It brings a village – Portland Tribune

Neighborhood-approved homeless enclave opens in Kenton to shelter women in tiny houses with services and support

For years, a graveled lot directly north of Kenton Park in North Portland's Kenton neighborhood, sat vacant. But on June 5, a work crew arrived on North Argyle Street to begin transforming the empty site, roughly an acre in size, into Kenton Women's Village, a temporary intentional community the likes of which the city has never seen.

A half-dozen neighborhood residents spread across an adjacent southern slope. Some tore out invasive blackberries and other weeds; others used picks and shovels to clear way for a staircase that would connect the lot to Argyle Street.

Three small bulldozers zipped around the site, delivering piles of dirt and gravel and leveling the packed ground.

Standing in the middle of the lot, Margi Dechenne, program manager of the housing transitions program of Catholic Charities of Oregon, watched a truck hauling two small shipping containers pull into the lot. "Oh good," she said, "the restrooms are here."

Debbie Haskett, a 55-year old-woman who has been homeless for eight years, walked to the far end of the lot where 14 "sleeping pods," super-tiny homes approximately 96 square feet each, stood in an oblong semi-circle.

Haskett, one of 14 homeless women chosen to occupy the structures, was deciding where to live. She chose a pod at the far end of the semi-circle that was painted black and turquoise. "Turquoise is my birthstone," she said.

She rubbed her hands together at the thought of a home, however small, that she could claim as her own. "I'm so excited," she said.

Community support is key

Portland has been a leader in the homeless village movement since a group of homeless agitators wrested control of a vacant city-owned property near the Portland International Airport in 2000, cobbled together a cluster of shacks on it, established a system of self-government, and named it Dignity Village.

Dignity Village had antecedents in Seattle and Los Angeles, which it outlived, establishing itself as what appears to be the longest continuously sited community of its kind in the country.

Although the model didn't immediately proliferate in Portland, it persisted. A second group of homeless individuals pitched tents on a prominent Old Town/Chinatown corner in 2011; that settlement, Right 2 Dream Too, recently moved to a parking lot near the Moda Center. A third group launched Hazelnut Grove, to much controversy, in late 2015 in North Portland's Overlook neighborhood.

But Kenton Women's Village, which opened to residents on June 10, is different from these predecessors.

It's physically different. Tucked on expendable lots out of public view, Portland's other villages evolved from tent encampments and share an improvised, homemade look. Kenton Women's Village sits on prime real estate in an established residential community, a tidy collection of clean-lined, sturdy tiny homes designed by 14 different local architecture firms, shepherded by Portland State University's Center for Public Interest Design.

It's socially different. Portland's other villages are resolutely self-governed communities; residents make up their own rules and hold one another accountable to them. Residents of Kenton Women's Village will do the same, but within limits that don't apply at other villages. The village is operated by Catholic Charities, which has a contract with Multnomah County to do so. Each resident had to pass a criminal background check, will have an assigned case worker through Catholic Charities, and will agree, as a condition of her residency, to actively work toward moving back into permanent housing. There will be 24-hour security and a full-time, professional village manager.

And it's politically different. Dignity Village, Right 2 Dream Too and Hazelnut Grove were founded as acts of civil disobedience. Groups of homeless individuals built settlements on public properties, without permission, in protest of city laws prohibiting public camping. But its creators conceived Kenton Women's Village as a publicly backed, community-supported venture. It is sited on land loaned by the city, funded with city and county dollars, approved by a vote of the Kenton neighborhood association, and designed and built with the help of hundreds of volunteers.

Not coincidentally, Kenton Women's Village is designed to be temporary. Organizers promise to remove the settlement within a year. The sleeping pods will be hauled to another site, if an appropriate one can be found. Catholic Charities aims to help at least seven of the 14 residents find permanent homes, but it's possible some will be referred to shelters at the end of the year.

That's a risk the residents, who would otherwise spend the coming year sleeping in shelters, alleys or in the woods, appear more than happy to take.

Catholic Charities case manager Bernadette Stetz contacted the women to let them know they'd been accepted. "Their reactions were crying, screaming, like 'I feel like I won the lottery,'" Stetz recalled on June 9, her voice quavering.

Roots in Dignity Village

Whether one classifies Kenton Women's Village as a mainstreamed homeless village or as a radically reoriented homeless shelter, organizers consider it a model strategy for addressing the city's out-of-control homelessness crisis one that could be replicated in other neighborhoods.

The driving force of the project is the Village Coalition, whose members include residents of Dignity Village, Right 2 Dream Too and Hazelnut Grove. They say villages offer something shelters don't: a secure, reliable place to sleep and store belongings. More than that, villages give residents a sense of self-determination, common purpose and belonging, keys to healing and self-transformation that even transitional and permanent housing options can't often match. Those benefits, coupled with villages' relatively low cost of construction and operation, make villages a better public investment than shelters, advocates say if they can be structured, as Kenton Women's Village has been, in a way that appeals to neighbors.

That hopeful idea has attracted a small army of supporters, while eliciting skepticism on various sides.

At one extreme are Portland residents who say that homeless villages, government-backed or not, are public nuisances: unlawful, unsafe, unhygienic and apt to attract criminal behavior that burdens surrounding neighborhoods.

At another extreme are some longtime homeless activists who see the transitional-housing model being attempted at Kenton Women's Village as a watered-down version of first-generation homeless villages: politically palatable but, without homeless residents truly in charge, unlikely to sustain momentum.

In between are policymakers who see villages as a helpful but incomplete model for addressing homelessness, better than some alternatives but not proven effective at moving chronically homeless people 46 percent of whom experience severe mental illness and/or substance abuse disorders, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness into permanent affordable housing or true self-sufficiency.

But regardless of whether they can cure mental illness, make neighborhoods safer or advance the movement for homeless empowerment, many are betting that enclaves modeled after Kenton Women's Village could be a scalable answer to an undeniable and pressing conundrum: With permanent affordable housing in short supply, and mental health and addiction treatment services limited, chronically homeless people must live, sleep and move their lives forward somewhere.

And, as the 14 women settle in to their new 96-square-foot homes in Kenton, "Giving Ground," an investigative series produced by the Open: Housing Journalism Collaborative, will explore diverse perspectives on homeless villages.

What is their role in addressing the needs and aspirations of homeless residents, and what is their place in the physical, social and political fabric of the city?

We'll talk to homeless individuals, activists, policymakers, philanthropists, scholars and Kenton neighborhood residents, asking those closest to the issue what they know, and hope to discover, about the past, present and future of homeless villages in Portland.

Her own safe place

Haskett became homeless in 2009, after her children's father died from cancer. "I had no income coming in," she said. She moved from Indiana to Washington, then to Portland in 2013.

Haskett talks with a slight Southern drawl; her face is lined with deep wrinkles, and she is rail thin. She collects bottles and cans to get by. She camped along the Columbia Slough for two years, including last winter. "It was really rough. Especially with the snow. It was terrible," she said.

She first learned about Kenton Women's Village while watching the evening news. She asked her doctor to look it up on the Internet, wrote down the number for Catholic Charities and became the first person Catholic Charities selected to live in the village. "We've been working with her since day one," Bernadette Stetz, Haskett's Catholic Charities case worker, said.

Haskett hopes to start a vegetable garden this summerher mother, she said, was a "green thumb" and taught her how to garden.

Margi Dechenne, program manager of the housing transitions program of Catholic Charities, said she has gotten offers from people in Kenton and other parts of Portland to support the village, including from people who want to offer carpentry, yoga, cooking andyesgardening classes.

Asked what about living the village she's most looking forward to, Haskett answers simply: having her own place; feeling safe. "I'm glad they got the gate fixed to where it will be locked at night. That's the main thing right there," she said.

Is she worried about problems that might crop up from living in close quarters with other people, being responsible for chores and working together? "I'll deal with it," she said. "I'm just happy."

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It brings a village - Portland Tribune

Faith Communities to Honor Pulse Victims on One-Year Anniversary – 41 NBC News

Photos of the victims of the Orlando Pulse nightclub shooting strung together into a banner sits on Fifth Avenue before the start of the 46th Annual Heritage of Pride March in New York City. Albin Lohr-Jones / Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

Faith communities have a poor track record when it comes to LGBTQ inclusion, Rabbi Sharon Brous told NBC Out. Righting that historic wrong has been a priority for our community from its inception.

Brous co-founded and leads

IKAR, a Jewish community in Los Angeles. Every year the community celebrates Pride Shabbat as part of their commitment to overcome the ills of the past. She believes, she said, that houses of worship should counter the discrimination and denigration the LGBTQ community has had to face.

Celebrating Pride month in our synagogues, churches and mosques is one meaningful step in that direction, she added.

Last year, their Pride Shabbat fell on the Friday following the shootings as Pulse. Being that many within their community were shaken by the shooting, it was only fitting that they address the tragedy and honor the victims and survivors as part of their prayer service. Before the Kaddish, a prayer recited by those in mourning, they paused and one at a time, community members stood to read the name and age of each of the victims.

It was incredibly powerful, she added.

This year, Pride Shabbat will be more intentional as they remember the Pulse victims, but will be no different from Shabbats in the past. According to Brous, they will once again mark a celebration of their LGBTQ community, speak about the Pulse shootings and recount the the ways in which LGBTQ folks are made to feel invisible and unsafe.

In Atlanta, St. Mark United Methodist Church will host a commemorative service sponsored by Faith in Public Life (FPL). Beth Larocca-Pitts, senior pastor of the congregation, said they were asked to host the event.

We are rather unusual being that we are a Methodist church yet much of our congregation is made up of members of the LGBT community, she told NBC Out.

In the United Methodist Church, homosexuality is considered incompatible with Christian teaching and clergy are forbidden to officiate same-sex marriages. However, Larocca-Pitts said she accepted the request from FPL gladly.

Certainly a lot of our congregation were deeply affected by the Pulse shootings, being that a lot of our members are acquainted with the nightclub, she said. It was an extraordinarily horrific event, and we thought it fitting to check back in with people and see where folks are.

Last year, following the shootings, Larocca-Pitts said her church allotted time for members to write personal messages to the victims. They then collected the messages and shipped them to Orlando.

Graham Younger, Georgia statewide coordinator for FPL, said the organization has partnered with Outcry: Interfaith Voices Against Gun Violence for this years day of remembrance. In addition to the service at St. Mark, churches from across the state will ring their bells 49 times at noon in honor of the Pulse victims.

Remembrance, said Rev. Claudia Aguilar Rubalcava, is at the heart of her faith tradition. That is why she has chosen to participate in the FPL remembrance service. As an associate pastor at Virginia-Highland church in Atlanta, Rubalcava serves a congregation that has a significant number of LGBTQ and

Latinx members.

We are getting so accustomed to black brown, and LGBTQ bodies being treated as objects that we are getting quieter and quieter each time, she told NBC Out. It is important to remember this tragedy, because we need to speak up again until these events stop taking place.

Rubalcava also warned against criminalizing the entire Muslim faith community because of the acts of the Orlando shooter, who was Muslim. She referenced the backlash the Muslim community experienced shortly after the tragedy.

At the same time, we cannot emphasize enough the importance of legislation on gun control. This and many tragedies could have been avoided if we had stricter regulations on access to guns, she added.

In Orlando, an interfaith service was held on June 6 as a means of not only bringing faith communities together, but to also engage through poetry, music and dialogue. The event was designed to honor the victims of the Pulse massacre, while also reflecting on the mistakes too often made by people of faith in dealing with LGBTQ people.

Navtej Singh Khalsa, a member of the Orlando Sikh community and a regional director of SALDEF, a national Sikh civil rights group, participated in the event. He said in in addition to the June 6 event, the Orlando Sikh community also intends to memorialize the 49 Pulse victims in a prayer service at a local gurdwara, a Sikh house of worship, on Sunday, the day before the anniversary.

This tragedy reflects the lack of tolerance and hatred of others. Efforts must be made in schools and society to teach and advocate tolerance and peaceful coexistence of all, Khalsa told NBC Out.

One year later, the faith community has a unique responsibility, said FPLs Graham Younger.

