Archive for April, 2010

SASI Now on Facebook!

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Here’s another way to help promote SASI!

I believe this is the first time the Roundtable is using social networking to promote it’s offerings and I’m excited to give it a try.

If you’re a Facebook user…
1) Become a fan of/or “like” SASI online by clicking on http://bit.ly/9WXwA4 (or search “Social Action Summer Institute” on Facebook)

2) Invite others to become a fan by clicking on “Suggest to Friends” in the upper left side (under the SASI graphic)
3) Share it on your profile/news feed by clicking on “Share” on the lower left side
4) There is also a SASI 2010 Event online here.

If you’re not a Facebook user, but you know that your office, diocese, or other organizations or individuals that you think should know about SASI are on Facebook, please send them the link above, AND/OR email me the names or links of those offices/dioceses/organizations/individuals and I will try to find them on Facebook and invite them!

Thanks for your help! And leave a comment below if you have other ideas for promoting this great event!

Nominations for 2011 Awards due April 20!

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Don’t forget – nominations for the Roundtable’s two annual awards, the Harry A. Fagan Award and Servant of Justice Award, are due very soon. Click here to download the nomination forms and send them to coordinator@catholicroundtable.org by April 20, 2010. Please give some thought to whom you believe most deserves these awards next year.

Note that the criteria for the two awards are similar, but the Fagan Award is given to someone for contributions made at a national or international level and the Servant of Justice award is given specifically to a Roundtable member or former member for contributions at the local or regional level. Generally, the winners in past years have been people who had a full nomination submitted on their behalf.

The Award Committee will make recommendations to the full Board, who will make the decision at their June 3-5 retreat.

SASI Scholarships Available

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Hoping to attend the Summer Institute but don’t know if its in your budget? Thanks to our partners, partial tuition scholarships will be available to a limited number of diocesan directors and others, with preference given to first-time attendees. Scholarships are typically partial and don’t cover travel expenses.

Decisions on scholarships for diocesan participants are made on a rolling basis. Decisions on scholarships for parish participants will be made June 18. To explore additional sources of financial aid, contact your diocesan social action director or pastor.

To apply for a scholarship, please send your name, contact information, and a brief statement (600 words) on why you are interested in attending the SASI and how you hope to apply the skills gained at SASI to your work when you return home. Contact Jenn Svetlik at 202.635.2757 x133 or coordinator@catholicroundtable.org

Note from the Coordinator: Facelift, Upcoming Offerings and More

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Dear Roundtable members,

I hope that your Holy Week was filled with blessings and opportunities for reflection on Christ’s infinite love and that your Easter season is filled with the joy of the Gospel’s good news.

This issue of the Report highlights many new happenings within the Roundtable. Some of them are immediately obvious, such as our updated logo. We felt it was an appropriate time for this “facelift” as the Roundtable establishes itself as an independent organization. We have also updated the official name for the Roundtable, including the word “Catholic” to more explicitly express our faith identity.

Since the close of the National Pastoral Life Center last fall, the Roundtable has achieved much towards becoming an independent organization. The board worked hard to secure an office in Washington DC, hire me as Coordinator, secure a fiscal agent (Catholic Charities of Houma-Thibodaux, of which board member Rob Gorman is director) and establish a sound system of financial oversight, receive a federal tax ID number and are currently working towards independent recognized legal status. Additionally, thanks to prompt dues payments from many of you, financially we are currently doing very well – and please keep those dues coming so that we can continue on this path of financial stability!

During the annual Membership Meeting on February 7, as our members Roundtabled about the future of the organization, it became clear that this Association is needed now more than ever. For the past 25 years, the Roundtable has provided professional support to members through education, formation, professional relationships, and management development. The Association has been committed to deepening the capacity of social action directors to engage in the social mission of the church and will continue to do so for, God willing, another 25 years! Our board continues to be very committed and active to the Roundtable’s mission through work on a variety of committees. The four new board members that we welcomed in February will bring new energy and commitment to this work.

