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Just Neighbors in the News
ELCA Synod Focuses on Poverty With a Just
Neighbors Weekend
The
child’s play block had the letter “K” both capital and
lower case. There was artwork of a kite, a kitten, and a king. But there was
an audible gasp in the room as Karen Robinson of the Presbyterian
Resource Center
in South Charleston, read the message on her
children’s block: “In the United States,
an on-duty law enforcement officer is safer from gunfire than a child under
the age of 10.” The shock of that fact followed by the piercing
visuals of vulnerable young children growing up in Philadelphia’s
ghetto made this one of the most disturbing and motivating sessions of the Just Neighbors program
presented last August in Huttonsville,
WV.
Fourteen members of the Lutheran Synod of West Virginia
and Western Maryland, three ecumenical partners, and two guests from other
ELCA Synods gathered at Huttonsville’s Bishop Hodges
Pastoral Center
for the three-day event, which was sponsored by the host synod’s Church
in Society committee with full support from Bishop Ralph Dunkin. Bishop
Dunkin embraced the Just Neighbors concept after meeting with Pastor Craig
Richter of Mountain Lutheran Church
in Franklin, WV. Pastor Richter was inspired by a
previous Just Neighbors event where he learned how Rachelle Ankney, a young
math professor, applied Just Neighbors in her classes by challenging students
to develop mathematical solutions to hunger problems. It was there that
Pastor Richter conceived a three-year plan to use Just Neighbors to re-commit
the synod to work with those living in poverty. He believed that the
interactive, multimedia sessions of Just Neighbors would foster enthusiasm
among members of his Church in Society committee for the work ahead, so he invited
Just Neighbors Director Frank McCann to facilitate the program.
“This Just Neighbors event was a natural fit for me
because our synod could look at the real systemic stories, consider the
imbalance and injustice in the system and be faithfully creative on how to
raise further awareness with regard to the issue,” Pastor Richter
explained.
“There
were times we were moved to tears, other times to anger...”
Norma Boyer,
Chair of Church in Society.
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Norma Boyer, who serves as chair of the Church in Society
committee and has spent her career working with state-run poverty programs,
believes Just Neighbors was an enlightening experience.
“There were times we were moved to tears, other
times to anger. The program helps foster understanding of what it means to
live in poverty and provides concrete suggestions of ways to walk with people
who are struggling.” Boyer noted.
Just Neighbors had a similar impact on Sarah Soltow,
Director of Community Lutheran Partners in Shepherdstown and a Church in
Society member, who plans to use it in training and creating programs funded
by a domestic hunger grant from the ELCA.
“I was blown away by the statistics. Knowing that we
do so little for so many in need, sort of sparks my ‘social justice
anger’ and makes me want to do something,” Soltow said.
The
event included an immersion experience, which featured a visit with Belinda
Toms and her staff at Tyrand Cooperative Ministries in nearby Mill Creek.
Tyrand Ministries is an ecumenical effort to meet the emergency needs of Randolph County’s low-income residents.
Toms took participants to visit her friends and clients, John and Emily, at
their home in a nearby hollow. Once they arrived, participants were moved by
the eloquence of John as he shared his gratitude for what they had and his
faith. The cleanliness of the home and the dignity displayed by John and
Emily belied the lack of material resources at the family’s disposal.
The immersion session allowed participants to interact with and experience
firsthand the empathy of individuals who are on the front lines of working
with those most in need. More important, the Tyrand staff exhibited the
dignity with which low-wage earners deserved to be treated.
Participants
left motivated and empowered to make changes in their approach to those in
poverty. Soltow characterized the event as “intense, impressive and
enlightening”; and is not the only participant who plans to put to use
the lessons she learned. Steve Woodruff, a member of Church in Society from St. Paul’s Lutheran
Church in Morgantown, will apply Just Neighbors in an
ecumenical setting to get his church more involved in ministry to the poor.
And, after her nervous start, Boyer caught Pastor Richter’s enthusiasm
and she hopes to use Just Neighbors as “the centerpiece to our social
ministry program in the synod.”
The next steps for the Synod leaders include a facilitator
training to be held in January, and presentation of Just Neighbors as part of
the Synod Assembly in the summer of 2007.
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