The Pulse shooting was an event that touched so many different communities. The faith community is in a unique position to help people heal, and they take that responsibility seriously, he said.

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Faith Communities to Honor Pulse Victims on One-Year Anniversary - 41 NBC News

The future of caregiving: ‘good deaths’ and, of course, robots – MarketWatch

Expect a caregiving environment rich in technology in the not-so-distant future. But along with that, therell be an emphasis on human connection to counter the devastating health effects of social isolation on older people.

In May, NextAvenue marked its fifth anniversary, but not with a look back. Instead, weve been trying to peer into the future for people 50 and older. We wanted learn how everything will change or not: living, learning, work, personal finance, health and now caregiving.

We received help on the caregiving front from three experts who have an eye on trends.

Demographically, well be facing hard realities in the next five to 10 years, says Ken Dychtwald, founder and CEO of the research and consulting firm AgeWave, and a 2016 Next AvenueInfluencer in Aging.

Therell be a handful of profound demographic shifts among them, a boomer generation with fewer children than their parents that will alter our capacity for caregiving, Dychtwald says. That will create great need and demand for alternate solutions.

The hope with the experimentation thats going on [now], is that well come up with better models that dont involve residential care for the disabled elderly in nursing homes, says John Haaga, director of the Division of Social and Behavior Research at the National Institute on Aging.

Technology will play a big role in helping people stay in their homes, says Laura Sands, professor at the Center for Gerontology at Virginia Tech and editor of a new journal, Innovation in Aging, published by the Gerontological Society of America. But well get more nuanced in our use of things like sensors and apps.

What I mean by that is that its not obtrusive. It doesnt violate basic principles of privacy and dignity, Sands says.

Those are the broad strokes. Now heres more on what our experts see as the future of caregiving in the next 5 years, 10 years and beyond:

Apps and online tools for family caregivers will be widely adopted, Sands says. Caregiving has already been inundated with tech gadgets. Whats been missing is a foundation of research and evidence to weed out the schlock from whats truly usable by older adults and their families and will lead to good caregiving or good health outcomes.

That evidence is more available now and tech tools known mostly in the research world will be entering the consumer market, Sands explains. She says: Theres really a lot of opportunity for entrepreneurs to use this evidence-based literature to start thinking about, How can I bring this into a cellphone environment?

Well be feeling the gap between lifespan and healthspan, says Dychtwald. Our health care system has done a pretty good job of keeping people alive longer, but not necessarily alive longer with health, he notes. Pair that with the demographics families with fewer children, families more geographically spread out and more women becoming primary breadwinners as well as having less capacity for the caregiving theyve traditionally done the lions share of and well be forced to redefine our goals, Dychtwald says. Instead of thinking only about how to improve long-term caregiving services and supports, well be looking for ways to prevent more people from needing them.

Well benefit at least a little bit from disease trends that are turning in the right direction, says Haaga. The worst fears about the growth of the population that has dementia and severe disabilities so far havent come true. Those populations are growing, but I think theyre growing slower than most people would have forecast 10 years ago, he notes. The percentage of the population developing Alzheimers disease is going down, Haaga says, but because the population of older adults overall is growing, the absolute number of Alzheimers cases is still on the rise.

Next-generation sensors will support caregivers and older adults who want to continue living at home, Sands says. Therell be better privacy checks to control who gets the information, she explains, and really deep thoughtfulness as to what is the information theyre collecting and why are they collecting it. Instead of gathering a massive amount of ongoing data about all of a persons movements in the house, for example, sensors will use logic checks built into their operating software to collect and store only the movementsthat seem like red flags.

Well get better at designing environments that dont prematurely drive people into dependency, Haaga believes. The universal design elements that make a home more accessible and user-friendly for those with physical limitations are one example of this. But Haaga is talking about community design as well. I predict that in 10 years, there will be no brick sidewalks in the United States. They will have been replaced by exposed aggregate that reduces fall risks, he says. He expects the car-centric suburban model of community planning to give way to plans that are more walkable and livable for nondrivers.

A good death will take priority over prolonging life, says Dychtwald. The social, emotional and financial costs of a stretched caregiving system will prompt us to look hard at our health care systems bias toward prolonging life even when prolonging it isnt what the dying person wants. Im not saying we should shorten peoples dying process unnaturally, thats a slippery slope, Dychtwald says. But many people will welcome a conversation about good deaththe idea of dying in a natural way without a lot of technology hooked up to you, in a comfortable setting, perhaps at home and not having it stretched out longer than nature would have it.

Mapping out highly individualized care pathways will become possible, says Sands. It will involvelayering together three things: 1) a persons genetic makeup and the tendencies that come with it for example, being a good or bad metabolizer of a certain drug; 2) metadata analyses of whole populations and the way specific health interventions tend to lead to certain kinds of outcomes and 3) apersons life and health preferences and goals.

The result will be the ability to predict just how effective a certain treatment will be in a patient and to make a care plan that the person is likely to stick with and benefit from. I think we have that opportunity in the future, but were still a ways off, Sands says, because it takes a lot of communication between technologists and clinicians.

Robots will share in caregiving, Haaga says. Not the high-touch and highly personal aspects of care, he adds, but for some of the physically difficult aspects of care. For example, we wont have to have home health care aides spraining their backs turning people over.

Haaga is also really optimistic about things like self-driving cars to help older adults overcome isolation and get out into the community. Dychtwald, on the other hand, has a different take and wants to see a driver in that car with the older adult.

Were going to have to become more comfortable with interdependence, Dychtwald says. Independence has been our goal for generations, and weve all learned to want our own houses, cars, bedrooms, TVs, phones and tech gadgets. But independence combined with aging creates a lot of isolation, Dychtwald says. In recognition of that problem, more of what we call senior housing, will be intergenerational in the future. Where families are scattered or dont exist, well create intentional communities like the village movement to stay connected, he says.

The thing about the Jetsons is they lived in a world with lots of cool technology, but what we liked was the family, Dychtwald adds. They were together in their bubble car.

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The future of caregiving: 'good deaths' and, of course, robots - MarketWatch

Filmmakers Examine Links Among Cornish Colony’s Idealists – Valley News

Filming begins in and around Cornish next month for a documentary about the colony of visual and performing artists, the writers and the pioneering conservationists who orbited around Gilded Age sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens late in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Norwich filmmaker Nora Jacobson will direct that weeklong shoot of Land and Legacy of an Art Colony, a project that Etna author and retired musician Fern Meyers said this week she has been mulling over for years.

For most of those years, Meyers has been occupied with, among other tasks, writing three books about the Cornish Colony, overseeing the production of three CDs of music by colony composers, teaching Osher at Dartmouth courses about the colony and directing the summer music series at the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site. That left her little time to think about how to structure such a project, never mind raise the money and arrange the logistics.

Then last fall, after her final season directing the music series, Meyers recalled, she started thinking with more focus about the interconnections among the artists, such as painter Maxfield Parrish, musicians such as composer Arthur Farwell and conservationists such as Benton MacKaye, the forester who developed the idea of the Appalachian Trail running from Georgia to Maine.

They were idealists, Meyers said. They were progressive thinkers. And they were activists. Given the challenges were facing now in many spheres, especially the challenges facing the environment things like declining songbird populations Im quite concerned at this moment.

This is my way of trying to show why the history of the colony is relevant to today.

The idea of exploring that history intrigues Jacobson, even as she juggles a variety of other projects, including fine-tuning and promotion of her new feature, The Hanji Box.

I had done some shooting for The Vermont Movie, for the story about black Vermonters who fought in the Civil War, Jacobson wrote during an exchange of emails on Thursday. Several had traveled from Huntington, Vt., to join the 54th regiment, which Saint-Gaudens had portrayed in the famous Shaw Memorial. Beyond my acquaintance with the historic site, I am very interested in intentional communities in the case of the Cornish Colony not so intentional because it happened quite organically of artists who come together to work, think, play, talk, live, because they are inspired by each other and seek companionship with one another.

To tell that story, Jacobson and her crew will follow three descendants of Cornish colonists around the historic site and its environs. Veteran actor Jonathan Farwell, whose father, Arthur, was among the leading lights of the day, will lead that delegation.

Rather than a lot of interviews with talking heads, Meyers said, its going to be more of a discovery tour.

During the shoot, Meyers added, Upper Valley residents will be welcome to fill walk-in roles in a re-enactment of a pageant that Saint-Gaudens hosted at Aspet, his home above the Connecticut River, now the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site.

In addition to the 52-minute documentary, which is designed for broadcast on Vermont and New Hampshire public television, Jacobson will shoot a 12-minute version for visitors to the historic site.

To cover the $140,000 that she expects the project to cost, Meyers estimates that so far shes raised not quite half, including a $25,000 grant from the Byrne Foundation.

Its a daunting task, but Ive had some experience, not only with the music series, but getting a couple of orchestras started. Its worth the effort.

Filming of Land and Legacy of an Art Colony begins in Cornish on July 18. Donations toward its production can be made by check, made out to Meriden Bird Club and mailed to Fern Meyers, 62 King Road, Etna, N.H. 03750. To learn more, including opportunities for walk-on roles in the documentary, email fmsilverwood@gmail.com.

In the category of but-wait-theres-more, go see Norman at the Woodstock Town Hall Theatre this weekend.

Quite aside from the sheer novelty of seeing longtime leading man Richard Gere take on a subtle character role, youll spend two absorbing hours watching a stellar supporting cast orbit around Geres title character, a New York-based fixer struggling to juggle multiple complicated projects and demanding constituencies. In addition to the familiar faces of Steve Buscemi, Dan Stevens and Michael Sheen in key roles, keep an eye out for Charlotte Gainsbourg as a sharp prosecutor and Israeli heartthrob Lior Ashkenazi as a rising politician.

Screenings are scheduled for 7:30 tonight, Saturday night, Sunday night and Monday night. Admission is $7 for members of Pentangle Arts, $8 to $9 for others.

Worried about the health of the Earth and its inhabitants? Tuesday night you can choose from two documentaries on the subject, both in South Royalton.

At 6:30, Building a Local Economy (BALE) and Vermont Interfaith Power and Light co-host a sneak preview of From the Ashes at the BALE Commons. The movie, focusing on the impact of the coal industry on the economy, public health and the climate, comes amid the renewed debate over the viability and sustainability of the fossil fuel industry. Admission is free.

Meanwhile, Vermont Law Schools class on ocean and coastal law will show and discuss Sonic Sea, which looks at the correlation between man-made noise in the oceans and unusual behavior of whales. The movie starts at 7, after which a panel of experts that includes oceanographer Jean-Michel Cousteau will discuss the issues. Admission is free.

The Library Arts Center in Newport continues its series of films from or inspired by the 1960s on Thursday night with a free screening of the 1967 adaptation of Neil Simons romantic comedy Barefoot in the Park, starring Robert Redford and Jane Fonda. The lights go down at 7, and popcorn is available. Upcoming screenings include The Parent Trap (the one starring Hayley Mills as the twins) on June 30, Dirty Dancing on July 27 and 101 Dalmations on July 21. To learn more, visit libraryartscenter.org.

Next up in its series of classic movies at free admission, Pentangle Arts screens Robert Altmans M*A*S*H on Thursday night at 7:30. Still to come are American Graffiti on July 6, All That Jazz on July 13, Ferris Buellers Day Off on Aug. 3 and Mamma Mia! (with permission to sing along!) on Aug. 10.

David Corriveau can be reached at dcorriveau@vnews.com and at 603-727-3304.

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Filmmakers Examine Links Among Cornish Colony's Idealists - Valley News

How Are New Ecclesial Movements Changing the Church? – Commonweal

Priests incardinated within new ecclesial movements would not be subject to local ordinaries, that is, diocesan bishops. For the Vatican this would mean acknowledging something about how these movements have evolved from around the time of Vatican II. Originally, they were supposed to have helped renew the laity. But with the substantial reduction in the number of diocesan priests and the shrinking of religious orders worldwide over the last three decades, they instead now seem to be a source of new priests. While this could help alleviate the shortage of clergy in the short term, it might also introduce a new set of problems.