Our new logo came as part of a redesign of the Roundtable website, which will be launched in April at www.catholicroundtable.org. There you will be able to find a blog, downloadable copies of our recent publications, including our Standards and Expectations Document and Evaluation Tool, which is helpful to many offices in their strategic planning and evaluation. There will be searchable archives of the Roundtable Report and the Virtual Roundtable, with opportunities for interactivity online at the Virtual Roundtable. We hope that the website will become a helpful source of information for you in your work and a virtual community for all of us.

In this issue of the Report, you will see many of the things that the Roundtable and its members have been up to in recent months. In addition to a fantastic Symposium in early February (despite the weather it was such a blessing to meet many of you!) we continue to be very active through producing this newsletter, hosting the quarterly book discussion, facilitating an active Virtual Roundtable, and planning for the upcoming Social Action Summer Institute, about which I am very excited. For more information about the Roundtable’s offerings, click here.

Make sure to read in this Report the interview with our SASI keynote speaker Dr. Scott Appleby and share it with your friends and communities! This year the SASI has been shortened by a couple days so hopefully that will allow for more participation by reducing costs and out-of-office time. The program promises to be packed with information on the issues most relevant to our work and engaging workshops that will sharpen your skills and help you to come home with a plan for action in your communities. Promotional materials for SASI will be coming very soon – please do spread the word and let me know how I can support your SASI outreach efforts.

Over the past couple of months, some of you have received calls from me asking about your work including what excites you, what challenges you’re currently facing, and how the Roundtable can be more supportive of your work. These one-on-one calls have been an immensely helpful part of my orientation to the Roundtable, as I have learned much about you learned from you, which is helping me to see how in its new configuration, the Roundtable can be the most relevant and most helpful to your work. I look forward to continuing these types of conversations, so please don’t hesitate to call or email me with any questions, suggestions, or just to have a conversation about our shared work promoting the Church’s social mission.

In these 50 days of Easter, may we bear witness more fully to the new life that exists in Christ, even in the midst of the brokenness, persecution, and suffering in the world, and that how, as a community committed to sharing Christ’s peace and love in the world, we can strengthen and support one another in this commitment as Christ’s disciples.

With hope in the Resurrection,

Jennifer Svetlik

Despite “Snowmaggedon,” Symposium 2010 a Rich Experience

Monday, April 12th, 2010

By Adrienne Curry, Symposium Chair

In spite of the blizzards that caused Washington DC to come to a standstill, social action directors gathered for the 2010 Roundtable Symposium. Our theme this year was “Restoring All Things in Christ: Reclaiming God’s Covenant through Right Relationship.” In our 25th year, the Symposium’s focus was the care and renewal of the social action directors by inspiring a sense of community and new life and helping us reconnect spiritually with the core experience of our faith in Jesus Christ and in his abiding presence in our community. It was my pleasure to serve as the chair for the symposium this year.

Saturday, we began the Symposium with the words of Dr. Diana Hayes, who was unable to join us due to weather. Her talk, Created by Love to Love: God’s Covenant with Humanity highlighted biblical images that reminded us of our own interconnectedness, followed by a time of reflection questions. Rob Gorman, Rob Shelledy, Suzanne Belongia and I took turns reading sections of her paper. Dr. Hayes’ reflection included a recognition of our call today, “We are called to bring about the renewal of God’s covenant with creation and humanity by our actions on behalf of that creation in all of its myriad forms. May God continue to lift us up on every leaning side so that we may become truly one holy catholic people, God’s covenant in flesh and spirit.”

Saturday night Fr. Bryan Massingale, S.T.D., a priest of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and an Associate Professor at Marquette, was the recipient of the Harry A. Fagan Award. He received the award for his prophetic words and work in the fields of Catholic social ethics and racial justice. In accepting the award he focused on “truth telling and hope keeping.” He shared, “Justice depends on truth. Truth is the mother of justice. Every action of justice is a surprise done by those who dared to put God at their disposal. Hope without action does not end in justice. Without hope justice doesn’t have a chance.”

