat each other with love, charity, use your own words. And the second principle is, "Well, what do you do with this relationship?" Well, we don't know exactly how we got here and why we are here, etc. etc.; that's for minds larger than our own. But we do know that we are like kinds, and we should work together to make this as good an experience as possible: tikkun olam -"let us repair the universe." Now, Islam believes that, and Buddhism that has no god believes it. Every Ethical Humanist I ever met believes it. Those two principles: We're supposed to love one another and we're supposed to work together to make the experience better. That's all the religion you need, really, to make a success of this planet, and I'd like to see that in 9/11 somewhere. I'd like to see that captured somewhere.

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