The issue is not ideological, as there is a great diversity among these fraternities: seminarians and priests from SantEgidio, for example, are more conciliar and ecumenical than those from Communion and Liberation or the Neo-Catechumenal Way. Rather, its structural: in order to replace or replenish diocesan seminaries and diocesan parishes that are short on clergy, the territorial Churchthe bishops, including the bishop of Romeare making allowances for priestly vocations coming from non-territorial organizations: the movements.

This raises four interesting considerations. The first is Church politics: the movements are not, in the eyes of Francis, the special elites for the new evangelization as they were under John Paul II and Benedict XVI. Francis has been clearly critical of any sectarian tendencies he detects. But even he realizes that these movements are producing new, desperately needed priests in a Catholic Church that still needs the clergy to function. In this sense, the move, if approved, would signal that the Church finds it much easier to change the relationship between the territorial and personal dimension in the Church than to ordain married men to the priesthood (viri probati) or ordain women deacons.

Then theres the ecclesiological consideration. Reversing the relationship between the territorial or geographical dimension of Church aggregations (parish, diocese) to the personal dimension (membership in a group not defined by geographical location) would overturn a system that dates from the early centuries of Christianity (dioceses were the successors of the provinces of the Roman Empire) and that was solidified in the second millennium, especially by the Council of Trent (1545-1563). It would also pose a challenge to the ecclesial concept of the local church that is in dialogue and tension with the universal the Church.

The third consideration is theological. The whole idea of enculturation of the Christian message is connected to the ecclesiology of the local church. It remains to be seen what kind of formation (and where) priests from new movements would receive, or whether they would be priests for the entire Church (including Franciss peripheries) or only for their movement. This issue was raised by John Paul II in the apostolic exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis (1992), the apostolic letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente (1994), and the apostolic exhortation Vita Consecrata (1996). The relationship between some movements and the local churches has in many cases been less than collaborative; for example, local bishops have long complained to Rome about the modus operandi of the Neo-Catechumenal Way in their own dioceses and even on a national level.

Finally, theres a historical consideration. In 1513, prior to the council of Trent and the Reformation, the Venetian Camaldolese monks Paolo Giustiniani and Pietro Querini presented to Pope Leo X Libellus ad Leonem X, the most important set of reform proposals in the immediate pre-Reformation period. Giustiniani and Querini proposed, among other things, a radical reduction in the number of religious orders (with just three typologies of rules for religious life: Augustinian, Benedictine, and mendicant) and a more centralized, reformist church under the leadership of the pope and the bishops. But what happened after Trent was exactly the opposite: a proliferation of new religious orders (Capuchines, Barnabites, Jesuits, etc.).

Something similar has unfolded since Vatican II, which envisioned a Catholic Church under the leadership of the bishops and the pope, and less autonomy for religious orders and personal, non-territorial Church structures. Instead, theres been a crisis in the episcopacy bishops now function more as CEOs than as pastors; they are called on to act collegially with the pope and synodally with their flock; and they face a fixed retirement age seventy-fiveand a shift in how it is expected to work alongside a successful papacy. This comes along with the spread of ecclesial groups and movements tied to intentional communities that claimand obtainautonomy from local ordinaries. It all would seem to be yet another example of how the living body of the Church undoes the best-intentioned and most well-thought-out reform projects of enlightened theologians.

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How Are New Ecclesial Movements Changing the Church? - Commonweal

Archbishop: In ‘post-Christian world’ fidelity, charity, truth stand out – CatholicPhilly.com

Posted June 7, 2017

The following interview with Archbishop Charles Chaput, conducted by Australian writer Marilyn Rodrigues, appeared in slightly edited form on June 2 in The Catholic Weekly, newsweekly of the Archdiocese of Sydney.

***

Archbishop Charles Chaput. (Photo by Sarah Webb)

Q. Your latest book is clearly written for the American Catholic people, but its relevance for us here in Australia is also very clear. Briefly, for those who are yet to read your book, in what ways do you understand us to be living in a post-Christian world?

A. Theres actually no such thing as post Christian as long as people anywhere believe in Jesus Christ and try to live accordingly. Jesus is the lord and meaning of history. And since he is, there can be no history after him. The Church has often found herself dying or extinguished in some places and thriving in others. Its no different today.

But we can do our best to ignore or diminish Jesus. So in that sense, much of the developed world, or at least its leadership class, makes itself post Christian by trying very hard to forget God.

Q. You paint a comprehensive picture of the historical philosophical, political, and social anti-Christian forces underpinning contemporary life. Much of your book is concerned with how we got to this point. Why is it not enough to simply get on with things why is it so important to understand the past?

A. The ability to remember and learn from the past sets humans uniquely apart. So a man with amnesia literally becomes a nobody. He loses his identity. Hes a blank slate for others to write on. Thats because his life story is shaped by the past, by his beliefs and experiences over time, and once forgotten, others can insert a new life story in its place.

The same applies to nations and communities. Thats why totalitarian systems and democracies, too, can be totalitarian always end up trying to erase or revise the past.

Q. You explain that Christian hope is the overcoming of despair, differentiating it from optimism which assumes things will always improve. In many ways we are witnessing a crisis of despair, maybe best manifested in Australia in unprecedented suicide rates. You clearly lay out the reality of, and good reason for, much despair and disquiet in our culture today. Would you say that the world we face today is crystallizing into precisely a most Christian moment of hope? What should this inspire? Where do you most see manifestations of hope today?

A. The Christian faith is growing rapidly in much of the world. But we rarely hear about it because it doesnt fit the standard secular narrative. So we over-focus on our own problems. Thats natural. But its also dangerous, because when we lose a sense of the larger picture, we can lose confidence in our own beliefs. The reality is this: Even in countries like the United States and Australia, God is raising up plenty of strong young clergy, religious and laypeople, and movements and communities committed to renewal. Theyre the future. They need to be encouraged. Thats where we need to focus. God will take care of the rest. Theres no reason to be bitter or afraid.

What believers are now experiencing in the developed world is equivalent to a cold shower. Its not fun, its not pleasant, but it does wake us up. It forces each of us into a choice. The indifferent may leave the Church, and thats a sadness. But those who stay with the Church will be more alert and intentional. Thats a good thing. Honesty and clarity are always good things. Confusion and ambiguity are never of God.

Q. In Australia, among other things we are seeing companies exerting pressure on the federal government to enact same-sex marriage laws. New South Wales has been facing a push for extreme abortion laws, and euthanasia is on the table in Victoria. Where do you see examples of Christians engaging well in political life? What are they doing successfully?

A. I cant speak to Australias situation, obviously. But in the United States, companies like Apple and Salesforce.com have been very aggressive in pushing same-sex marriage and similar issues, often in the face of strong popular resistance. They have no interest in the will of the people unless the economic and public relations cost of their actions is too high. So Christians need to get involved in the kind of political organizing and economic boycotts that inflict an appropriate penalty. That has to start at the local and regional level. Lots of people are already doing it. Even when good people lose a battle in the public square, they achieve something good. They witness to the truth, they clarify whats at stake in an issue, and they extract a cost from those who would do evil.

None of this should lead us to believe that politics is the most important part of a Christian life. Its not, by a long shot. And none of this absolves us from the Christian duty to act with good sense about strategy and tactics, or with the respect, justice, charity and prudence we owe to others including those with whom we disagree. But avoiding a fight on matters of real importance is never excusable.

Q. Increasingly, Christian values around marriage and family, reverence for life from conception until natural death, and are being understood to be archaic and nave at best, and inhibitory of human freedom and equality at worst. A Catholic mentality means different things by freedom and equality. What is happening here at the level of language of meaning? Is it more important than ever now for Christians to say what we mean and mean what we say?

A. Those who control the language of a debate largely control the outcome. Words shape thought. An expression like marriage equality is deeply misleading and arguably dishonest. But its also very effective. It bypasses serious thought and goes straight to the emotions that surround the word equality. So its vital for Catholics to know and understand what their faith teaches, to speak the truth, and to challenge the words of a public debate when they mask lies and ambiguities.

Q. You express some sympathy for, but dont advocate for, the Benedict option the idea that people wanting to preserve Christian culture might need to withdraw into alternative communities. You would rather see Catholics as healthy cells within society. Why is this this the better option, and why do you think the idea of the Benedict option is so appealing to many people?

A. Rod Dreher the author of the recent book The Benedict Option is a man I know and admire, and Im quite sure he doesnt mean the Benedict Option as a call to withdraw to a religious bomb shelter. He does mean, and I think hes right, that we Christians need to find better ways to build intentional communities of faith and separate ourselves mentally from the bad things in our culture. But this isnt a new message. And Benedict probably isnt the best model for our age. Augustine is.

Augustine never ran or hid from adversity. He was a bishop for and with his people, people who had to continue their everyday lives even as the Roman world around them fell apart. Augustine knew that the City of God and the City of Man overlap and interpenetrate. He wanted Christians to realize that their real home, their real loyalty, is heaven, but we get there by passing through the City of Man. So we need to seed this world with as much good as we can while were here.

Like anything else, the Benedict Option is unhelpful when its over-marketed and poorly understood. People are always attracted to escape hatches in trying times. But there arent any escape hatches. The world follows us. The world is in us, so we need to deal with it. Jesus accepted the cross, and if we claim to be his disciples, why would we try to avoid it? And even if we could hide from the world, we shouldnt, because we have the mandate to heal and convert it.

Q. What can young parents do, who are worried about their children being exposed to toxic elements of culture at younger ages, from which its becoming increasingly impossible to shield them at younger ages?

A. Turn off the electronics. Unplug the devices. Read to them. Pray with them. Play with them. Teach them the value of silence. Develop their critical skills in examining the daily life around them. These things sound simple, and in a sense they are. But try to do them for a couple of weeks and youll see that theyre actually quite radical. Most of all, love each other as a couple and show it, because the love, tenderness and fidelity between parents has a profoundly formative effect on children. Theyre watching their parents every waking minute of every day.

Q. You write that the fundamental crisis of our time, and the special crisis of todays Christians, is a crisis of faith. Could you offer some thoughts about the continuing disunity among Christians, and within the Catholic community (as manifested by the disagreements over Pope Francis ministry and Amoris Laetitia) on how this relates to the crisis of faith?

A. Any current disunity we have in the Catholic Church and we can easily overstate it comes down to how much we want to accommodate the world; how much were willing to bend; how much we want to gloss the hard edges of the Gospel message and Church teaching. I was a Capuchin Franciscan before I was a bishop, so Francis of Assisi has always had a big influence on my thinking. Francis had no use at all for glosses, so I think we need to be more radically faithful to the uncomfortable parts of our faith and teaching, not less.

Numbers arent essential for the Church. Fidelity is. Charity is. A commitment to truth is. And thats because the Church doesnt finally belong to us, but to Jesus Christ. Its his Church, not ours.

As for our relations with other Christians: The disdain often shown toward religion today has the ironic effect of drawing many believing Christians together across lines that once divided them. I have more friends who are pastors, scholars and persons I deeply admire in other, non-Catholic Christian communities than I ever thought possible 45 years ago as a young priest. Denominational labels are often less important than whether a person really believes in Jesus Christ, the Word of God and the core of the Christian faith. Our differences are important. They cant be minimized. But the common faith we share in Jesus Christ is equally important.

Q. You recommend an effort to live the beatitudes, in their radicalness, for people who live in the world of mortgages, tough jobs, and complaining children all Christians in their daily lives. Theyre meant for plumbers and doctors, teachers and salesmen, mothers and fathers. It reminded me of GK Chestertons comment, that Christianity has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found difficult and not tried. Can you give an example, perhaps from your own family or friends, where you have seen someone (not a priest or religious) has really tried to live this way? What impact has that made on you?

A. Dorothy Day had a huge impact on my life. And there are many other invisible people like her in the Catholic Worker movement, the Neo-Catechumenal Way, the [Protestant] Bruderhof communities, Communion and Liberation, and a dozen other renewal movements and communities. And there are thousands of similar examples of ordinary people doing extraordinary things in local parishes.

No one lives the Beatitudes perfectly. We all fail. Its in our deliberate, persistent efforts in trying to live them that God remakes us, and through us, provides a witness of holiness to others which is the only way a culture really changes for the better.

