Release to the Captives:
Restorative Justice, Abolition, and Ministry with Incarcerated Persons
Monday, January 6 - Wednesday, January 8, 2025
The Shalom Academy is a peace-and-justice-forward retreat experience in the beautiful Shenandoah Valley with daily worship, keynotes, workshops, conversational spaces, and time set aside to relax or connect with fellow wayfarers. A virtual access pass is available for keynotes and teaching sessions.
Keynote Sessions
Chris Hoke
Keynote addresses will be delivered by Chris Hoke, the founding director of Underground Ministries and creator of the One Parish One Prisoner program in Washington State. He is a commissioned PC(USA) pastor and the author of Wanted: A Spiritual Pursuit Through Jail, Among Outlaws and Across Borders.
Teaching Sessions
Still Doing Life
Howard Zehr and Barbara Toews will present their Still Doing Life project, which will be exhibited on location. Still Doing Life consists of 22 pairs of photographs and interviews separated by 25 years of individuals serving life sentences without the possibility of parole in Pennsylvania prisons. Howard is Director Emeritus of the Zehr Institute for Restorative Justice at EMU. Barbara is Associate Professor of Social Work and Criminal Justice at the University of Washington, Tacoma, and an alumna of EMU’s Center for Justice Peacebuilding. In this hybrid teaching session, they will be joined by Freddie Nole, who participated in the project prior to his 2019 release.
RJ and the School-to-Prison Pipeline
Katherine Evans and Aundrea Smiley will engage in a conversation about the potential of restorative practices in education to dismantle the school-to-prison pipeline, how to resist the logics that sustain that pipeline, and our need to lean into our own mission of healing, humanization, and liberation. Katherine is a Professor of Teacher Education at EMU, where she has developed the graduate program in RJE, and co-author of The Little Book of Restorative Justice in Education. Aundrea is Assistant Professor of Teacher Education at EMU, an EMU alumna from the first RJE cohort, and a career educator with over 17 years of experience in the field.
David Evans
The opening teaching session will feature David Evans, Professor of History and Intercultural Studies at Eastern Mennonite University. His forthcoming book, Damned Whiteness: How White Christian Allies Failed the Black Freedom Movement, explores the work of Dorothy Day, Clarence Jordan, and Ralph Templin in the context of the long Black Freedom Movement.
Workshop Sessions
Workshops will feature a nonprofit organization accompanying children in detention, advocates for racial, social, and economic justice in public policy, learning for trauma-informed spiritual care, as well as current practices for restorative (even transformative) encounters in local communities. The schedule also holds time and space for creative processing and incubating actionable plans.
-
Extended Workshop Session
-
Shorter Workshop Sessions
This event has been designed in collaboration with the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding and the Zehr Institute for Restorative Justice.