On Sunday morning we heard again from Rev. Massingale who spoke on the theme of The Challenge of Unity with Our Adversaries. A copy of his talk will be posted on the Roundtable web page.

At the Roundtable Luncheon, we presented our first ever Servant of Justice Award. The Servant of Justice Award is designed to honor a Roundtable member or former member who has made unique contributions to the achievement of the Catholic vision of social justice in his/her diocese or region. The recipient of the first Servant of Justice Award went to Joanne Welter, Director of the Office of Catholic Social Mission of the Diocese of Tucson. She led the coordination of two major bi-national Border Conferences that provided experiential and educational awareness of the border realities for diocesan Social Ministry directors from across the nation. Following the Southwest Regional Conference on the Border in 1999, Catholic Relief Services opened an office on the U.S.-Mexico border. Joanne advocated for a partnership between the Diocese of Tucson and the Archdiocese of Hermosillo which has been established, called “Diocese Without Borders: Hermosillo, Tucson, Phoenix.” Jack Jezreel, Director of JustFaith Ministries was the keynote at the luncheon (read the text here).

First Servant of Justice Award Bestowed on Roundtable Member

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Joanne Welter, Director of the Office of Catholic Social Mission in the Diocese of Tucson, received the Roundtable’s first-ever Servant of Justice Award at the 25th anniversary luncheon. Chair Barbara Budde presented the award to Joanne and former Roundtable Secretariat Jeff Korgen offered tributes to her, highlighting her prophetic voice on immigration issues and her relentless spirit to do justice.

During her remarks, Joanne shared the story of Josseline, a 14-year old girl from El Salvador who died trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border.

Prose by Joanne Welter

Both humbled and Proud
How can I be?
Upon your award of
Such confidence in me

Servant of Justice
Rings well in my ears
We are in this together
Servanthood over the years

I miss the RT Board
And as Jeff related
My Board presence was a
Desert Migrant Voice
Unabated

The message was heard
The cross border
Experiences occurred
Ecclesia in America
Solidarity actions unfurled

Unfurled blessings
Msgr. Phil brought forth
From two Border
Bi-National Conferences
Connecting South and North

CRS-Mexico just down the hall
Dioceses without Borders
Bi-National partners all
Kino Border Initiative
Manos Unidas
Among many Border projects
Live

Here on the Border
We know first hand
Solidarity in Ministry
Bi-Nationally
As well as
Across this Land

Humble and Proud
We all can be
In our gratitude for
Our love of God
Humanity and creation
Could we ask for more

SASI: Find a roomate, share a ride here!

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Looking to save on costs for the Social Action Summer Institute? Welcome to room and ride-share central! Post a comment below if you’re looking for a roommate, looking for a ride, or looking for additional riders in your car or bus. Others also looking for a roommate or travel companion can contact you to followup!

Interview with SASI Keynote Scott Appleby

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Check out this interview with SASI 2010 Keynote Speaker Dr. Scott Appleby, which was featured in the April 2010 issue of the Roundtable Report. Scott Appleby is director of the Kroc Institute at Notre Dame and the Roundtable Report spoke with him in March for the interview.

Roundtable Report: We know you are an active expert today in the world of peace and particularly in the field of religious peacebuilding. We thank you for accepting the Roundtable’s invitation to an interview and we very much look forward to you being with us as a keynote presenter and advanced track co-leader during this year’s Social Action Summer Institute August 1-4, 2010 at Santa Clara University.

First, could you talk briefly about your academic and professional background? And how did you get into peace work?

Scott Appleby:  I received my undergraduate degree from Notre Dame in 1978 and my PhD from the University of Chicago in 1985, where I focused on the History of Christianity. As a Catholic, the study of religion has always interested me. After I graduated, I taught at Saint Xavier College in Chicago, and then in 1986 I was recruited by my doctoral mentor, Martin E. Marty, to work on a research initiative that changed my career and my life – it was called The Fundamentalism Project. It was a multi-year, interdisciplinary study of global religious resurgence in the world’s major religions. The project produced five encyclopedic volumes of scholarly essays, three PBS TV documentaries, and an NPR radio series.

