This website is best viewed in Internet Explorer 7 or higher or Mozilla Firefox. Please upgrade your browser for the best accessibility and usability. Thanks!
Word & World

Yearly Archives: 2007

Update

Stay tuned to the bolg and website for the release of the 2007 Economic Justice and Prophetic Witness School Report to be issued within the next few weeks.  Also this website will be updated in the near future.  We’ve had a few changes in the past few months with our dear and highly competent interns moving on and others of us are now trying to learn the ropes of the blog, website, etc. 

Faith Seeking Peace Training in Winston-Salem

Women’s Action for New Directions (WAND) has recently released the second edition of a curriculum for people of faith, Faith Seeking Peace, which addresses issues such as federal budget priorities, the cost of war, nuclear weapons, women’s experiences of war, terrorism, and peacemaking from a Christian perspective (see www.faithwand.org and click on “curriculum” at the top to download copies of the curriculum).

WAND will offer a Facilitator Training in Winston-Salem on Saturday, September 8th, from 8:30am -12:30pm at Lloyd Presbyterian Church, located at 748 North Chestnut St. (27101). The purpose of this training is to equip persons interested in facilitating the Faith Seeking Peace curriculum in a congregational or organizational setting.

In an effort to prevent the isolation experienced by many of us in the peace community, we encourage those interested in the training to find a partner or two from your community of faith to attend the training with you. This is not required, but strongly encouraged, as we have found that it takes team work to bring these issues into communities of faith. It is our hope that by having small groups of 2 or 3 persons from various congregations or organizations, we can effectively ensure that the Faith Seeking Peace curriculum will be utilized in your community.

The training is free of cost and open to all denominations, we welcome women and men alike to participate. We hope to have 15-20 participants committed to learning about the Faith Seeking Peace curriculum. If you are interested in registering, please contact Rev. Amanda Hendler-Voss at ahendlervoss@gmail.com and provide your name, email address, denominational affiliation (if any), and congregation or organization.

In Peace,
Amanda

Rev. Amanda Hendler-Voss
Faith Communities Coordinator
WAND
www.faithwand.org

From the Archives: Word and World dedicated to Social transformation

“Moveable institute seeks to educate committed individuals” by Beth Maples-Bays East Tennessee Bureau Chief

Originally Posted 09/01/2006 at http://outandaboutnewspaper.com/article.php?id=42

Imagine Memphis, the site of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s death, changed into an ecumenical and transformative place of learning providing the impetus for a new beginning.

Visualize Christians coming from miles around to soak up wisdom coming not only from the seminaries and sanctuaries, but also from the streets. Envision those same people graduating from this inclusive people’s school, armed with new skills, new courage, and new dreams.

This is exactly the scenario described by Knoxville’s own Marquez Rhyne of the Carpetbag Theater upon his return from Memphis after taking part in the Word and World school.

Dubbed the “Faith, Labor, and Community Initiative: Resurrection in Memphis,” the five-day intensive provided participants with radical education and skills for work in service, solidarity, justice, peace, and social change. The school is part of a larger regional and national picture that will help to bring social and economic justice to our nation in a time when those values have been set aside.

Word and World receives guidance from a national board of directors who work closely with regional and local leaders as they strive to make each school as relevant as possible to the attendees from a particular area.

The Word and World people’s school was immediately followed by the Southern Faith, Labor, and Community Alliance conference themed “Moving Toward a Grassroots Southern Strategy.” The conferees came together to plan a strategy for cooperation among faith-based activists, union organizers, clergy, and labor activists to further the progressive principles of economic justice and workers’ rights.

Knoxville’s Marquez Rhyne attended the recent Word and World people’s school. He emphasized the way art is used intentionally for community building and social justice movement work. “As we enter into dialogues about politics and faith, I want to keep art central to the conversation,” says Rhyne. “We used community singing and other art forms to actively involve the participants in the process. This is a way to take the focus off ‘self’ and build community.”

Talents displayed included the use of the spoken word, singing in the American folk tradition with lots of improvisation, and infusing art into the entire process of political organizing. The participants observed that the more common forms of organizing such as peaceful demonstration, gathering signatures for petitions, and other traditional means of dissent are made richer by the presence of art in any form.

“I truly enjoyed talking to people in the faith and social justice communities,” Rhyne affirms.

For further information on Word and World, visit them online at www.wordandworld.org or call them at their Greensboro, North Carolina headquarters at (336) 230-0330.

