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Moroccans protest after monarchy, Muslim party fail to deliver on reform

Morocco, held up as a model for reform in the wake of the Arab Spring, is slipping back into autocracy. Though a new constitution was passed in 2011, ongoing economic marginalization, a lack of transparency, and abuses by security forces have driven citizens to the streets for the first time in five years.

Observers and activists say that the government has responded by stifling speech and press freedoms and using the long reach of its security services to prevent a new protest movement from gaining steam.

Gary Dorrien wins award for book on black Social Gospel

Gary Dorrien, professor of social ethics at Union Theological Seminary in New York City, won the 2017 Grawe­meyer Award in religion for his book The New Abolition: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Black Social Gospel.

The award honoring “creative and significant insights into the relationship between human beings and the Divine” is given annually by the Louisville Pres­by­terian Theological Seminary and the University of Louis­ville. The prize is one of five given in different fields and in­cludes $100,000. Re­cip­ients will give free lectures in Louisville, Kentucky, in April.

Award-winning TV series on religion and ethics to air final show

The television series Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly will end its run of 20 years on PBS on February 24.

Bob Abernethy, a broadcast journalist who is a member of the United Church of Christ denomination, started the series and hosted it.

Writing for the Christian Century in 2000, Abernethy said religious pluralism presented “the greatest challenge of all the thousand or more stories we have reported.”

Muslim clerics disappearing near Kenya-Somalia border

As Kenyan coastal region sheikhs, imams, and preachers vanish in alleged killings and forced disappearances, their wives are demanding answers.

The clerics have disappeared or died after security service involvement.

“The common thread is all the victims are Muslims,” said Hussein Khalid, “perceived by authorities to be actual or potential terror suspects.”

Khalid is executive director of Haki Africa, a human rights organization that has been offering legal aid for victims’ families.

John Glenn, astronaut and Presbyterian elder, dies at age 95

John H. Glenn Jr., best known as the first American to orbit the earth, who was also a lifelong Presbyterian, died December 8 in Columbus, Ohio, at age 95.

Glenn was raised in New Concord, Ohio, and attended West­minster Presby­terian Church with his family. His mother was the first female ruling elder ordained in the congregation, where his father also served on the congregation’s governing body, or session.

Glenn and his wife, Annie, continued to visit Westminster, the last time they came to worship being seven or eight years ago, said George St. Clair, a ruling elder.