As a scholar, I focus on religion in the modern period. The question most central to my work is “How can people remain faithful to a religious tradition during the era of modernity, when secular trends and forces conspire to dominate our thinking and behavior?” This is a time in history when patterns of social life and thought tend to erode traditional ways of life and belief.  In response religions are forced to react, resist and adapt in various ways. In so doing, they risk manipulating the very tradition they are trying to preserve by politicizing it and reducing it to a “social program” or ideology. Some reactions distort the tradition by or placing an excessive emphasis on certain doctrines and scriptures and construing them as ingredients of a political platform. This is the foundation for both fundamentalisms and modernisms.

After my time at the Fundamentalism Project, in 1994 I came to Notre Dame to direct the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism and teach in the History department. In 2000 I was asked to become the director of the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies. My time at Kroc has deepened my appreciation of the larger world of peacebuilding and conflict resolution, and I see strong links between the quest for peace in this world and the religious life as it is unfolds in conflict settings.

At Kroc we focus on conflict and the social and political foundations for building a sustainable peace. Our interlocutors include governments, intergovernmental organizations, NGOs and faith communities that are working for peace, justice, economic development and human rights. A peacebuilder’s vision must incorporate every social good, from access to clean drinking water and education, to protection of women and children from exploitation, to the negotiated resolution of civil wars. We examine what it means to develop lasting peace in societies that are emerging from years or even decades of destructive conflict – it is a long and arduous process that requires patience and wisdom as well as technical know-how.

RR:  What is the difference between being a peace maker, as the scriptures say, and a peacebuilder? What exactly is peace building?

SA: Let’s first take the word peace. It is a word with a theological or eschatological connotation, but also a practical, this-worldly meaning. The risen Lord says to the frightened apostles huddled together:  “Peace be with you.” Jesus was   offering eschatological peace, the final peace that accompanies perfect unity with God. Here on terra firma, our realization of peace is always partial, as we attempt to bring a chaotic and conflicted world a measure of the love and compassion that God offers us all.

Peacemaking and peacebuilding are two related but different ideas. Peacemaking usually has the connotation of official treaties and settlements that unfold at a political and national level. Peacebuilding, on the other hand, refers to a grassroots process that moves “from the ground up” eventually to reach the high level elites who are involved in peacemaking. Peacebuilding begins with local communities and calls upon  a variety of local and regional actors, including political officials, religious and business leaders, young people, the media, etc. to form alliances and partnerships for sustainable development, conflict management and human rights. Aside from official negotiations, which often characterize peacemaking, peacebuilding also strives to prevent destructive conflict, at one end of the conflict cycle, and to implement peace accords and rebuild institutions, from courts and schools to churches and mosques, in societies coming out of violent conflict, at the other end of the cycle.  If the negotiations and peace accords do not resonate with the people on the ground, if the settlement is not inclusive and just, there will not be lasting peace. All of this is part of the peacebuilding process.

RR:  Can you give us a preview of what you’ll be sharing during the Social Action Summer Institute?

SA: I will ask the participants to think of themselves primarily as peacebuilders, and ask how this self-identification would affect their self-understanding and sense of vocation, and prod them and re-conceptualize what they are doing. Thinking of yourself as a  peacebuilder  suggests a different notion of time and space, process and outcomes, more in keeping with “building the kingdom of God” than with “Getting to Yes” in a negotiation process.  The spiritual charisms of peacebuilding include discernment, patience, and fortitude.

The first part of my presentation, then, will focus on what it means to be a peacebuilder and how that lens might affects the work of social justice and charity. We’ll also look at how peacebuilding is situated within Catholic social doctrine and scripture. The second section will focus on “reconciliation” and what that might mean as a distant goal for peacebuilders. Healing includes not only the physical but also psychological and spiritual wounds as well.  Finally, we will ask how the Catholic religious imagination informs and can be informed by the concept and practice of peacebuilding.

