Archives For PRISM

1. Love in real life
My lovely wife wrote a great piece for Christianity Today’s This Is Our City project, telling the story of Chris and Bethany, a Phoenix-area couple who are committed to loving their neighbors — as in, the actual people next door:

In order to love one’s neighbors, one must first know who they are—a teaching that’s much easier said than done in a place like Phoenix… But one couple at Sage Stone has a vision for something different, and they think Christians should make it a reality. They wonder what would happen if Christians in Phoenix met new residents with a friendly smile and an invitation into relationship. Is it possible they could upend Phoenix’s loner culture?

2. Tribute to Frederick Buechner
Kristyn Komarnicki, the excellent editor of PRISM, shared a brief tribute to one of my own favorite writers:

Buechner’s gut-level honesty—both about his own spiritual failings and doubts and about Christ’s attractive/repulsive call on our lives—has gained him a loyal following among the warts-and-all crowd. I just started rereading The Book of Bebb, Buechner’s delightfully earthy yet heaven-gazing tetralogy about a couple of con artists (a preacher and his alleged apprentice) who bumble into faith and grace. And it fills me with hope for the state of “Christian” art and with joy over the way Christ’s salvation can sneak into the tiniest cracks in our armor and seep into our souls without us even realizing it, until it’s too late, and we wake up saved, wondering how we got here.

3. Never The Same
In a comment on yesterday’s post, my good buddy Barnabas shared a link to this new 15-minute documentary about the Sawi people fifty years after Don and Carol Richardson went to live among them. It’s a great short film.

4. The future of the Church of England
Jake Belder, an assistant minister in a local congregation of the Church of England, had a great post this week offering his (sobering) thoughts on the road ahead for the Anglican church:

As I say all of this, I realise that I may sound as if I want to see the Church of England broken up. I genuinely don’t. I hate division as much as the next person, and I would love to see a wave of reform pass through the institution and to see a recommitment to doing the work of spreading the gospel and faithfully bearing witness to our Lord Jesus Christ. But I am also a realist, and though I have not been within the walls of the Church of England for long, I find myself increasingly sceptical about its future. Division will come at some point, and probably sooner than we think. What that will look like, I don’t know. The one clear thing, however, is that the institution cannot continue to exist as it does for much longer. For that reason, I would encourage my conservative evangelical brothers and sisters to begin sitting down now and having those serious conversations that need to be had.

5. Why sidewalks, plazas, & bike lanes matter to God
Eric Jacobsen, a pastor and new urbanist in Tacoma, Washington, explores the theology of the built environment in this great talk at the Center for Faith & Work.

Repaso is intended as a thought-provoking compilation of news and commentary from the past week related to the intersections of faith, development, justice and peace. As always, I welcome your thoughts on any of the links and ideas in this roundup!

[Photo credit: gardenvisit.com]

On Tuesday I shared my latest feature story for PRISM about a community-led peace and reconciliation movement in Sierra Leone. If you haven’t checked it out yet, please do.

In the same issue I have a review of the newly released second edition of Walking with the Poor: Principles and Practices of Transformational Development (Orbis) by Dr. Bryant Myers of Fuller Theological Seminary. For anyone interested in missions or faith-based development, it’s simply a must-read.

The PDF version of the review is here.

My latest feature story has been published in PRISM, focused on Fambul Tok, a community-led peace and reconciliation movement in Sierra Leone. The country endured a brutal eleven-year civil war, and Fambul Tok is helping communities to heal again, not relying primarily on outside resources and ideas, but on a long-held tradition within Sierra Leone’s culture that takes place around community bonfires.

I’m convinced this story can teach all of us a lot about peace, forgiveness, and reconciliation in our increasingly fractured, violent world. Here’s how the story begins:

Sahr and Nyumah grew up as best friends. But that was before the war.

While attempting to flee their village in eastern Sierra Leone when invading rebel forces attacked it in 1991, the two boys were captured and ordered to kill. Sahr was given a knife and told to murder his own father. He refused. The knife was given to Nyumah, and a gun was put to his head. Once he had killed Sahr’s father, Nyumah turned and beat Sahr to a pulp.

This was war, and it would be an 11-year nightmare.

When a peace treaty was eventually signed, those who survived the war did their best to return to life as usual. Villages that had been burned to the ground had to be rebuilt from scratch. Families and their ways of life had to be pieced back together. Many returned home accompanied by the ghosts of amputation, an enduring reminder of the gruesomeness of war. Thousands of combatants who had grown old against their will at the ages of 10, 11, 12 struggled to reclaim the innocence of childhood. For too many it was too late. Tens of thousands of women and girls carried with them the silent shame of violation. And for all the obvious wounds, a myriad more lay just below the surface, largely unacknowledged—but simmering.

The highly touted Truth and Reconciliation Commission, intended to help the people of Sierra Leone find closure, found some success here and there, but it never reached rural villages like Gbekedu, where Sahr and Nyumah lived. Villagers were left without a sense of justice, and though guns and machetes had for the time being been set aside, true peace had not yet been fully restored.