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Archbishop: In 'post-Christian world' fidelity, charity, truth stand out - CatholicPhilly.com

Open house will celebrate Folk Art Guild’s 50 years – News – The … – Penn Yan Chronicle-Express (blog)

The Rochester Folk Art Guild attains a milestone accomplishment this year, as the group celebrates 50 years as a vibrant and creative crafts community.

The first seven members put down roots on East Hill, Middlesex in 1967. Since that time, hundreds of people have spent time at East Hill Farm, helping the Guild grow and develop into an exceptional school for crafts, and one of the most successful and long-lasting intentional communities in the country.

The Guilds fine pottery, woodworking, weaving, and other handcrafts have found their way around the world into museums, galleries, and private collections, even appearing on the table at the White House on different occasions.

The half-century marks a special point in the Guilds history, and the members are extending a warm welcome to all in the local communities to come share in a day of celebration, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. June 10.

There will be tours of the studios and East Hill Gallery, chamber music by Ensemble Resonance, and free, light refreshments for all.

Ensemble Resonance is flute, bassoon, and piano, and the three will play Mozart, Nino Rota, and Taylor-Coleridge at 12:30 and 2:30 p.m.

We are thankful to have great supporters, as well as wonderful neighbors in Middlesex and the surrounding Finger Lakes communities, says Guild spokesperson David Barnet.

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Open house will celebrate Folk Art Guild's 50 years - News - The ... - Penn Yan Chronicle-Express (blog)

How Power Street Theatre Company is taking on representation in the arts – Generocity

Power Street Theatre Company (PSTC) was founded out of rage.

Gabriela Sanchezstarted the theatre company the only one in Philly run by all women of color, she said in 2012 while studying theater and communications at Temple University. It was there where she felt the frustration of knowing that it wasnt for a lack of she skill she wasnt getting more opportunities on stage. Rather, it was because her stories as a Latinx woman werent being represented and as weve heard before, representation is everything.

Sanchez realized if she was feeling this way, there must be others around her who also felt the same way, and soon enough, she met and collaborated with Erlina Ortiz, a classmate at Temple, to start PSTC, where Ortiz is now the resident playwright.

Five years later, the theatre company is going strong with its main focus of providing accessible theater and arts to the North Philly communities, through which Sanchez said theyve engaged more than 3,000 audience members through seven productions and six contract performances.

That focus on serving the North Philly area, where Sanchez has deep familial ties to having been born and raised in Philly, is an intentional effort in promoting diversity and inclusion, which are values Sanchez said are still just buzzwords in the theater industry.

Im very intentional about the work that I produce, the relationships that I build and knowing that it takes time, Sanchez said. My work is very rooted in the communities that I care about, that I serve, that I come from.

PSTCs most recent production series, Theatre en Las Parcelas, is currently underway through a partnership with the Norris Square Neighborhood Project, where she is the education director for the organization that aims to make social change by engaging youth in education, leadership and the arts. The second show of the series, Out of Orbit, will feature Sanchez and two other women tackling the topic of privilege, among other things, through the lens of space and the universe.

The free performance will take on June 10 at the Las Parcelas garden, where the last event, an open mic garden party, will also take place on Aug. 12.

Working in tandem with community and social change organizations is nothing new for PSTC, like when it partnered with Women Organized Against Rape and Warrior Writers to produce She Wore Those Shoes, a production that looked at sexual assault in the military.

The art-for-social-change effort is also something Sanchez herself has personally been involved in with since she was 15 years old, when her first full-time job for six years was being part of the City of Philadelphias Conflict Resolution Theatre, part of a series of Strength-Based (Trauma-Informed) Leadership Programs hosted throughout the city.

I saw a need in my city, I saw a need in communities that were disenfranchised and young people that didnt have access to the arts, she said.

Location and pricing of tickets are bothaccessibility factors PSTC has givenattention to, whichSanchez says shes proud of. All youth under the age of 18 get free access to any shows, college students and senior citizens get half-off their tickets and community residents just pay $5. All in all, inclusivity is key to keep theatre alive, Sanchez said.

Theres this stigma that people of color dont like theater, but the reality is that thats not true were storytellers, its ingrained in who we are, she said. We just dont have the platform or the resources or the accessibility to access theatre because its an expensive and secluded art form in some ways.

Even as a student, Sanchez felt that her studies would often not teach her how to sustain the art, thus prompting her to learn how to run a theatre company through experience, whether it be writing grants or fostering those relationships with community organizations. She hopes to grow PSTC into a full-time company within the next two years, and in that effort, teach and grow other women and people of color in the theater world.

Sanchez credits the success of PSTC so far to her team Ortiz; Asaki Kuruma, Diana Rodriguez and Lexi White who have often volunteered much of the administrative labor, and its through listening to other communities PSTC may have not yet reached out to where they hope to find more stories.

Creating art and social change arent on one person, Sanchez said. I believe its about dialogue, about reflection, about asking questions and having conversations. In order for all of us to get on the same page, we have to start listening to each others stories.

Albert Hong is Generocity's contributing reporter. He started hanging around the Technically Media office as a summer intern for Technical.ly and eventually made his way to freelancing for both news sites. While technology and video games are two of his main interests, he's grown to love Philadelphia as a city and is always excited to hear someone else's story.

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How Power Street Theatre Company is taking on representation in the arts - Generocity

Local ties: New tailgate market locations highlight business and community connections – Mountain Xpress

From homemade sauces to local artwork, North Asheville residents now haveanother place to shop on Saturday mornings: Anew community market debuted June 3 outside Gan Shan Station on Charlotte Street.

The market was created to give localbrick-and-mortar businesses an alternativeplace to sell their goods, says Jade Pombrio, director of the new project. Currently, most areatailgate markets are producer-only, meaning that you can only sell things that you produce, saysMolly Nicholie, program director at ASAP Connections.

Weve been wanting for a while for a venue to be able to sell all of our hot sauces and rib glaze, Pombrio says. So it kind of started as someone else wanting to sell stuff realizing that, Oh, we do have a good space. We really wanted to make this a community restaurant and make it a place with lots of community engagement, and a market seems like a natural symptom of that.

In addition to Gan Shans products, the market will feature fresh bread and pastries from The Rhu, handmade sausage and ethical meats from Intentional Swine, flowers from Paper Crane Farms and a food pantry with items from Lees Asian Market. Pombrio also plansto have a rotating weekly schedule of featured artists from the community.

The Gan Shan Market joins the North Asheville Tailgate Market as a Saturday morning shopping destination for North Asheville residents. Competition amongmarkets can be challenging, Nicholie says, as markets tend to attract similar vendors and customer bases. However, Pombrio thinks the Gan Shan market will appeal toresidents in the immediate Charlotte Street neighborhood and shoppers who are looking for items they cant get at other markets.

Coffee, pastries, breads, sauces this is going to be more pantry items because theres already so much produce, there are already so many farmers here, Pombrio says.

Gan Shan Station isnt the only business to embrace the idea of community farmers markets. Breweries have also jumped at the chance to offer their establishments as potential locations, with the intent of strengthening ties within the immediate community and bringing in a new set of customers.

Several months ago, Highland Brewing Co. reached out to offer its Meadowspace to the Oakley Farmers Market. Themarket declined the offer at the time, but when itsprevious Fairview Road sitebacked out just days before the 2017 season opened, the Oakley Farmers Market relocated toHighland on May 4.

While the market has been operating at Highland for only a few weeks,Oakley Farmers Market directorLexi Binns-Cravensays shehas received positive feedback from both vendors and visitors.

Our new location is a lot more child-friendly, where [vendors] can just bring their children, Binns-Craven says. People bring their dogs to the Meadow, and weve had a lot more families come. They bring their children, the kids are playing around as the parents shop, and its just a much more child-friendly atmosphere.

The current popularity of farmers markets is causing people to try and align their mindsets and shopping needs with local vendors, Nicholie says. Over the years, there have been amazing partnerships between businesses and farmers markets, she says. One thing I dont think the public realizes is how farmers markets serve as an incubator for businesses many cant necessarily afford a brick-and-mortar building but can sell their product at a farmers market.

Highland Brewing Co. President Leah Ashburn says the community-focused market fits well with the brewerys community-oriented mindset and that partnerships between businesses and local grassroots effortsare important for growth.

Asheville, in general, has so many wonderful resources for people that grow or bake or make things, and farmers markets are such a nice way for residents to connect directly to those growers, Ashburn says. Theres a similarity to directly connecting with brewers they are both crafting a product, and there are individual people behind that. And those individual people that make beer and craft beer are going to be shopping and buying baked goods and produce at local farmers markets, and that just feels good.

New Belgium Brewing Co. also extended an offer to house the West Asheville Tailgate Market, says market director Quinn Asteak. Although the market decided not to change locations, Asteak appreciates the offer.

While we all think it would be great to have a market at New Belgium for so many reasons they are a beautiful space and a great organization and theres a lot of great appeal we wont be leaving Grace Baptist Church, Asteak says. When the conversations started, everyones ears perked up. Theres a lot of benefits to it; its definitely a thing where it would help both businesses for markets to exist at their locations.

Despite the fact that New Belgium will not host the West Asheville Tailgate Market, the brewery remains a great place for local community involvement, says Suzanne Hackett, communications specialist at New Belgium.

What weve heard from the community is that they love to meet here and see our neighbors here, which feels really good to us, Hackett says. Supporting farmers, for us, is more than just interacting with communities; its essential to our business. Without sustainable agriculture, we dont exist, so its very important to us.

The Gan Shan Farmers Market happens 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturdaysthrough midfall. The Oakley Farmers Market operates 3:30-6:30 p.m.Thursdays through the end of September at The Meadow at Highland Brewing Co.

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Local ties: New tailgate market locations highlight business and community connections - Mountain Xpress

Curating Community through Intentional Placemaking – Urban Land

Decades ago, who would have thought that the graffiti-covered walls of deteriorated industrial buildings would catalyze the regeneration of an entire urban community? The 2016 ULI Global Award for Excellence presented to Miamis Wynwood Walls underscores how all types of art can become the foundation for economically successful placemaking.

A panel at ULI Washingtons recent Trends Conference explored strategies for strengthening communities identity and economic vitality with arts programming and local institutions. The session was moderated by Andy Shallal, proprietor of Busboys and Poets, a combined bookstore, restaurant, and performance venue with several locations in the Washington, D.C., area.

Shallal pointed out that creative placemaking can lead to gentrification, which, in turn, can cause displacement. Successfully regenerating urban neighborhoods can quickly become too expensive for the artists and longtime residents who created their communities allure to begin with. Displacement is an unintended consequence, but we keep doing it, he said.

Displacement does not always occur, argued Jim Brooks of City Solutions. It happens in strong markets, but not necessarily in weaker ones. It can be avoided by building in affordability over the long term, he noted, through land trusts, covenants, and similar measures. He also cited the success of a number of HOPE VI projects, which preserved affordable housing for many longtime residents. There is always pressure to build for the market rate, he warned.

Heidi Zimmers organization, ArtSpace, is devoted to creating, fostering, and preserving affordable space for artists and arts organizations. Financing usually combines state and federal low-income housing tax credits with a variety of other sources to maintain income-qualified housing and/or studio space for artists. The need for this type of housing became obvious in 2016 when a fire killed 36 people in an Oakland, California, warehouse that had been converted to an artists collective.

In 2006, the Washington, D.C., Department of Housing and Community Development asked ArtSpace to help expand and renovate Dance Place, which had helped generate a renaissance of development and investment in the citys Brookland neighborhood since 1986. ArtSpace and Dance Place formed a partnership to create a unique arts complex that is being built in two phases. Phase I, the mixed-use Brookland ArtSpace Lofts, is now in operation, while fundraising is underway for the complete renovation and expansion of Dance Places existing theater. Brooklands subsequently built $250 million mixed-use Monroe Street Market, using no public funding, includes 27 artists studios designated affordable in perpetuity.

Since its founding in 1979, ArtSpace has expanded to operate in 20 states across the United States. Its completed projects include nearly 2,000 live/work units and millions of square feet of nonresidential community and commercial space.

