Social Justice Saturday: The Otoe-Missouria People of Nebraska

The Otoe-Missouria People lived in Nebraska for hunreds of years and then in 1833 were made to leave after "treaties" gave the land to white people beginning to move to that area. Now, this year, after some people at the Capital and the University have been developing relationships with this tribe, which now lives in Oklahamo, this week members of the tribe were invited for a visit. The time included a ceremony, with an official apology, visits to the land. There's an excellent article about it, I found on the PBS app, and there's the same article on the local NPR station in Nebraska.

Listen to the story and read more on Nebraska Public Media

Social Justice Saturday: Reparations Study and Action

Responding to the Massachusetts Episcopal Diocese invitation”in the name of repentance, reconciliation, and accountability to our siblings of color in our diocese—prayerfully and purposefully to explore their historic involvement in and present wealth derived from the forced labor of enslaved people…” the St. John’s Social Justice Group invites all parishioners to be part of a working group to explore reparations as a topic and possible actions.

Using “The Process Toward Reparations: A Template,” published by the diocese, we will:

*Examine our history as a parish

*Report what we learn

*Begin the process of repairing what has been damaged or destroyed, whether or not it was intentional

*Move on to making reparations, in whatever form that takes.

Social Justice Saturday - Global Oneness Project: Art Contest Winners


Global Oneness Project Student Art Project
Winners and Finalists: The Environment Is in You

Photography and Original Illustration Contest

I”nspired by the writing of Linda Hogan, Robert Hass, Wendell Berry, and Dara McAnulty, this contest was an invitation for students to take a photograph or create an original illustration that documents the fragility, hope, and future of our planet due to climate change. Many students connected to the following statement by writer and environmental activist Wendell Berry: “The environment is in you, it’s passing through you, you’re breathing it in and out, you and every other creature.”

We asked students how their local ecosystems have changed over the last few years and how their artwork would tell that story. We also asked: How might…”

View the rest of this and see the winners work at GlobalOnenessProject.Org

Photo: Amber Cypress (16) - Florida, U.S. “Respect the land was a message passed down from my ancestors for generations.”

Social Justice Saturday: Season of Creation

Season of Creation, Sept. 1-Oct. 4

The Season of Creation opens with World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation and concludes with the Feast of St. Francis. Together with the bishops of both Episcopal dioceses in Massachusetts, the Creation Care Justice Network invites you to "join with Christians around the world to celebrate in prayer and action our Gospel calling to protect the Earth that God has entrusted to our care."

https://www.diomass.org/creation-care has information and resources.

For a selected list, please visit Sustainable Life: Responding to the Climate Emergency. This is a collection of resources assembled and periodically updated by members of the Creation Care Justice Network.  

Members of the Network recently created a short video that frames our mission: a call to climate action in Massachusetts.  Please take a look, and then sign up to join our network!  Whether you're an experienced climate activist or just beginning to be concerned about the health of our soils, forests, water and air--to say nothing of the human and other-than-human creatures whose lives depend on them--we need your skills and input as we work together to protect the web of life that God entrusted to our care.

Social Justice Saturday: Poverty Retold

Poverty Retold: Why Narratives Matter for Economic Mobility

By Allison Yates-Berg

What is it like to live in poverty in the United States? Without lived experience, you probably can’t imagine the constant set of challenging choices that people living with low incomes confront each day. You may also have a hard time imagining the tremendous resilience and resourcefulness that it takes to overcome poverty’s grasp. Let’s imagine a family we’ll call the Sampsons. Consider: does your view of Bill shift while reading his story?

Bill Sampson missed work again today. His manager Mary at the warehouse shakes her head—Bill has been getting noticed for being a hard worker, but he’s on thin ice. He recently…

Read the Rest at Arithmetic of Compassion


Social Justice Saturday: "Skin-color" Crayons

When my daughter Amy was in third grade, I was in an art store and found a packet of crayons that were all shades of skin tones, from light pink to dark brown. “What a neat idea,” I thought, and bought two sets, one for home and one to gift to Amy’s art teacher. A couple of weeks later, I asked the teacher how the crayons were working, and she said, “Oh dear, it really wasn’t a good idea. The kids starting comparing their skin colors, and I just had to put them away. I can’t use them.”

I was so surprised I hardly knew what to say. Often, when topics of race come up, especially unexpectedly, or in a negative way, I can be caught off-guard and only think of what I could have said, hours or days later.

What might you have said in this crayon situation? Has a comparable incident happened to you? How do we help children appreciate all the beautiful skin-colors in our communities and nation?

Sharlene