These communities, however, had a tradition—a memory from before the war. In a simpler time, after the day’s work had been done, village residents would gather around a bonfire for a time of “family talk,” or fambul tok in the Krio language. They would discuss whatever was on their minds, and together, led by village elders, they would resolve any disputes that had arisen during the day.

It was at one such gathering, years after the war, where Sahr finally found the words and the audience he needed to be able to speak out. After courageously telling the truth about what he and his family had endured, he went a step further, declaring, “The man who beat me and killed my father is here.”

Hobbling over to the edge of the circle on his permanently crippled legs, he reached into the crowd and pulled Nyumah out of the shadows and into the flickering light.

Sahr and Nyumah had not spoken in the years since the rebels invaded and their lives were torn apart. But around that bonfire, face to face with Sahr and in the sight of all, Nyumah confessed to his crime in stark, grisly detail.

“But what I did,” he continued, “it was not my choice.”

Then, bowing to the ground and putting his hands in the dirt, he asked Sahr to forgive him. Without hesitation, Sahr granted forgiveness. The two embraced and began to dance as the community burst into exuberant song, voices rising into the night, swirling like sparks.

Continue reading the story here.

Learn more about the Fambul Tok book and film, and about Fambul Tok International.

[Photo credit: Sahr and Nyumah after participating in a Fambul Tok reconciliation ceremony. Photo by Sara Terry via fambultok.com]

It’s been about two months since Tomato Justice came out, telling the stories of those who pick tomatoes in Immokalee, Florida, and what it has to do with us. Based on feedback, it was well-received by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers and their partners. And perhaps best of all, Wilson, the farmworker I interviewed, sent a copy to his family back in Guatemala.

It’s been encouraging to get this feedback and to see the story picked up in various places, like FoodFirst.org, the Campolo College of Graduate and Professional Studies blog, and the “Fair Food” section of the Presbyterian Church (USA) website.

Just the other day I heard that International Justice Mission has launched Recipe for Change, its own campaign for slave-free tomatoes. For those who don’t know, IJM is an innovative and inspiring Christian human rights organization that “brings rescue to victims of slavery, sexual exploitation and other forms of violent oppression.” Here’s their campaign blurb:

Slavery is not just happening overseas. While IJM has developed expertise through our casework to rescue families from forced labor slavery in South Asia, the U.S. Government and domestic anti-slavery organizations have developed strategies to combat slavery here at home. In the past 15 years, over 1,000 people have been freed from slavery in U.S. tomato fields. And there is a way to guarantee that all of Florida’s tomatoes are slave-free. This summer, we have a Recipe for Change. Join us as we campaign for slave-free tomatoes.

IJM was kind enough to include Tomato Justice in its list of resources for “connecting your faith to the issue.” I’m encouraged that more and more people and groups are considering this an issue worth knowing about and acting upon, and I’m especially pleased to see IJM getting involved, further amplifying the voices of our brothers and sisters in Immokalee.

As I said in my original blog post introducing the story, I believe this tragic story is slowly but surely turning into a hopeful one. But there’s still more to be done, so we can’t celebrate quite yet. For updates, you can follow the campaign on Facebook.

Please consider sharing Tomato Justice with anyone you think may be interested to learn more about this issue, and consider ways to support the farmworkers in Immokalee, especially by pressuring your preferred supermarket to continue to earn your loyalty by ensuring all workers in its supply chain are treated with dignity. If that doesn’t work, you might consider buying your tomatoes from a local provider like a farmers market, or from one of the two grocery store companies that have committed to slave-free tomatoes: Trader Joe’s (my favorite) or Whole Foods. Let’s reward those companies courageous and forward-thinking enough to be on the right side of this issue!

I’d love to hear what you do, and please keep spreading the word!

[Photo credit: Luis M. Alvarez/AP via iwatchnews.org]

Tomato Justice

May 2, 2012 — 11 Comments

My latest writing project for PRISM has been published as the cover story for the May/June issue, focusing on tomatoes, migrant farmworkers, and a small town in Florida that has been called “ground zero for modern-day slavery.”

It tackles some uncomfortable realities and will hopefully challenge you to think more carefully (and more theologically!) about your food choices, but I loved researching and writing it because in the end, it’s mostly an encouraging success story. Efforts to ensure farmworkers earn a decent wage and are shown a basic level of respect in the workplace (i.e., not held in slavery or being sprayed with pesticides while pregnant, for a start) have largely been successful. One important hurdle remains, but given the successes I highlight, it no longer seems insurmountable.

For this piece I interviewed a Guatemalan migrant farmworker, an advocate for farmworker rights working in Immokalee, the author of a book called Tomatoland, the former speechwriter and press secretary for Cesar Chavez, a professor who is writing a book about Chavez’s faith, and an author/speaker/activist you may have heard of named Brian McLaren. Thanks to each of you for taking the time to speak with me; your insights made this story possible.

So, without further delay, I give you: Tomato Justice.

To learn more about the people, organizations and issues in this story, I’d encourage you to begin by checking out Coalition of Immokalee Workers, InterFaith Action’s Faith Moves Mountains campaign, Politics of the Plate (blog by Barry Estabrook, author of Tomatoland), and this post from Brian McLaren.

[Photo credit: Scott Robertson via kqed.org]