Juanita Hardy, ULIs senior visiting fellow for creative placemaking, believes that collaboration is the key to successful arts-focused community redevelopment with minimal displacement. ULIs Building Healthy Places Initiative, as part of a two-year creative placemaking project funded by the Kresge Foundation, has identified ten best practices in this area, summarized below and in her article in the March/April 2017 issue of Urban Land magazine:

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Curating Community through Intentional Placemaking - Urban Land

The Groves of Academe: On Keep the Damned Women Out – lareviewofbooks

JUNE 3, 2017

IN THE INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY of Twin Oaks, Virginia, co is not merely a prefix for words like coeducation and cooperative. The hundred or so people who live in Twin Oaks, which has operated as an egalitarian commune since 1967, also use co as a pronoun. Co is both gender inclusive used in situations applying to men and women and people who identify as neither as well as gender neutral. As one member wrote, Gender-neutral pronouns can help minimize [] gender assumptions and help others get to know people for other characteristics.

In a community like Twin Oaks, where both work and rewards are shared equally by all, even subtly gendered stereotypes could prove corrosive to a strictly neutral division of labor. Co, then, is more than an artifact of speech. It is an elementary principle, as expressed in Twin Oakss creed: From everyone according to cos abilities, to everyone according to cos needs.

As Nancy Weiss Malkiel argues in Keep the Damned Women Out: The Struggle for Coeducation, the promise embodied in the co of coeducation was considerably more superficial for the elite universities that suddenly began admitting both men and women in the late 1960s and 1970s. Women who enrolled in previously all-male universities found that they were lucky to be given full-length mirrors and better lighting in their restrooms. Concessions to womens preferences or needs in most other areas of life from dining to the curriculum were always begrudging and often elicited both disbelief and indignation. Men could treat almost any adjustment as an injustice, as women found out when a Yale faculty member harangued the new co-eds that they were responsible for the abolition of that most sacred male prerogative: to be able to stroll naked in the gym!

When a reader picks up a book like Malkiels, they expect numerous such anecdotes, instances of entitlement that both disgust and titillate the reader. That is, in a sense, one of the genre conventions of the Ivy League history, although to be strictly accurate, Keep the Damned Women Out is not about coeducation in the Ivies: about 40 percent of its 609 pages (not counting index and notes) are about non-Ivy colleges, and Malkiel only discusses the experiences of four Ivies Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Dartmouth in any depth. (The other schools covered are Vassar, Smith, and Wellesley in the United States and, across the pond, Oxford and Cambridge.) But so strong is the Ivy undertow that most reviewers have treated the book as a de facto Ivy history, and I will follow suit.

That is just as well, for Malkiel has much to contribute to the ample and sometimes distinguished tradition of books that peel back the Ivy Curtain and reveal the pettiness of privilege. But Keep the Damned Women Out is very different in tone from the jaded memoir-cum-exposs of figures like Walter Kirn, Ross Douthat, William F. Buckley, Dinesh DSouza, or William Deresiewicz. It is more comparable to Jerome Karabels The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton or Craig Steven Wilders Ebony and Ivy: Race, Slavery, and the Troubled History of Americas Universities, books that have nobly excavated histories of exclusion and exploitation in the nations elite colleges.

Like Karabels or Wilders books, Keep the Damned Women Out tells how gatekeepers addressed the question of who belonged in the Ivy League and who did not. But where those books focused primarily on the efforts of college officials to build up the ramparts of inequality, Malkiel gives us the story of the people who tried to break them down. Her book is, she writes, a case study in leadership as a fundamental element in institutional change. Malkiel, who was formerly a dean of the college at Princeton, bucks long popular and scholarly traditions of casting administrators in the role of reactive and reactionary stand-patters, always trying to slow down progress and outflank dissenters. There is no Dean Wormer from Animal House to be found here.

Malkiel builds her case for these administrators solidly in the endless paper trail of memos and minutes; she demonstrates considerable skill by interpreting much of the coded language and hidden pressures that lay beneath meetings of trustees, admissions staffs, or alumni donors. Malkiels method is exhaustive, tracking almost every movement of the principal administrative players as they debated, listened, cajoled, polled, and planned the issue of whether to go co-ed.

This approach yields an abundance of quotes and anecdotes like the one about Yales gym, but Malkiel is not out to shock the reader. Rather, she presents this evidence of male intransigence and masculine entitlement as proof of the agility of these schools leadership. For almost all these anecdotes are about people outside the administration: the opposition was almost wholly located among alumni, with pockets of students and faculty also acting obnoxiously. The threat of alumni revolts conducted above all through the withholding of donations is a persistent beat felt throughout the book. The question, then, which the book seeks to answer is how these presidents Robert Goheen of Princeton, Nathan Pusey of Harvard, Kingman Brewster of Yale, and John Kemeny of Dartmouth won the acquiescence if not the approval of their schools alumni.

Posed that way, the books ambitions seem rather special or at least specific, but in crediting the efforts of these figures, Malkiel hopes to make a subtler but also more far-reaching point. This is not a story of women banding together to demand opportunity, to press for access, to win rights and privileges previously reserved for men, she writes. Coeducation resulted not from organized efforts by women activists but from strategic decisions taken by powerful men.

Malkiel is not credulous about the motivations of these powerful men. She notes time and again that it was self-interest and pride that drove them first to consider and then implement coeducation. Certain that they were starting to lose some of the best (male) applicants to elite schools like Stanford that already were co-ed, Pusey, Brewster, and Goheen in particular felt obligated to move quickly to maintain their institutions national preeminence by removing that liability. They would add women to their campuses rather as a president today might add a climbing wall, or larger dorm rooms: it would look better in the brochures.

Malkiel doesnt put the matter quite that brutally, but the implication is certainly there. And in that implication, her assertion about the responsibility of powerful men for the coming of coeducation seems to me to take on another meaning. For while as Maggie Doherty has pointed out in The Chronicle of Higher Education Malkiel tends to scant the power of student activism to get administrations to change their ways, her insistence on crediting the men who ran the Ivies with making coeducation happen leaves the responsibility for the shortcomings of coeducation at these universities firmly in the laps of those same powerful men.

Here is where Malkiel demonstrates the tragic and frustrating superficiality of the struggle for coeducation as it was waged and won by powerful men. Malkiel argues forcefully that the all-male schools of the Ivy League were frequently cavalier about undertaking the responsibilities entailed by educating both men and women. All too often, they asked what kind of effect the women might have on their male students, but to women the answer was always an avant la lettre, lean in!

Our approach has not been, Do women need Princeton? but rather, Does the Princeton of the future need women? wrote the author of Princetons influential report on the feasibility of coeducation, Gardner Patterson. What the Patterson Report tried to answer, Malkiel highlights, is whether the presence of women would heighten the value of the educational experience of the students, where students quite obviously meant male students. Women were not equals; they were, at best, honorary men, as one student reminisced, and that honor could easily be rescinded. Women felt at all times that they were there on sufferance, and that they had to prove not just that they belonged but that they were doing something extra to compensate for taking the spot of a hypothetically deserving man. Malkiels sober awareness of the frequent failures of administrations to give equal weight to the pedagogical, emotional, and social needs of the newly admitted women extends to the ways that a lack of administrative resolve of leadership as a fundamental element in institutional change has abetted the persistence of quiet and not-so-quiet biases against women students in the formerly all-male institutions, from traditions of disproportionately rewarding men with the highest honors to the tenacious stereotypes keeping the number of women enrolled in STEM courses low.

But if Malkiel ends the book by considering the short- and long-term effects of coeducation such as it was on women and holds men accountable for not doing more to make the new arrangement work for its women students, the reader receives only tantalizing glimpses of how this experiment affected its female subjects. There are barely any exchanges social or intellectual between women. And while Malkiel does quote from a number of later reminiscences by these pioneer women, they mostly point to but do not really redress the lack of a substantial account of coeducation as a history of women, rather than as a history of institutions and transformative leadership.

To her credit, Malkiel clearly recognizes this paucity of womens dialogues and reflections about coeducation within her book. She delicately allows her sources to address it rather than didactically disavowing responsibility for it the conventional beyond the scope of my study disclaimer. But a passage like the following aches for further exploration, for a sort of historical reversal of its haunting solitude:

Women find no natural mechanisms for becoming close to one another. Perhaps the most important womens complaint is that they spend so much time sorting out their activities with men that they lose a sense of their own directions; and further, when they do begin to move toward their own goals in some independent way, men feel abandoned and threatened.

The Ivy Leagues first women, it turns out, were in need of more than full-length mirrors. Plus a change.

The desire to find out more about the women who first attended these schools leaves the reader feeling both somber and hopeful that another study as ample and ambitious as Malkiels will delve into the records of student organizations and perhaps student records (if they are open for research). But Malkiel makes other choices that left this reader wishing she had either spelled out her assumptions more clearly or taken note of the questions she did not wish to pursue. Three issues stood out to me as needing much more solid answers than the ones Malkiel gives. The first concerns the presumption that the Ivy League is the pacesetter of academic change. Elite institutions, Malkiel writes, are not more important than other institutions, but what happens at elite institutions has an outsized influence on other institutions [] [They] set a tone and provide a model that profoundly influences other[s].

Such a statement in the context of coeducation is curious, to say the least. Certainly, it is notable that so many universities elite and not moved in the late 1960s and early to mid-1970s to erase various forms of sex segregation in practices ranging from admission to housing assignments. Furthermore, Malkiel demonstrates clearly that research undertaken by the Ivies, particularly by Princeton, aided administrators at other universities who were trying to decrease forms of sex segregation. But when the history of mixed-gender higher education in the United States dates back to before the Civil War, does it make sense to call the Ivies leaders or laggards?

Moreover, while Malkiel addresses the broader social context that surrounded the debates over coeducation in a chapter named Setting the Stage: The Turbulent 1960s, her account is truncated. The unfinished assimilation of Jews and Catholics on these WASP campuses is apparent from allusions scattered through the book, and while Malkiel does not draw the threads into any kind of conclusion, an attentive reader will note how often (male) student leaders agitating for coeducation had typically Jewish names. The Yale Hillel, which was still fairly new in 1968, helped to welcome women during a sort of trial run for coeducation in that year by offering a bagel and lox breakfast.

Race was never disconnected from coeducation in the minds of many alumni who opposed changes to the student body, and Malkiel could have done more to connect the two in her account. You cant very well get rid of those already admitted, wrote one Yale alumnus in 1970, but for Gods sake dont admit any more blacks or coeds. While alumni saw these two forms of desegregation as two parts of one whole, Malkiel doesnt inquire if that view was shared by anyone else. It would be especially interesting to know, for instance, if some of those pioneer women who broke the gender barrier at Yale or Dartmouth took for their own historical model not Mrs. Daniel Boone entering the Cumberland Gap but James Meredith enrolling at the University of Mississippi. Malkiels choice to treat coeducation as a discrete development in higher education concentrated among elite schools at the end of the 1960s is particularly frustrating at this point: as soon as we see coeducation as, instead, part of a broader and longer movement toward desegregation starting with the racial integration of the military in 1948, new vistas open and the Ivy League once again looks like a latecomer, not an innovator.

While Harvard might quiver in irritation at thinking that it was, in some way, responding to changes originating in the Deep South or the outer boroughs, it is more accurate to see the Ivies decision to go co-ed as nearing the end of desegregation than as leading a new venture in diversity. That is not to say that the question of why so many elite institutions were simultaneously wrestling with the issue of coeducation and why so many decided in favor isnt important on its own. But the narrative is shaped differently if we imagine Brewster, Goheen, and others belatedly giving in to a broad consensus that coeducation was normal rather than forging a new ideal that coeducation was the future.

The second issue that needed more consideration was the place of queerness on these campuses both before and after coeducation. While Malkiel makes an effort to acknowledge the impact of the Civil Rights movement on student consciousness, there is no real presence in the book for the percolating gay rights movement of that historical moment, or, indeed, for queer life at all. With so many lines redrawn and roles destabilized, the latent queerness of the process of gender desegregation would seem to be at least a necessary subtext. Many people would have identified with the sentiments of either of the two cartoons Malkiel includes in the book. CONFUSED of course, Im confused! a father shouts in the first. I have a son at Vassar and a daughter at Yale! In the second cartoon, we find two women chatting (or flirting?) at a cocktail party: Princeton, did you say? How interesting. Im a Yale man myself.

