Category : Uncategorized

Touched by Violence Partnering for Peace Workshop

SCUPE, in partnership with the Parliament of the World’s Religions is offering a one-day long workshop on Wednesday, May 22nd to address this question.

Tio Hardiman, director Cure Violence and Ceasefire, Rabbi Joel Mosbacher who’s work on gun legislation was recently featured in the New York Times, and Imam Abdul Malik Mujahid, the chair of the Board of Trustees of the Parliament of the World’s Religions will be the featured speakers.

In this workshop we will:
• Share stories of how we have been touched by violence.
• Explore how our faith traditions may legitimize violence.
• Build partnerships with other leaders touched by violence.
• Learn strategies for dealing with the aftermath of violence.
• Commit to bold actions for peace in and across our communities

The workshop is meant for clergy, lay leaders and professionals in the field. As in all SCUPE events, the expertise and the perspectives of the participants is sought and valued, and dialogical learning from each other, encouraged.

For more information and registration please click here: http://scupe.org/touched-by-violence-partnering-for-peace/

 


Food Patriots at IPS!

Last week IPS sponsored a screening of a documentary in progress called Food Patriots. The documentary looked at our broken food system and ways that ordinary folks are working to change that system. It was a wonderful event where we not only watched a great film, but celebrated the work of Chicago volunteers with a reception in their honor. In IPS’s MA in Social Justice and Community Development, we’ve found that a good number of our students come to the program from long-term service positions. This is one reason we offer advanced standing for long-term volunteer work. At the reception, we were able to honor volunteers from Amate House, Jesuit Volunteer Corps, City Year, Americorps, Episcopal Service Corps and other local non-profits. We also had a great Q&A with filmmaker Jeff Spitz and some of the folks in the film. But rather than tell you more about this wonderful event, I thought I’d let you read a blog from one of our attendees, Jondae Scott, who works with Americorps at the Greater Chicago Food Depository.

Here’s what Jondae had to say:

As an Americorps member serving for the Greater Chicago Food Depository, it is often that I have to think about where a client’s food will come from, but mostly in the sense of prepared, or ready-to-buy food.  It was one thing to not know where your next meal will come from, but my state of food insecurity was not knowing where any of my food actually comes from.   While being raised and currently living in a food desert, which is described as an area or district with limited to no access to foods that support and sustain a healthy and nutritious diet, I almost became complacent with this particular state of food insecurity.

The truth is, for the average person with food insecurity, food’s origin is rarely a first concern.

With that being understandable, it’s important to ask why America can’t seem to produce wholesome, sustainable food to those in need and make it accessible to everyone?  This seems to be the unanswered question in “Food Patriots,” a movie about everyday people who dedicate their time and lives to help correct America’s system of food production and distribution.

On April 6, 2013 the MA in Social Justice and Community Development at Loyola in Chicago held a screening of “Food Patriots,” hosted by Melissa Browning, Graduate Program Director. I had the pleasure of attending this event with my fellow Americorps member Kayana Jordan, agency support for Breakthrough Ministries, who also felt a personal connection to this topic.

In lieu of National Volunteer Month, I thought this event was a great way to kick off the month that recognizes, honors, and encourages volunteers in America. “Patriots” is geared by volunteers and people who are tired of not having control of something so simple-where their food comes from. Volunteers from Americorps, Loyola, and other organizations were honored and encouraged to pass on the spirit of service.

The movie follows Spitz’s story from his son’s food borne illness and his wife’s dedication to controlling where their family’s food comes from. When their backyard chicken farm is banned due to city ordinance, the family sets out on a journey to find out why wholesome food and produce is so hard to come by, and expensive, while processed food is highly advertised, accessible, and cheap. Their story becomes one of many; people being tired of feeling hopeless when it comes to the nutrition and source of food, the most common necessity!

There will be screenings happening across Illinois, and hopefully nationwide, so please go out and support this well directed and well proposed movie. It made me more aware of what I’m eating, what food corporations I’m supporting, and how easy it is to start taking control of my food! “Food Patriots” may be one of many films about government regulations on food, but can definitely be singled out as a personal journey that leads into a national crisis that deserves much more exposure and awareness.

Thank you to Jeff Spitz and Melissa Browning for taking your time to host this event and helping us all take one more step to becoming Food Patriots.