RR:  How does your Catholic faith influence your peacebuilding work?

SA: Peacebuilding is not merely a mundane occupation. We are called to  live in the Kingdom of God, a state of being that is measured not merely  by how many people are fed or diseases cured –these things are, of course, important— but how we nurture and show compassion toward one another and ourselves.  We are not going to bring peace in the final sense; we are not going to eradicate original sin. Catholics understand that the interplay of grace, freedom and sin are part of the human condition, and that perfection will not be achieved until the human heart is purified in a definitive unity with God. Being a peacebuilder changes your way of being in the world, however. You measure progress and success not only through numbers and empirical studies, but also through questions such as “Am I growing spiritually, in the practice of compassion? Am I participating in the Kingdom of mercy and forgiveness?” When those are the metrics, you are more forgiving of yourself –and you realize that Jesus has already overcome the world.  Such spiritual insights and religious convictions cast the daily work of “building peace and pursuing justice” in a different light.

RR:  What are the biggest challenges peacebuilders face in the 21st Century, particularly those who identify as Catholics or work in ministry?

SA: Peacebuilding today faces many challenges, particularly in this economy where money is tight and budgets and staff are being reduced, people are out of work. Preparing people to be professional peacebuilders is costly; they need cultural studies and language training, interdisciplinary education and technical skills.  Peacebuilding is an enterprise and a vocation that integrates many types of knowledge and resources. But now we have fewer resources to do this work. Catholic Relief Services (CRS), for example, has had to cut back on its peacebuilding budget.  In the financial crisis, the first thing that has suffered is “peace.”

A second major challenge is burnout. There are many talented people working for justice and peace, but they can very quickly become exhausted. This work takes great patience and persistence, and the question is how these workers can be renewed and persist on a long path to peace.

Image is a third challenge. Someone might ask, “What do peace people do?” They march on Washington, they negotiate settlements, they advocate for human rights, they fight corruption in government—the reality is that peacebuilders perform all of these activities, and more.  The actual profile of the peacebuilder, who must be a strategic thinker and a coordinator of various skilled and gifted colleagues, is not widely known or appreciated, as it should be. Only then will professional peacebuilders be integrated more fully into government and civil society and humanitarian agencies like CRS.

RR:  Are you currently working on any research or writing?

SA: I am leading a major interdisciplinary, multi-year research project called “Contending Modernities: Catholic, Muslim and secular.” It is an attempt to understand how these two major religious traditions and communities have been affected by secularization—by the “separation of church and state,” the rise of religious pluralism, the drive toward democratization, the human rights revolution and other modern trends and forces.  The study attempts to anticipate ways in which Catholic, Muslim and secular actors might collaborate in the future in battling poverty and disease, reducing violence, and advancing human rights for all.

RR:  Do you have any reading recommendations for Roundtable members and SASI attendees?

SA: Strategies of Peace, edited by Daniel Philpott and Gerard Powers and recently published by Oxford University Press, provides the best definition and discussion of strategic peacebuilding (and it just came out in paperback!). Also, I recommend The Moral Imagination by my friend and colleague John Paul Lederach.

Please pay your 2010 dues

Monday, April 12th, 2010

We depend on your support to continue offering you the resources & services that we do. If you need a new dues letter or form, you can download one here.

Thanks to prompt dues payments from many of you, financially we are currently doing very well – and please keep those dues coming so that we can continue on this path of financial stability!

New issue of Roundtable Report released

Monday, April 12th, 2010

The April 2010 issue of the Roundtable Report has been released, which contains many great articles including:

  • An interview with SASI Keynote Speaker Dr. Scott Appleby
  • Many highlights from our recent Symposium, Fagan Award Dinner and Servant of Justice Luncheon
  • The text from Jack Jezreel’s Luncheon Presentation: “New Wine for New Wineskins: CST and the Future of the Catholic Parish”
  • Roundtable Roundup: Your local news from around the country
  • And much more!

Read it here.