The situations entailed by the novelty of coeducation were quite obviously ripe for such gender confusion. But one also wonders if some of the anger and resentment at the intrusion of co-eds into what Dartmouth men called the masculine heaven of Hanover was due to the changes it forced upon the casual homoeroticism of the locker room and fraternity. Even the small number of women who were admitted to these previously all-male institutions necessitated the rewriting of formal rules governing interactions between men. They must certainly have rewritten less formal ones as well.

From time to time, Malkiel provides evidence that administrators did see coeducation as an opportunity to redraft the sexual codes of their campus, although she appears reluctant to parse what mostly appears to be coded language. Much of the administrators concerns, however, seem to have been not about homoerotic play but rather about sexual assault and date rape. The debauchery of the weekends when Ivy League men brought girls back to their campuses was legendary: one thinks of Dorothy Parkers quip about the Yale prom that if all the girls attending it were laid end to end, I wouldnt be a bit surprised. But other artifacts of this culture of weekend revelry luxuriated in the element of coercion which accompanied these dates: Dartmouths in town again / Run, girls, run went one well-known drinking song.

Given the different standards he would have had regarding consensual sex, it is difficult to know for sure what Yales Kingman Brewster had in mind when he made the following comment:

The social and moral value of having two thousand college girls of outstanding intellectual and personal qualifications resident in New Haven is apparent [] The crash week-end, the degrading form of social activity known as the Mixer, have been [] a most unhealthy and unnatural part of the four Yale undergraduate years. Such an environment is not conducive to the development of a considerate, mature, and normal relationship among the sexes.

Less ambiguous, however, was the fact that one of the changes made to the physical plant to adjust to the arrival of women undergraduates was to augment campus lighting and install locks on doors.

But it was the crass opposition to coeducation at Princeton that reveals how much sex was on peoples minds when it came to coeducation. One Princeton alumnus wrote (in a letter that actually appeared in the Princeton Alumni Weekly), a good old-fashioned whorehouse would be considerably more efficient and much, much cheaper. Such a remark, while crude, was representative of one objection to coeducation: having sex or scheming to have it would consume the whole attention of Princeton men once they had access to women at all hours. The Patterson report addressed this belief head on. It was not true, the report read, that men would use the women undergraduates for their social and sexual convenience. Instead, the only reason Princeton men seemed so priapic was because of the unnaturalness of the weekend hunt for dates. The presence of women would stabilize rather than inflame their libidos.

Men at both Princeton and Yale believed that the presence of women would civilize men. When Princeton repeated Yales experiment with hosting women for one week as a trial run for coeducation, The Daily Princetonian wrote that For one week Princeton was a more humane place to go to school [] The whole campus seemed more natural. Men on their own or with limited access to women were animals; with women, they were humane.

Making humans more humane is not the particular responsibility of anyone, or of any gender, because it is or should be the mission of everyone, of all gender identities. It has often, however, been a role taken on energetically if not always consistently by higher education: the humanities, after all, is generally one of the divisions of a university for a reason.

And that is where we might return to the example of Twin Oaks, Virginia, and its experiments in equality in language and in everyday life, in making humaneness or mere humanity the responsibility of everyco.

Twin Oaks is known as an intentional community because it is a place where people voluntarily come together to live according to a shared set of principles. But we might equally acknowledge that universities are intentional communities as much as communes are. Universities are, from one point of view, the most successful utopian projects ever created, even if they do not feel like utopias much of the time. Much as has been the case for other utopian communities from Brook Farm to the Soviet Union, the failures which we find difficult to explain are often chalked up to human nature thats just the way people are: acquisitive, lustful, cruel, or fearful.

Keep the Damned Women Out is clear in laying the blame for coeducations limited progress toward true equality at the doors of the men who never fully committed to remaking their institutions into schools and homes for women as well as men. But in some ways, it accepts that failure as a product of the nature of these schools and perhaps even a product of the nature of men. It could hardly have been otherwise, Malkiel seems to say, you can see what they were working with.

And perhaps that is true; perhaps it is even fair. But the purpose of critique is not just to weigh what was plausible but to project back into the past the seeds of a better present, to imagine what would have been necessary then to make a better now. To do that, we cannot lean on clichs about human nature or about the characters of particular institutions: the limits our subjects believed in for their own actions cannot be our limits for the imagination of what could have been.

Coeducation at the Ivies, Malkiel demonstrates, was not a utopian project but a pragmatic acquiescence to necessity and self-interest. Yet that does not mean that further work in the name of coeducation must be pragmatic, that the co in coeducation must mean only with a few (more) women or with a few trans* or genderqueer persons now added. Bare inclusion not equality was the paltry goal of the administrators whose story Malkiel tells. It need not be ours as well.

Andrew Seal received his PhD from Yale University in 2017. He is a regular blogger at the Society forUS Intellectual Historyand his work has appeared in TheChronicle of Higher Education,n+1, Dissent, andIn These Times.

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The Groves of Academe: On Keep the Damned Women Out - lareviewofbooks

A ‘Justin Option’? Justin Martyr and the Ben-Op – National Catholic Register (blog)

Blogs | Jun. 1, 2017

Christians must be countercultural but our countercultural stance must be balanced by two principles a lot of Benedict Option enthusiasts arent big on.

Oh please.

Not another option.

Not another half-thought-out counterproposal to the Benedict Option to add to the heap, along with theFrancis Option, theDominic Option, theAugustine Option, theGregorian Option, the David option and even theCatholic option.

Now, along with the Ben-Op, were going to talk about a Justin option? A Just-Op, as in Just Stop? (There, I said it first.)

Believe me, I get it.

Ive read a number of critiques of Rod Dreher and the Benedict Option, and Ive read a number of defenses. I appreciate the moral seriousness with which Dreher has approached and tried to address the problems facing serious Christians in the world today.

I find the whole Ben-Op debate fascinating, and in the end I have no particular brief either for or against the Ben-Op in itself partly because, for all Ive read about it, the concept is still somewhat fuzzy to me. (This may, indeed, be part of the point: that we are in a new situation and dont yet know exactly what to do.)

Insofar as I may have a critique, or at least a contrasting or supplementary point, its not so much aimed at anything in particular Ben-Op advocates or enthusiasts say aswhat I dont see them saying, at least not a lot.

I admit up front my reading has not been exhaustive, and I could be missing a great deal. But the relative silence that concerns me is clearly a feature of a lot of conservative dialogue among what could be called the Ben-Op constituencyat least, and today seems like the perfect day to address this.

Thats because today is the memorial of Saint Justin Martyr, best known for his First Apology (or Apologia), addressed to the Roman emperor Antoninus Pius, and his Second Apology, addressed to the Roman senate.

Among Justins briefs for the authorities of his day is the contentionthat Christians are not enemies of the state or the civil authorities. On the contrary, he maintains that good Christians are good citizens though Justin frankly admits that not all Christians are good Christians, and urges authorities to punish wrongdoers but not to blame Christians as a group.

Justin advocates a vision of Christianity as a fundamentally rational philosophy that puts Christians in accord with all reasonable men; in fact, to the extent that men have spoken or acted in accordance with reason, that is, the Logos, that is incarnate in Jesus Christ, they can be considered Christian in a way, even if they lived before Christ.

I think its instructive to consider Justins approach in light of what many Christians today seem to experience as a dilemma between Benedict Option and culture war.

I think I agree with Dreher on two points: First, culture war is no longer (if it ever was) a viable or helpful approach for Christians living in the world today. Insofar as Christians, particularly Christian conservatives, have defined our mode of engagement in terms of culture war, weve lost.

Second, Im in favor of intentional communities that foster a consciously countercultural ethos and a critique of the mainstream culture.(My parish is one, or rather there are intentional communitiesat our parish.)

Yet insofar as the Ben-Op is understood to entail, or at least correlates with, a strategic retreat or withdrawal from engagement with mainstream culture, I have concerns about where it leads.

I understand that Dreher has been at pains to deny that the withdrawal he has in mind means a head for the hills physical withdrawal. Well and good.

From what Ive read of Dreher and other Ben-Op enthusiasts, though, I think I can speak of what might be called a Ben-Op mindset characterized by a) a lot of engagement with the likeminded, among whom b) mainstream culture is invoked primarily in a polemical mode, in terms of whats wrong with those outside the fold and the world they want.

To be sure, we need engagement with the likeminded. And, since our faith is countercultural, we must be clear both what we believe and where we think the culture has gone wrong.

But we must also be doing two other things that I dont see a lot of from Ben-Op advocates, and certainly from many among the Ben-Op constituency.

First, like Justin Martyr, we must be directly engaged not only with each other but with the mainstream culture. We need to talk a lot to people with outlooks very different from ours.

Whats more, our engagement must not be dominated by counterculturalpolemics and negativity. We must be countercultural, but we must balance our countercultural stance with positive engagement.

We must be able to step out of our comfort zones and recognize when and where those outside the fold (even people we may consider ideological opponents, and who may return the favor) have been touched by the light that lightens every man and arrived at valid insights and reasonable views. (I dont imagine Dreher would deny this, but with notable exceptions I dont see him doing a lot of it myself, and certainly there are a lot of Ben-Op enthusiasts who dont seem interested in doing it at all.)

Second, inseparably connected from the first, we need to do something else that has become far more pressing today than it was in Justins time: We must acknowledge frankly, both among ourselves and to the world, the extent to which individual Christians and even Christian leaders, organizations and communities have been part of whats wrong with the world instead of the solution to it.

Justin admitted to the emperor that there were bad Christians but he lived just a few decades from the age of apostles, at a time when Christians were powerless, often despised, and occasionally persecuted. Times have changed.

A lot of water has gone under the Milvian Bridge since Constantine legitimized Christianity in A.D. 313 and Theodosius made it the official religion of the Roman Empire in 380. Christians have much to be proud of in our 2,000-year history, but also much to be grieved over and to make amends for. Justin could afford to suppose that the odium fidei of his time was inspired by demons. We no longer have that luxury, alas.

Its true that Christian history has often been painted overly black by the Churchs critics and by critics of Western culture generally, particularly in academia. Its also true that Christians, particularly Christian conservatives, tend to err in the opposite direction.

We must recognize that sometimes the problem isnt them, or not just them.Sometimes the problem is us. Not just those Christians over there bad Christians but our own communities (yes, even our intentional Ben-Op communities!) andpotentially even our own hearts.

We must balance our countercultural stance with ongoing self-critical frankness. (Once again, Dreher wouldnt deny this, and on some topics he is more than willing to critique the failings of Christian communities and leadersnotably, and rightly, on the Catholic clerical sex-abuse scandal. But I dont see him emphasizing the need for this self-critical spirit in the Ben-Op communities he advocates. And, again, many Ben-Op enthusiasts are completely uninterested in anything of this sort.)

If we cant do these two things if we cant balance our countercultural stance with positive engagement and self-critical frankness then what we call our countercultural stance will devolve into mere tribalism.

We must transcend tribalism to make the case to our culture, as Justin did in his, that good Christians are good citizens, and a world that makes room for Christians will be a better world than one that crushes us underfoot.

Frankly, even this involves what has become in some ways an uphill battle. There are some who will never accept us. It may be tempting to focus on our most implacable opponents, shrug our shoulders, and say, No sense even trying.

But this would be a disastrous mistake. Progress is possible. If we cannot reach all, we can still reach many beginning, perhaps, with our own children.

In the long run, I suspect, our children will be less likely to keep the faith we wish to impart to them if they grow up with a one-sidedly countercultural, negative view of the world outside the fold and an insufficiently self-critical view of ourselves.

Reality itself will educate them as they learn that the people we taught them to think of as ideological enemies could be more reasonable than we allowed. And they will certainly discover the flaws in ourselves, and in the intentional communities in which we raised them, that we didnt want to acknowledge or think about.

Saint Justin Martyr, ora pro nobis.

