Transforming Communities
75 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Transforming Communities , livre ebook

-

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
75 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

The world around us is a wreck. When there's so much conflict around the country and around the corner, it's easy to feel overwhelmed, powerless, and helpless. What can one person do to make a difference? Here's the good news. Millions of everyday people are ready to step into their power to transform their communities. And you are one of them. Take heart and be inspired by real stories of ordinary people who took action and changed their corner of the world, one step at a time. Equal parts inspiration, education, and Do-It-Yourself, Transforming Communities by veteran community activist Sandhya Jha will open your eyes to the world-healing potential within you, and give you the vision, the tools, and the encouragement to start transforming your neighborhood, one person at a time.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 07 novembre 2017
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780827237162
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0960€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Praise for Transforming Communities
“The stories in this book reminded me of songs by Woody Guthrie and art by Marc Chagall: rays of hope lighting up a dark landscape. This is a book to be cherished.”
— Eboo Patel, author of Interfaith Leadership: A Primer
“Sandhya’s stated goal—which she ably achieves here—is simple yet arduous: to get us out of our stifling cynicism so that we may see deeply, listen intently, act justly, and love radically. To break down our world-weariness and its consequent inactivity, she beautifully fuses the enduring wisdom of faith and justice movements with the raw tactility and wounded victories of on-the-ground work, in ways that both disarm and charm. To be sure, her scholarship is needed more than ever, for it is nuanced yet accessible, technical yet gritty, erudite yet disruptive.”
— José Francisco Morales Torres, Director of Pastoral Formation, Disciples Seminary Foundation, Claremont, California
“Describing the convicted, creative, courageous initiatives of people in our own communities, Sandhya Jha focuses a narrative beam of light on the moral arc of the universe as it bends toward justice. Thank you, Sandhya, for helping us lift our eyes to see possibility and hope—and a pathway to our own involvement.”
— Sharon E. Watkins, author of Whole: A Call to Unity in Our Fragmented World
“I can be overwhelmed by the call to live transformative love in the world—to house the homeless, restore souls, repair relationships, generate justice. So I am very grateful for Sandhya Rani Jha’s book. She doesn’t deal in empty aspirations. Instead, she describes community-change models that are actually working. Jha not only knows what I hope for, she shows me how to get there. I need this good news. I think we all do.”
—Andrew Dreitcer, Center for Engaged Compassion at Claremont School of Theology
“Jha pulls no punches in this enlivening report from the front lines of social justice activism and our common life together: ‘Protests aren’t enough. And experts can’t fix communities from the outside.’ If you’re looking for hope amidst the turmoil of our times alongside practical strategies to enhance your own work, read each chapter and take notes in the margins. From innovative prison programs and new church models like Gordon Cosby’s Church of the Saviour, you’ll find inspiration.”
— Rob Wilson-Black, Chief Executive Officer, Sojourners
“In this practical and inspiring guide, Sandhya Jha teaches us how to lean on the arc of the moral universe so that it bends towards justice. In our exhaustion and desperation, Jha infuses hope into every page.”
— Carol Howard Merritt, pastor and author of Healing Spiritual Wounds
“My South African friend Episcopal priest Rene August, says that the difference between a marathon and a sprint is how you breathe. Many of us are finding ourselves in a marathon at this historic moment and we need books that make us take a deep breath. Transforming Communities is such a book; it draws our attention to the good news happening in communities around us in a way that strengthens our faith—while providing us with practical advice designed to encourage and equip.”
— Alexia Salvatierra, coauthor of Faith-Rooted Organizing: Mobilizing the Church in Service to the World
“Sandhya Rani Jha has provided a timely resource for community leaders to get a handle on how to live and lead faithfully in an increasingly polarized world savaged and torn apart by racism, sexism, xenophobia, economic disparity, and political isolation. She surveyed our recent history and mined from it gems of community transformation led by the local people for the local people. She did not glamorize these stories but shared them holistically with their successes and struggles that came with challenging the status quo. Along the way, she showed how relational and truth-telling tools such as asset-based community development, restorative justice, World Café, and truth commission are essential for transforming communities in our context today. The “Learn More” section of each chapter is invaluable for further learning and connecting with these tools and resources beyond this book. I know I will refer to this book again and again in my ministry of empowering church leaders to create sustainable communities.”
— Eric H. F. Law, Executive Director, Kaleidoscope Institute, and author of several books including Holy Currencies
“In our transitional, diasporic age, the possibility of true ‘community’ seems lost in the face of daunting rates of isolation, addiction, and structural violence. Yet Sandhya Jha dares each of us to imagine ourselves as grassroots organizers wholly prepared to challenge and calm the tempest of political winds now blowing nationwide. Complementing an intersectional diagnosis of our manifold social ills with practical examples of effective, justice-centered change, Jha offers an inspiring reminder that we hold immense power to make our communities right again.”
— Ethan Vesely-Flad, Director of National Organizing, Fellowship of Reconciliation





