Saturday, May 7, 2011
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
What is Something You Have Done, Recently, For Someone Else?
What is Something You Have Done, Recently, For Someone Else? Close your eyes and say to yourself, "state prison." Your mind likely fills with images, colors, sounds, emotions - all harsh - and most of them are probably accurate. But there is more to find in prison. There is humanity.
IPP Volunteer Becky LoDolce writes about her experiences inside San Quentin State Prison in this month's New Cartographer magazine. Becky shares the special acts of compassion the men in her group have found to do for each other.... For the complete story,
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Laying on of hands
A story I read recently in a wonderful book by Judy Cannato called The Field of Compassion, How the New Cosmology is Transforming Spiritual Life, shows us one way to think about our Praying for the Prisons project. The jest of the story is that a man name Nate Sears was out on the Cape Cod beach checking the piers for storm damage when he spotted three pilot whales coming to shore. Realizing that they were intent upon beaching themselves, Nate sent someone off for help and waded out to the first whale. Instinctively Nate placed his hands on the whale and quietly held them there. The thrashing stopped and the whale became still. Nate was able to turn it around and point it back out to sea. Nate used his hands to calm and turn the second whale as well. As Nate was calming the third whale help arrived. The whales returned to their natural habitat without further incident. Nate’s willingness to simple hold them in their travail made the difference. Nate’s actions were intuitive, spontaneous and significant.
Our Prison system is thrashing about in its self destructive process of answering “bad with bad.” May our prayers be the quiet and steady hands that will bring calm to the agitation and turn the self-destructive process around. May we realize that what must happen first and foremost is to bring love’s power to bear. From Love, the natural process of healing will flow forth.
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
“What kind of place would this prison be, if it was governed by compassion?”
Moving Meditation (Qigong) on C yard at CSP-Sac today, took me another important step in working forward the prayer that our prisons become places of healing and peace. Lately I’ve been thinking it was one step to ask (pray) and another step to visualize (manifest) the new possibility.
I had been explaining about visualization and we practiced, after a deep opening, visualizing the empty chairs filled, and any barriers dissolved that were keeping the other students from getting to class. And I was getting ready to bring up the big visualization project I hoped they’d all participate in and the door opened and three more students came in and filled the empty chairs.
Gathering them into our centered Qigong state, I suggested that we all ask the question: “What kind of place would this prison be, if it was governed by compassion?” Not seeking the answer right yet, just opening into the question as we practiced. We talked about everything being created out of our imagination, if not ours, God’s, or our ancestors. We imagine and the creative process begins. If we can’t even frame the question, if we can’t even wonder about the possibilities, how can it come about?
I told the story I read about in the plane coming home last night from Pittsburgh, of the groups who gathered in the church basements in divided Germany, daring to ask the question that seemed so far fetched: “What would Germany be like a thousand years from now when the Berlin Wall finally came down?” A movement of prayer groups began gathering all over Germany to ask these questions and imagine a new future. And the unimaginable became history, in dramatically less than a thousand years.
So why not us? Why not ask the question that seems so far fetched? Why not see where our creative minds might take us?
“What kind of place would this prison be,
if it was governed by compassion?”
if it was governed by compassion?”
Coming home I was thinking about conditions, prison conditions. Certainly prisons are one of the most conditioned places on earth. The rules are tight, the conditions kept severe and deliberate, as controlled as possible. I was holding that up against our discussion of holding the future of the prison in the unconditioned field of potential, in the possibility that compassion or unconditional love might become the purpose orchestrating the conditioned life of our prisoners.
Here is a play of opposites if ever there was one. And that seems to be exactly the challenge that God has put me up to. If we can visualize this, anything is possible.
Typically we think these are two opposites, conditional and unconditional. Unconditional sounds like freedom and that is seemingly impossible in the context of the prison system. The prison’s very purpose is to take away freedom and impose conditions upon those they wish to punish. So to juxtaposition compassion, which is often thought of as unconditional love, with the conditions of the prison, and its deliberate withdrawal of freedoms, finds us quickly dismissing the notion as impossible. Out of the realm of possibility. Is it?
Perhaps it is, if we continue on perceiving the prison’s as God-less places, perceiving prisoners as devils, and dismissing resurrection as fantasy. Let us stop choosing to be blind to the unconditional presence of God in whom the prisons live and breath and choose their future. Any kind of condition can arise from the unconditional.
Our prisons could look very much the same, the prisoner’s sentences remain the same, and public safety still be the primary reason for isolating people behind bars. Within all the conditions that are required for prisons to fulfill their purpose within society, we could conduct our mission with compassion.
Compassion is certainly not the opposite of public safety. Compassion can be full of rules and expectations, full of conditions. Yet compassion believes in love as the primary agent in healing. Compassion leaves no one out, delegates no one as hopeless.
“How would our prisons be, if compassion were the governing principle?”
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Juvenile Justice
This Blog Talk Radio interview by Herb Blake is with Fr. Michael Kennedy is a Jesuit Priest who dedicates his life to seeking Social Justice for juvenile offenders and at-risk youth. In addition to his political activism, his spiritual ministry takes him inside juvenile halls, jails and prison as he works to ignite a spirit of hope in the hearts and minds of young men and women. Seth Weiner is an attorney and the Co-Director of the Center for Restorative Justice at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, CA. Seth is a tireless advocate for Restorative Justice. He not only works to educate future attorneys about the value of fundamental fairness for everyone, he also takes his message out into the community.
I think you will be inspired by it!
I think you will be inspired by it!
Insiders at New Folsom tell their transformation story
This site is full of my students, explore it!
Higher Consciousness Movement within the prison walls and beyond.
We, the Prisoners for Peace at New Folsom Prison, Sacramento
believe and want the following:
1. WE BELIEVE THAT PEACE CAN COME THROUGH THE CULTIVATION OF ONE'S OWN CONSCIOUS.
2. WE BELIEVE LIVING IN THE HEART SPACE/CHAKRA CAN GUIDE US THROUGH THAT CULTIVATION SAFELY.
3. WE BELIEVE THAT TAKING FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR ONE'S OWN HIGHER CONSCIOUSNESS CAN ILLUMINATE THE WORLD AROUND THAT BEING.
4. WE WANT TO BUILD A BRIDGE BETWEEN THE FREE COMMUNITY AND THE PRISON POPULATION ON A CONSCIOUS LEVEL.
5. WE WANT TO HELP PEOPLE BECOME AWARE OF THE SHIFT IN CONSCIOUSNESS THAT’S ALREADY TAKING PLACE.
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Whats this about?
Several times while traveling recently I have had the opportunity to share this deep concern of my heart, this Calling. And from inside me the words stumbled, while the spirit of the words made it through and we have several more champions rallied to this cause, it was made clear to me that I need to work on my "elevator speech". Here is what came this morning as I am anticipating taking the cause up at the Prison chaplain conference later this afternoon:
prayer in its many forms and formats,
to address the brokenness of our prison system,
to address the brokenness in our society
that relies only on revenge and banishment
to solve problems of criminal behavior, and
to activate our deep faith,
that through God all things are possible,
into our actions.
As Einstein said, you can't solve a problem with the same level of thinking that created it.
So this essay is a call to activate our spiritual problem solving techniques, prayer in its many forms and formats,
to address the brokenness of our prison system,
to address the brokenness in our society
that relies only on revenge and banishment
to solve problems of criminal behavior, and
to activate our deep faith,
that through God all things are possible,
into our actions.
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