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A 'Justin Option'? Justin Martyr and the Ben-Op - National Catholic Register (blog)

The fight for affordable housing in Jefferson Park continues – Chicago Tribune

I was deeply saddened to hear Mayor Rahm Emanuels recent remarkscriticizing efforts to create the first affordable housing for veterans and people with disabilities in Chicagos Northwest Side neighborhood of Jefferson Park.

Residential segregation in Chicago has never been an accident. The corollary of this bitter truth is that today, intentional efforts by citizens and elected leaders to transcend our citys segregation will not be free of contention, least of all when the deep fault lines of race and class are touched by a civic discussion. In this ongoing conversation, Emanuels recent words that anti-affordable housing activists need to be heard functions as an acquittal of racial animus, masquerading as a white-washed call for process.

I commend Ald. John Arena for his leadership and vision. The community process that he implemented was both rigorous and thoughtful. Hundreds of neighborhood residents attended informational meetings and some of them were contentious. Whats right is not always popular, and whats popular is not always right. Arena is demonstrating both care and leadership for his community. To call for more time and space to honor the tired historic forces seeking to retrench segregation is to dishonor the future we are collectively reaching for.

Fifty-one years ago, around the same time that Martin Luther King Jr. marched for open housing in Marquette Park, a parallel march for open housing occurred in Jefferson Park, equally met with bricks and violence.

What is different today on the Northwest Side is that amidst the resurgence of prejudice and hateful energy by some factions in Jefferson Park, there is also an energetic movement growing among anti-racist, largely white, homeowners, who are as committed to opening their community to new neighbors, as others are to keeping it closed.

King prophesied, The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice. If this is true, it is made so only through the intentional acts of everyday citizens and courageous elected leaders who take stands where they can especiallyin their own communities and within the policy-making spheres they can reach to bend that arc in the direction it must go.

Jesus Chuy Garcia, commissioner, Cook County Board

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The fight for affordable housing in Jefferson Park continues - Chicago Tribune

Searching for a greater interfaith understanding – Seattle Globalist

Muslims end their daily fasts during Ramadan with an iftar, an evening meal often eaten with others. (Photo by raasiel via Flickr.)

We are currently in Islams holiest month. U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will not be hosting a traditional Iftar or breaking of the fast as it has been done for the past 20 years. Incidents of Islamophobia are rampant. Yet, even as the federal government failsto honor amajor holiday or quickly condemn fatal incidents of hate, President Donald Trumpcelebrates a ten-year,$350 billion arms dealwith Saudi Arabia.

Todays political regimeand climes are teaching us so much about what we, the people, can do to make things better. We can learn from the othersaround us, and the incidents that ignite and unite us in love even as we make mistakes in our day-to-day interactions.

Ananya Rabeya is one person who has taught me much. She is the Seattle Chapter president of #Spreeha Foundation, a nonprofit that aims to help alleviate poverty in Bangladesh. She literally brought tears to my eyes with hersincerity, care for the community and her loving support for the mission of a new grassroots civic group Act Now Mantra, that was birthed by the needs our times.

Then, I listen to the brilliant Aneelah Afzali, the director of the American Muslim Empowerment Network at the Muslim Association of Puget Sound in Redmond (MAPS). Afzaliis off the charts bright and speaks very quickly, yet she is gentle, loving, empathetic. She says rightly that theculture of fear against Muslims is promoted systematically to justify authoritarianism.

We know of wrong-doers from all religions, but the crimes they commit do not color the entire group. Between 2008 and 2013, about $205 million werechanneled through about 33 organizations togroups that promote Islamophobia.

Its people likeAnanya Rabeya andAneelah Afzali who helped me realize that I need a greater interfaith understanding in my own life.

My realization that I knew disgracefully little about Muslims lives started with our attempt to book a date and venue for our Food Festivus event for Act NowMantra.

We were honing in on June when Rabeya pointed out that a food festival during the month of Ramadan wasnt optimal. One of ourorganizers asked, You can eat only until 9 p.m., right? She had to learn it was the opposite that people observing Ramadan can eat only after sunset. How ignorant of us to not know the religious practices of 1.8 billion people on this planet earth.

Then we tried to book the facility of the Muslim Association of Puget Soundthinking that besides food, we could have a few cultural performances there too. A friend was surprised. Performances at MAPS? Why, I myself go there to pray! You cant be performing there.

Request denied. Now we are hoping for an arrangement at LangstonHughes Performing Arts Institute.

Another eye-opener was at a fundraiser for a nonprofit. I was seated next to a handsome couple, who wereMuslims. The people pouring wine kept missing our table and I motioned them over. When they came and poured wine in the glass of thegentleman to my left, I was appalled. I assumed that my neighbors would be offended.

Muslims dont drink alcohol and he must be offended and probably feels insulted and resents my instigating this wine-pouring! I thought. Quickly, I picked up his half-full glass, and poured the wine into my wineglass. Smiling at him, I breathed a sigh of relief and sat back in my chair.

Imagine my mortification when he motioned another person to bring him wine!

How much misinformation do we carry about communities we dont interact with? How many chances to enrich ourselves with the sheer love and cultures of beautiful souls, we have amongst us, are we missing out on? My own ignorance and all the missed chances are so clear to me.

Why am I feeling so emotional? Is it the unbearable sweetness of Ananyas love, Aneelahs sincere devotion to spreading truth, the classy demeanor of the gentleman who did not embarrass me after my social gaffe? Or do I cry for all the lost opportunities in growth so far and my obliviousnessto the reality of millions for so long? Why can I count on one hand the number of friends I have in the black community and the Native American community?

Can we make cross-community interactions more intentional, frequent and enhance/endow ourselves by being more inclusive, curious, giving and open to taking? And as rational, prudent human beings, if not as kind, large-hearted ones shouldnt we?

I have always felt that we should invite more non-Indians and non-Hindus to our festivals and now that feeling is strengthened even more. Also elevated is my resolve to participate in many more Christmas and Hanukkah celebrations with gusto and I am gratefulto all friends who have included me in the past. And we need to find ways to have the story of Sikhs told more clearly and participate in their community events like the one held in Kent in May.

Because of this, Im grateful that people in Muslim community is inviting everyone in their traditional breaking of their fast in their holiest month. MAPSis hosting its annual Interfaith Iftar on June 7. Islamic Community of Bosniaks in Washington and Edmonds Lutheran Church are also hosting an interfaith Iftar on June 10. Other mosques and communities in the Seattle area may also be hosting events open to the public throughout this month.

Editors note: The event at MAPS is sold out. This post has been updatedto include other public events.

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Searching for a greater interfaith understanding - Seattle Globalist

Cohousing Part I: Creating community and reducing social isolation – Michigan State University Extension

Cohousing Part I: Creating community and reducing social isolation
Michigan State University Extension
According to the UK Cohousing Network, Cohousing communities are intentional communities, created and run by their residents. Each household has a self-contained, personal and private home but residents come together to manage their community, ...

and more »

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Cohousing Part I: Creating community and reducing social isolation - Michigan State University Extension

Saint Benedict’s Mandate – Patheos (blog)

(Note: this piece was originally composed in response to Rebecca Bratten Weisss recent postwhere she wrote about how the evils of the world can often accompany the members into the life of lay intentional communities. Father Stephanos writes about the same phenomenon as a feature of the Benedictine monastictradition.Michael)

Here in the monastery we must work hard to screen out applicants who may have motivations or qualities that are unhealthy, mistaken, or unvirtuous. We dont always succeed at that.

During a mans formative years in the monastery before we permit him to profess perpetual vows, the man can hide his flaws until weve allowed him to make perpetual vows, and THEN the real person comes out. However, once hes in perpetual vows it can be very hard to deal with him, to get him to change and grow, or even to encourage him to leave if we determine that is necessary.

Sometimes during the formative years of a potential monk, we may see signs that he would not make a healthy, reasonable, basically good monk, but we, as a community, may fail to agree to confront the issues, and the majority of us might vote to let the man into perpetual vows. Then afterwards we end up struggling with the results.

Community life is hard work. It would be even more problematic and unrealistic if the monasterys goal were to be an Us-against-the-Outside-Option. That is not what St. Benedict had in mind. Rather than a mentality that would say, We are Christians inside the monastery, and people outside are not, St. Benedict wrote of the pride, stubbornness, and other vices that every monk has inside himself.

We monks with our personal flaws and gifts are a challenge and a support to each other in striving to be men of justice and charity in living together. It would be unhealthy, unwise, and unvirtuous if the monastic option were that of seeing the people inside the option as the good guys, but seeing those outside the option as the bad guys. No! For the real St. Benedict each man inside the monastic option is both a good guy and a bad guy. He wrote of his urgent expectation that the laity and clergy outside the monastery should hold those inside the monastery accountable for living virtuously. If all the monks were to connive at corrupting the monastery, St. Benedict wrote of having the laity and clergy outside the monastery step inside to stop it; he even said it would be a grave sin not to intervene. That is a real option a mandate from St. Benedict himself.

Fr. Stephanos Pedrano, O.S.B.

Prince of Peace Abbey

Oceanside, California

(image via Wikimedia Commons)

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Saint Benedict's Mandate - Patheos (blog)

my family did the benedict option before it was cool and here’s why it doesn’t work – Patheos (blog)

A few years ago, I started writing a novel that was loosely based on my recollections of having grown up in and out of a series of attempted religious communities. As I wrote, I collected material from others with similar experiences, and the anecdotes piled high. Eventually I realized that some of the stories were so over-the-top, mere realism would be insufficient to convey the bizarre intensity of life on the outside of the ordinary parameters of modern American experience, and a sort of magical realist/ gothic mashup would be better. Magical realism as a sub-genre has a special place in tale-telling of post-colonial or marginalized communities. And there is something post-colonial, something of the feel of the immigrant, when you come out of community life and dwell in the mainstream. As my collection of anecdotes piled high, I found myself thinking, repeatedly, damn, this is good. I HAVE to use this one. Of course, in the ethos of the storyteller, good usually means excruciatingly bad, painful, embarrassing, tragic.

So, yes, escapees from intentional community have stories to tell, and many are painful. My own experiences verge more on the grotesquely humorous, and some of my memories are happy ones, so even now, when the experiments are over, I still can understand why something like the Benedict Option would appeal to people. In a way, it is a beautiful dream.

Because, you see, the Benedict Option though not by that name was around for a good forty years before Dreher sat down to write. My father was one of several who came up with the idea. While running a raucous bar in Chapel Hill, NC, he was also reading Thomas Merton and Louis Bromfield and Ralph Waldo Emerson, and eventually came to the conclusion that the best bet for Christians in the modern world was to come out and be set apart. He even drew on his understanding of St. Benedicts communities, with a special stress on the notion of ora et labora.

Because my father opted actually to do the thing, instead of sitting in an office writing a book about it, you have never heard of him. Which means, I suppose, that his attempt was fairly successful. But these attempts are never all that successful.

My novel The Serpent Motif ended up being 180,00 words long, which means too long to interest agents for hard-copy publications, so Im trimming it down a bit while I work on another, shorter project. And from a theoretical standpoint I could also wax overly verbose, on the idea of intentional religious community, why it is attractive, and why it wont work. I have had first-hand experience of just how things can go wrong, and lots of second-hand stories about other ways they can go even more wrong.

And theres something touchingly tragic about it: because on a fundamental level, one can see the appeal of the idea, and many of those who attempted it did so with the noblest of intentions.

Sam Rochas recent review of The Benedict Option details some of the areas in which Drehers conceptualization fails. Rocha, like me, has first-hand experience of what an attempt at community feels like. Fr. Stephanos Pedrano, guest-writing for Steel Magnificat, details why the Option isnt especially Benedictine.

And there are other problems: when you try to come Out (or In?), whatever you feared in the World comes in with you, into your microcosm. Its ironic that my fathers first community was called New Eden. Into every Eden, a serpent will come. We tend to bring it in with us. Want to escape from overweening tyrannical power? Too bad, you probably brought it with you, and you will find the community dominated by whichever leader (usually male) has the loudest voice and the least empathy. Want to escape from sexual perversion? Ha. Have I got some stories! Its amazing just how perverse people can be, on the land, when no one is looking. Want to escape from a welfare system in which those who dont work wont eat? I can assure you, you will be shelling beans or building a cabin while nearby some hanger-on rambles on forever about how misunderstood he is. Tired of nitpicking bureaucracy? Your community will be filled with nitpickers, happy to call you out if your daughters skirts are too short, or if your sons have been listening to evil music like (gasp) Simon and Garfunkel.