–Jondae Scott, Americorps Member for the Greater Chicago Food Depository


LUC President, Fr. Michael Garanzini shares an Easter message

Dear Loyolans,
As our Jewish brothers and sisters observe Passover, our new Jesuit pope, Pope Francis, prepares to celebrate his first Easter as the leader of the Catholic Church. He chose the name Francis in honor of Saint Francis of Assisi and as a reminder to himself and the Church of our need to care for the poor and least among us.
In all that we do for our students, each other, and our community, may we share in the desire of Saint Francis that God would “enlighten the darkness of our hearts, give us true faith, certain hope, and perfect charity, sense, and knowledge, that we might carry out God’s holy and true command.”
With my wishes for a blessed Holy Season,
Michael J. Garanzini, S.J.
President and CEO

Click here to access the original post: http://blogs.luc.edu/ilweekly/2013/03/28/an-easter-message-from-father-garanzini/


Feature Profile: Kevin Chears, MDiv student and upcoming Open House panelist

 

After working in the business world for much of her adult life, Kevin Chears felt the call to full-time ministry work. She came to IPS in 2007, pursuing the MA in Pastoral Studies, which she compeleted in 2010. After some discernment, Kevin again felt called into the Master of Divinity progam at IPS. She was able to roll all 36-credit hours of her MAPS degree into our MDiv program. Kevin is currently working as a parish intern at St. Gertrude Roman Catholic Parish in the city’s north side Edgewater neighborhood. She is set to graduate in May with the MDiv degree.

You can learn much more about Kevin on Saturday, March 23, at our Spring Open House! To register for this event, click here: https://gpem.luc.edu/register/IPSMarchoOH


Art Institute free to all students, faculty, and staff

Dear Friends,

Instead of paying the Art Institute for a membership – have I got news for you!

This spring 2013 semester the University is partnering with the Art Institute of Chicago to pilot a program to provide students, faculty, and staff with free access to the museum and its exhibits till the end of the semester.

To gain access to the museum, simply show them your Loyola ID.

For more information about University Partner benefits, please contact the museum’s Corporate Relations office at 312.443.3121 or universitypartners@artic.edu.


2013 IPS Damen Award Winner Jimmie L. Flewellen, Sr., MPS ’83

IPS Damen Award Recipient 2013

Named for Loyola University Chicago’s primary founder, Arnold Damen, S.J., this award is granted to an alumnus(a) from each of Loyola’s schools and colleges.  It recognizes the qualities of leadership in industry, leadership in community, and service to others.  This year IPS is proud and pleased to announce that Father Garanzini will bestow this award upon

MR. JIMMIE FLEWELLEN 

Jimmie L. Flewellen, Sr. is a native of Columbus, Georgia, born in 1926.   He completed high school in Columbus and was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1945.  After his service he married and moved to Chicago.  He converted to the Roman Catholic faith in 1960. In 1970 he joined the training program for Permanent Deacons in the Archdiocese of Chicago, and was ordained a deacon as a member of the first class, in 1972.  He began service in his home parish, St. Thaddeus, a ministry he continued for 34 years.  In 1985, he was appointed a Catholic Chaplain for the United States Justice Department.  In this appointment he was the first African American Catholic Chaplain in the History of the United States.  He served as prison chaplain in Springfield, Missouri from 1985 to 1993.  In 1993 he was transferred to the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Chicago as its Head Chaplain.  He held that position for nine years, until his retirement.  Deacon Flewellen received a Master of Pastoral Studies in 1983.  This award will be presented at Founders’ Day, June 8, 2013.


Climate Change is Setting the World on Fire

Dr. Melissa Browning, the graduate program director for our MA in Social Justice and Community Development degree, has recently been published on the Huffington Post Religion page. Check out her article here:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/melissa-browning-phd/climate-change-and-setting-the-world-on-fire_b_2630715.html


USGA’s Initiatives

LUC’s Unified Student Government Association has posted about their campus initiatives, including highlights of their fall 2012 initiatives. Check out these initiatives at http://www.luc.edu/usga/news/latestnews/

The USGA Executive Board would like to encourage students to reach out and let their voices be heard. To voice your opinions, check out www.luc.edu/USGA and visit the Let Your Voice Be Heard section.

Your voice, your student government. Tell us how we can better serve you!

www.luc.edu/USGA
www.facebook.com/LUCUSGA
@loyolaUSGA
#jumponitUSGA


INSPIRE hosts “Pre Advent Day of Reflection”

Many times leaders of religious communities are so concerned with helping their parishioners with their own spirituality, they forget that their own physical and mental well-being needs nourishing. In order to care for parish pastors and their staff members, theINSPIRE program, a partnership initiative between Loyola and the Archdiocese of Chicago, hosted a “Pre Advent Day of Reflection”  in November at Loyola’s Water Tower Campus and the Archbishop Quigley Center.

Read more about INSPIRE in this article featured on the front page of today’s Inside Loyola blog:

http://blogs.luc.edu/ilweekly/2013/01/08/an-inspiring-day/