Honoring Franz Jagerstatter: A dispatch from Detroit

HONOR THE MEMORY OF FRANZ JAGERSTATTERjaegerstaetter.gif

ANNIVERSARY OF HIS EXECUTION August 9, 1943

REMEMBER THE VICTIMS OF NAGASAKI August 9, 1945

STOP THE KILLING IN IRAQ!

PREVENT RECRUITING OUR YOUNG PEOPLE!

Franz Jagerstatter, Austrian peasant and church janitor, is today honored for his refusal to fight in Hitler’s army. As a Roman Catholic he has been declared a “martyr of the faith” and is expected to be “beatified” this October. Franz lived the gospel which the church proclaims. He is a solitary witness of nonviolence from whom the community can learn.

Today we also remember the people of Nagaski – victims of U.S Weapons of Mass Destruction. We recall that city turned to ash and rubble.

In Iraq, cities are also turned to radioactive rubble and ash, by the U.S. invasion and continuing occupation.

The city of Detroit is under military assault. Its resources are stripped by a war which has cost the citizens of Michigan $12 billion, and city residents $767 million in tax dollars. Why is money lacking for schools, clinics, community developments?

Moreover, the young people of our city are conscripted into the military by false promises, outright lies, and an economic draft which seems to offer no alternative living.

We recall that the first soldier killed in Iraq was Marine Lance Cpl. Jose Gutierrez, a 28-year-old undocumented immigrant who was posthumously awarded U.S. citizenship.

To the church we say: Speak out and act against this war, from the pulpits (especially on August 1-19), from offices high and low. Read and live the gospel. Lift up nonviolence; Honor Jagertatter; remember the victims; repent our silence

To the Pentagon and it’s recruiters we say: End this war now. Obey international law. Leave our young people alone.

To the young people of Detroit we say: There is hope in the communities of this city. There is an future, economic and social, but we must make it ourselves. We need one another, we need you here in the struggle for life and community.

To the dead of Nagasaki we say: Forgive us even now. We commit ourselves to putting an end to these weapons.

To the people of Iraq, we say: Forgive our silence and our complicity. Forgive our submission to these leaders. We pledge to end this war. Refuse to pay for it. Refuse to fight in it.

Reflection from the Economic Justice and Prophetic Witness School

[The Economic Justice and Prophetic Witness School that was held July 17-20 was a sacred space of word and action. We are working to collect and amplify the stories of those who participated in the School. Below is the first of such reflections from a delegation that came all the way from New Mexico.]

Dear Word and Worlders,

I want to thank all of you who were at the Economic Justice and Prophetic Witness School and all of those behind the scenes folks who helped to make it happen. I know that many of the participants left feeling refreshed, informed and encouraged. One person in particular was deeply inspired.

Azucena Molinar attended Word & World for the first time this year. Although she was always excited about joining us for the trip, she was apprehensive about the school itself. I don’t think any of us knew the impact the school was having on her.

As many of you know we drove from New Mexico so we spent about 2 1/2 days in the car driving home. About 10 miles outside of Albuquerque Azucena leaned forward from the back seat and said “I have been thinking. I want to go to school. I want to go to college.” Both Amber and I were pleased and encouraged her.

Well, Azucena was more than serious. Tuesday, July 24th I went with her to our local community college. (You should know that several years ago she was rejected from this same college due to her legal status.) But she gathered her courage, filled out an application and took in stacks of paperwork. After a few obstacles, the admissions clerk began telling Azucena when and where to take her placement exam and where to buy her books. Azucena looked at me wide-eyed and I asked the clerk “Does this mean she has been accepted?” The clerk said yes and Azucena began to cry. She cried all the way to the car. She cried all way home. And she cried when we announced her entrance into the ministry as “la famosa alumna!”.
She said she was crying because she was not allowed to go to school growing up because she was female. But when she saw the women at Word and World who had college degrees, she knew that she too could go to school.

We have only been home from Word and World for 2 days and already major life changes have happened. So thank you.
Thanks for inspiring Azucena this year and continually inspiring me and others every year.rhonda-azucena.JPG

Rhonda Newby
East Central Ministries
Albuquerque, NM

[Rhonda and Azucena take a moment to reflect during the farm labor camp visit (right). If you have a reflection that you would like to share from the EJPW School, send an email to info@wordandworld.org and we'll post it on the blog.]