Communities like this tend to attract those who are unable to get along in the ordinary world, and whatever it was that made them unable to get along, they will bring in with them.

But the main thing I want to touch on, here, is why the idea of radical separation into intentional community is delusional from the start. And that has to do with money.

Money creates systemic dependence. Thats why agrarianism is a needed component in any marginally successful effort. Independence from the System means creating an alternative inter-dependence on the land. Back in the early nineties, my family and others were involved in ongoing discussions about this, with others involved in Caelum et Terra, the brainchild of Daniel Nichols. Nichols, like my father, gets the hipster cred here: he came up with the Benedict Option before it was cool. Too bad they didnt patent it.

Now, today, David Russell Mosley writes about Michael Martins Sophia Option, as an alternative to Drehers approach. Martin is a biodynamic farmer (I have him to thank for my fine horseradish planting), and understands better than a journalist what is entailed in creating a network of interconnections that differ from those in the neo-liberal capitalist system. I would suggest that any attempt at intentional community that neglects agrarianism is already problematic, because it means that one remains absolutely dependent on money, and therefore on capitalism, and therefore on industry, and therefore on the whole global military industrial complex. Which means, if you think youre set apart, youre just fooling yourself. You are living immersed in structural evil, and limply virtue-signalling.

But even with agrarianism, its impossible to avoid money. We tried. We lived on someone elses land, so there were no taxes. My parents had no money-earning work outside the home, but we lived almost entirely on garden produce. We had electricity, but no running water, no telephone, certainly no television. We heated our home with a wood stove, and my father spent all day every day all winter just cutting wood, with a bowsaw and axe (no noisy chainsaws to disturb the tranquility of nature), in order to keep one room of the house livable.

But we still needed a little money, and relied heavily on donations from those who remained complicit in the system. Which means we were complicit in the system, even if we pretended not to be.

The Onion had a funny piece, recently, about how Noam Chomsky trying just to enjoy a normal day, but everything he sees reminds him of our dependence on neoliberal global imperialsm. I sympathize. I would like to create a culture in which I know that nothing I use is made by slave labor or via environmental despoilment. I would like to rely entirely on hand-tools that dont depend on fossil fuels, and derive my energy from renewable resources. Forget about the incredible challenges of going off-grid in our society. The challenge even buying work clothes that dont tie me in with slave labor is so great, I occasionally have what my husband jokingly refers to as Noam Chomsky moments.

Unless we run off into the wild and live by foraging, and clad ourselves in natural fibers, we are locked into the System.

And even if we were to do this, the System would go on.

Unless, of course, it collapses: this was what I was raised to believe would happen, and now I regard with amusement the feverish attempts of Preppers to prepare for it.

In the Prepper mind, once the System collapses, well all be living like survivalists, foraging and hunting, growing things from open-pollinated seed. But this is again sheer fantasy. We have so depleted our natural resources, the only way a nation of Preppers would survive off the land is if most of them were killed off in the apocalyptic event, first. As it stands, an America full of trigger-happy survivalists out there bagging game for their families will wipe out the deer population in no time at all. I suppose eventually the Preppers will get around to eating one another. Radial inter-dependence on community, indeed.

So what we have to admit is that no matter how diligently we attempt to distance ourselves from the System, we are still locked into it. Or else living on a mountain dressed in goat-hide, eating one another.

So as Christians who take a serious moral stance in relation to structural evil (though we may differ in our ideas of what structural evil is: what I fear is not at all the things Dreher fears) what do we do? There have to be a range of middle grounds between total acceptance of a system that generates destruction, and the sort of radical self-sufficiency that leads to degradation, failure of community, and ultimately cannibalism (metaphorical, if not literal). I hope that, at least, the publication of Drehers book will open up more space for these conversations. But in order to sort out what is and isnt possible, we need to start by being honest with ourselves about just how dependent we really are.

Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jean-Fran%C3%A7ois_Millet_(II)_001.jpg (This painting of The Angelus by Millet was iconic in my upbringing, an image of the dream my father had of the life of work and prayer on the land)

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my family did the benedict option before it was cool and here's why it doesn't work - Patheos (blog)

Intentional neighborhoods take root across country – LancasterOnline

PLUMSTEADVILLE, Pa. (AP) When it comes to the joys and challenges of raising foster and adopted children, "it really does take a village," said Mary Pappas, a Perkasie mother of five.

"You can feel very isolated."

Inspired by the role a supportive "village" plays in building healthy families, projects known as intentional neighborhoods are taking root across the country.

Within these communities, foster and adoptive families live and build relationships in a neighborhood of seniors, single-parent families, couples and others.

When Mary and her husband, Mark, who have two biological children, two adopted children and a 2-year-old foster child, learned of the pioneering concept and a plan to build one in Central Bucks, they were intrigued.

"The goal is not to be separate, but to bond with other neighbors," said Mary Pappas. "The common goal is to keep kids safe and build community."

It's a model that is proving successful, including Treehouse, in Easthampton, Massachusetts, which opened in 2006.

Pappas visited the village with other Bucks County residents as part of a program "Revisioning Foster Care in America."

"Treehouse was pretty amazing," Pappas said. There, elderly residents have bought homes to be part of the community by walking children to school, baby-sitting and mentoring.

Similar communities are operating in Tampa, Florida, Washington, D.C., and Portland, Oregon.

Recently, a Bucks County nonprofit, BeTheFamily, began searching for a property to create a neighborhood, said Marco Munari, a founder of the organization.

While not part of a church, the new organization is an outgrowth of a Doylestown church's ministry that started 10 years ago to support adoptive and foster parents, said Munari's wife.

"We have a passion and a desire to wrap around those marginalized in our community and are just taking the steps necessary to find the right location for our family and those we will be serving," said Michelle Munari in an email.

In an informal presentation to Plumstead supervisors recently, Marco said such neighborhoods are designed to provide "a sense of belonging, self-worth and community through direct involvement and relationships."

Still somewhat rural, Plumstead is of interest to BeTheFamily because the organization's vision includes a therapeutic farm where residents could help with farming responsibilities, Michelle Munari said. She and her husband stressed that the effort is still in its infancy.

Experts on child welfare and foster care agree the need for quality foster homes is great, as is the need for caring communities to support them.

"There's a drastic shortage of quality foster homes," said Debra Schilling Wolfe, executive director of the Field Center at the University of Pennsylvania. "It's a national crisis."

The intentional neighboring model is a "really wonderful way of giving back. It's a community taking responsibility for the care of kids," she said.

Wolfe cautioned there are also concerns about communities where foster and adoptive children live together.

"It's very easy to be idealistic, but foster kids bring with them baggage from earlier homes. ... Their trauma has to be addressed," Wolfe said. Foster children, and their foster parents, also have unique safety and confidentiality issues, she noted. More evaluation of the model is needed, Wolfe said.

It's because of the special needs that Mary Pappas finds neighborhoods designed specifically to support those with foster and adopted children appealing.

"People say oh, my kid does this or that, but they can't appreciate the difference in a foster child," Pappas said. "They are rooted in different trauma. They have loss experiences from their first family."

To be in a community where others understand that would be helpful to parents and children alike, Pappas said. "I would love to see it happen."

As a real estate agent, Pappas said she is keeping an eye out for potential properties in Bucks County.

Lynne Rainey, executive director of Bucks County Children and Youth Services, called the concept innovative.

"The safety and welfare of children is a community concern," she said. "We all share in the well-being of kids."

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Intentional neighborhoods take root across country - LancasterOnline

Trust comes in several varieties – Muncie Star Press

Mitch Isaacs 4:05 p.m. ET April 8, 2017

Mitch Isaacs(Photo: Provided)

Trust is the bedrock of solid teams and strong communities. There are two basic kinds of trust: trusting character and trusting competence.

Generally, when we talk about trusting someone, we mean that we trust their character. Its another way of saying that we think someone has integrity and honest intent. When we trust someones character we find them open, caring, honest, fairand authentic.

We all appreciate livingand workingwith these kinds of people.

Trusting someones competence means that we can count on them to produce results. This kind of trust is built on credibility, skills, knowledgeand performance. This is what we mean when we say that we can trust someone to get the job done.

Of course, its entirely possible to trust someones character but not their competence. We can genuinely like a person because they are authentic and honest, while knowing they dont consistently produce results. Or, alternatively, we all work with smart, capable people who continually perform but would stab you in the back at the drop of a hat.

So how do we build teams of character and competence?

At Shafer Leadership Academy we consider trust the foundation of good teams and strong communities. We help individuals, companies, and social benefit organizations build trusting teams. We provide intentional activities, and supportive learning communities, designed to emphasize character and develop competence. Just as importantly, we explore a process that builds on trust, to help teams work through conflict, commit to decisions, hold each other accountable, and ultimately produce results.

The process is called The Five Behaviors of a Cohesive Team and the program launches April 26.

Visit http://www.shaferleadership.com to start your journey of building a trusting team.

Mitch Isaacs is the executive director for Shafer Leadership Academy, a Muncie-based nonprofit organization with a vision to see vibrant communities and workplaces developed within East Central Indiana supported by skilled, collaborative and engaged leaders.

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Trust comes in several varieties - Muncie Star Press

Speak out about your experiences – Hibbing Daily Tribune

HIBBING An innovative program designed to bring generations to together is inviting Hibbing residents of all ages to Speak Out.

Hibbing is the newest community to step forward to join the Northland Foundations AGE to age: bringing generations together, which is an initiative of the Northland Foundations KIDS PLUS Program.

For 25 years, KIDS PLUS has been working with communities in northeastern Minnesota to improve the wellbeing of children and youth, from birth to adulthood, said Lynn Haglin, Northland Foundation vice-president and KIDS PLUS director. AGE to age began in 2008 with a handful of communities and has now grown, with the latest addition of Hibbing, to 16 sites throughout the seven-county region.

To show residents what AGE to age is all about, community members are invited to a Speak Out event from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 14, in Hibbing Community College commons, where dinner will be served and, as the organizers hope, much conversation will be had.

This is a special opportunity to hear from Hibbing area residents representing a span of many decades from present-day youth to people in their 80s or 90s, speakers will share what it was like to grow up in Hibbing, Haglin explained. The audience can listen to these interesting stories, ask questions and share their insights as well. It will be a chance to learn about their community history and find out what has stayed the same and what is different about being a young person in Hibbing whether they grew up in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and so on, up to today.

The program aims to create intergenerational connections between Hibbing residents to not only learn from each other, but to work together to build a stronger community by using these discussions to develop plans and projects for the area.

As Haglin pointed out, it is rare for discussions of this type to occur these days.

In many communities today, there arent many intentional ways for young people to meet and benefit from the older generations, she said. In many cases, weve lost the inter-generational connections that families and communities used to have in the past. Grandchildren may not live near grandparents. Neighbors may not know neighbors as well as they once did. AGE to age links the generations to share their time and talents.

In other cities participating in the program, projects developed through these dialogues have included community gardens, walking clubs, teaching traditional activities such as crafts, baking, language, storytelling and helping older adults with smartphone and computer technology.

However, there is no one telling residents what to do.

Each community knows best what its resources are and what its needs are, and AGE to age being guided by and engaging local people at each site allows the program to be unique in each location, Haglin explained.

In fact, the greatest resource in making these decisions is each and every resident of Hibbing.

This is a chance to understand one another better and learn some of the things that we share in common, no matter our age, Haglin said. We hope the room is full of people of all generations.

What: Northland Foundations AGE to age: bringing generations together Speak Out

When: 5 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 14. A light supper from 5 to 5:30 p.m.

Where: Hibbing Community College Commons, 1515 E. 25th St.

Who: Youth, parents, adults 55-plus, parents, and representatives from K-12 and higher education, state/local/tribal government, faith communities, youth serving organizations, health and human services, civic organizations and businesses. Ages 9 to 99 are welcome.

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Speak out about your experiences - Hibbing Daily Tribune