Copyright
Copyright ©2017 by Sandhya Rani Jha.
All rights reserved. For permission to reuse content, please contact Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, www.copyright.com .
Photo of Sandhya Rani Jha by Brooke Anderson
Cover Illustration: Natalie Turri
Cover Design: Jesse Turri
www.ChalicePress.com
Print: 9780827237155 EPUB:9780827237162 EPDF: 9780827237179


Contents


Praise for Transforming Communities
Copyright
Contents
Dedication
Introduction
1: The Power of Recognizing Assets
2: The Power of Listening
3: The Power of Making Things Right
4: The Power of Keeping It Simple
5: The Power of Connection
6: The Power of Empowering Community
7: The Power of Truth (and Reconciliation)
8: The Power of Blooming Where You’re Planted
9: The Power of Rooted Faith
10: The Power of Being Who We’ve Been Taught to Be
About the Author


Dedication
In the spring of 2014, I met with a colleague as I was finishing up my manuscript for my last book on race and faith in America. He asked how I was doing.
“I wonder if I’m suffering from depression,” I said.
“Well, you’ve been living in the narrative of systemic racism nonstop for the past 6 months,” he responded. “I’m not shocked to hear that.”
That summer I started a little podcast called “Hope from the Hood,” telling stories of the good things the small nonprofits I work with are doing. In fact, I was editing my first episode when the idea for this book emerged, and they were both part of the same reality that finally dawned on me:
I can’t keep living in the morass of how this nation is failing, I thought . I need to ground myself in stories of hope. I need to delve into the possibilities for a better world if I’m going to help build it.
This book is dedicated to the people I get to work with on a daily basis at the Oakland Peace Center who remind me not to give up hope. It’s dedicated to the people who are actually building what Dr. King called “Beloved Community” brick by brick, garden row by garden row, inmate by inmate, and registered voter by registered voter. We do not look up from our work often enough to realize how much we’ve done.
Look up. People are paying attention. You’re making the world people want to live in. Thank you.


Introduction
“You can’t have a cooperative without cooperators.”
—Jose Maria Arizmendiarrieta
The village of Mondrag ó n 1 was excited to meet its new priest. Until he stepped into the pulpit.
“He spoke in a monotone with intricate and repetitive phraseology difficult to understand. Away with this priest that the Monsignor has imposed upon us, he hardly even reads with any grace! That was the first reaction of the faithful,” complained one parishioner. 2 He had really wanted to study sociology in Belgium, and it showed; people found him hard to follow in small group settings as well as during his homilies. They even tried to get “that red priest” (as conservatives in town called him) reassigned, to no avail.
But 25-year-old Father Jos é Mar í a Arizmendiarrieta recognized that his small Basque village in the foothills of the Pyrenees was suffering in the wake of the Spanish Civil War. And he knew that the reason they were suffering was lack of opportunity, lack of jobs, and a state government in no way interested or equipped to aid the people they still saw as insurrectionists.
Arizmendi, as he was nicknamed, was a sociologist at heart. After two years of building trust, in 1943 he started youth programs and a soccer league, and he soon launched a training school for villagers to get good jobs. By 1956 his former pupils started a cooperatively owned business making paraffin stoves.
Today, the Mondragon Corporation is the 10th largest business group in Spain with 80,000 employees, many of whom own shares in the company. The region has been transformed, and in a country suffering severe economic strain and massive unemployment, Mondragon Corporation’s commitment to caring for its workers as well as providing quality goods ensures the community continues to thrive. And since shares are held by employees, decisions are made by workers.
***
Arizmendi was an ordained Catholic priest, but he was also just a guy—a guy who had watched his region at war with his national government and who had gone to prison for writing about it during his career as a journalist. He wasn’t an inspirational preacher. He wasn’t even in the job he wanted: sociology. But Arizmendi knew his community was suffering and that the autocratic government wasn’t helping poor, jobless people it had deemed resisters. Sermons alone would never lift up

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents