In April of 2026, a faith-rooted Oak Park group said it opposes the nation’s war in Iran, arguing that the fighting has crossed from combat with a regime and military forces into attacks on innocent and vulnerable people. Wednesday Journal of Oak Park and River Forest reported the statement under the title “Why we oppose the war in Iran.”
The group said peacemaking is always a better option than weapons of war, and it warned that total war injures and murders populations indiscriminately. It also said the Iranian government and military fight asymmetrically, a detail that complicates any claim that military force can stay neatly limited once it starts.
The statement matters now because it places a present-day war inside a moral argument that is meant to cut through partisan noise. It says recent previous American administrations chose negotiation and diplomacy over military conflict, then ties the current moment to a longer history in which the United States and Iran have shaped each other through force, pressure and suspicion.
That history, the group said, runs back to 1957, when the Central Intelligence Agency helped overthrow the democratically elected Iranian government. It said the United States then worked to install leaders who would act in its interest rather than Iran’s, and that a clerical-led Islamic state emerged in that climate. The statement also said crushing economic sanctions were used for decades to slow development and choke off Iran’s budding middle class. It went further, calling the United States the world’s greatest purveyor of violence, arms dealing and lawlessness, and saying the old national aspiration of a “city on a hill” has degraded into a “gangster in an alley.”
The group framed its position in the language of the African American Black Church tradition of prophetic speech and said it was aware that the nation voted against United Nations General Assembly recognition of the history and effects of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. That larger moral framing echoes April 3, 1967, when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. preached against the war in Vietnam at Riverside Church in New York City. The group said the relationship with the United States is older than the portion of the record it cites, a reminder that the conflict it is condemning did not begin with today’s battlefield.
The tension in the statement is plain: it draws a hard moral line against war while also describing a history of intervention that helped create the conditions for the present crisis. That leaves the most consequential question not about rhetoric but about power — whether a nation that says it wants peace can still stop a war once it has already decided the vulnerable are part of the price.