PCNTV

Sign In Home Live Politics History 250th Sports Search Shop Donate Subscribe


ADVERTISEMENT

"Faith, Reentry, and Prison Reform": America250PA

Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site and America250PA program on faith, reentry, and prison reform in Philadelphia.

Caption Text Below:    

00:00 - The following program was financed by a Grant from america to fifty pa.

00:07 - Good evening

00:08 - and welcome to eastern state

00:09 - my name's Matthew darragh

00:10 - i am the chief of staff for america to fifty pa

00:13 - we are the state commission working in all sixty

00:15 - seven counties and over four hundred municipalities

00:18 - to prepare for this once in a generation anniversary.

00:22 - This summer and throughout twenty twenty six.

00:24 - We've developed over a dozen programs and projects

00:27 - and tonight we're here as part of one of those programs the lecture to fifty series.

00:32 - So much of what we do

00:33 - at america fifty pa is about celebrating together

00:36 - lecture to fifty is our opportunity to bring folks together for

00:39 - for learning.

00:42 - I'm so glad to see all of you in the audience and all of our folks

00:46 - watching at home via pcn

00:48 - who are interested in making a deeper connection with their neighbors with the

00:51 - commonwealth and with the heritage that helps us

00:53 - make sense of who we are and where we're going

00:57 - and today as i was preparing for this i was reflecting on that heritage and i was

01:00 - thinking about something that i'd read in college

01:02 - and.

01:03 - We read

01:04 - poems by a poet degree ponied escalates

01:07 - and escalates thought a lot about some of the themes that we're talking about tonight

01:11 - about.

01:13 - Faith about justice

01:15 - and in one of his works he reflected on the fact

01:18 - that humans are often caught up in a cycle of

01:21 - violence and recrimination.

01:24 - The way to break through that cycle

01:26 - is with justice

01:27 - and

01:28 - as a matter of fact in one of his plays.

01:30 - He talked about the Greek myth of the first trial

01:33 - the first trial was divine inspired

01:36 - as a way to break that cycle

01:38 - and as a matter of fact the

01:39 - Greek goddess of wisdom herself fina was the judge

01:42 - and cast down a verdict and

01:44 - i think it's interesting to reflect on the fact that

01:45 - that verdict that for that first trial was one of mercy

01:50 - and i was thinking about that especially in connection with our founding fathers in

01:53 - the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the united states.

01:56 - Because they were also students of the classics

01:58 - and i wondered if they had thought about escalates

02:00 - when they were

02:01 - doing their writing

02:03 - Thomas Jefferson am sure sure many of you will will read or reread the

02:06 - declaration of independence this year

02:08 - and so much of that

02:10 - is

02:10 - a ruination

02:12 - and a grievance about who gets to pass laws who gets to enforce them

02:17 - and how shouldn't you know

02:18 - how should they be enforced.

02:20 - That's the problem was not settled

02:23 - with that with our victory in the reveille visionary wars map

02:25 - choose me as a matter of fact even decades later

02:28 - when

02:29 - the founders came together again to pass the bill of rights

02:32 - they were still ruminating and reflecting on.

02:36 - What is fair what is just

02:38 - and what is cruel and unusual

02:41 - and so

02:42 - i think that tonight when we come together there

02:44 - were going to have this conversation about faith

02:47 - about restorative justice

02:49 - i think it's very appropriate given the context of this moment in our history

02:54 - and i hope that we all remember and reflect

02:56 - that

02:57 - as the Greeks knew

02:59 - the heart of justice is very often

03:01 - mercy.

03:02 - So without further ado i will.

03:05 - Sorry to bring up some of the other speakers and we moved the program along but

03:08 - it's

03:09 - it's an honour a pleasure to be with you and if you're interested in any of.

03:12 - The future lectures that we're going to do or any other

03:14 - constellation of programming that's going to be happening

03:17 - in Pennsylvania through america fifty pa where our partners

03:20 - ask you to check us out at america fifty ph dot org

03:22 - again thank you to eastern state

03:24 - thank you to all of you for being here and let's enjoy this wonderful program.

03:29 - Three.

03:39 - That was excellent and i love that we're starting

03:41 - class already and really exciting i appreciate that

03:44 - so welcome everyone welcome to eastern state penitentiary historic site

03:48 - are so happy to have you here tonight my name is Curtis honor

03:51 - i am honored to serve as president and ceo here at this powerful place

03:55 - this powerful organization

03:57 - together we gather here tonight in center

04:00 - and in community and it's very important for us

04:03 - to gather in community for these conversations

04:05 - it's very important for us to gathering community

04:08 - at eastern state a place

04:10 - and an organization and a historic site that tried to break people of the community

04:16 - and this is why it's so important that we talk about community all the time here

04:20 - because so much

04:22 - of what people did and what we're going to talk

04:24 - about tonight is how important community is

04:27 - and how important religious communities are

04:30 - to hold on to one another we were talking about that tonight

04:34 - when we talk about religious communities

04:36 - what we see is the strongest strength that we see in religious cube unity's

04:40 - is it the ability

04:42 - to pull each other end

04:43 - to hold onto each other

04:45 - in times of forgiveness in times of mistakes and in times of genuine kindness

04:51 - and that is something that we saw in the history of eastern state

04:55 - so when we think of the two hundred and fifty s and

04:58 - we think of the two hundred in fifty years ago that

05:02 - people came together to have this country

05:05 - they came together and they gathered around this radical idea

05:09 - of

05:10 - mercy of justice of freedom of Liberty of all these big ideas

05:15 - but it wasn't just who gets freedom and Liberty and justice

05:20 - it wasn't about getting things it was also about the responsibility

05:25 - of having it

05:26 - and they were also questioning

05:28 - if they take it away from people what does that look like

05:31 - and at the end of the day they were talking about building communities

05:35 - they were talking about social contracts with each other

05:39 - and well howdy you you share in this community

05:42 - we call the united states

05:44 - and they were just figuring out how to even terminate the united states

05:47 - and not just listing a whole bunch of states and ideas

05:51 - and what was that

05:52 - social contract that they would have with each other

05:55 - but they were centering it around each other

05:58 - they were putting it around

06:00 - huh human dignity

06:01 - that's the revolutionary idea they came up with

06:04 - and guess what we still haven't figured that out

06:07 - so two hundred and fifty years later

06:10 - were sent it scenting in center together

06:13 - still trying to come up with the ideas

06:16 - still trying to figure out what is our responsibility to each other

06:20 - and how how do we do this

06:21 - better.

06:23 - How we at eastern state do this is we preserve

06:27 - this historic landmark

06:28 - we preserve this national treasure

06:31 - because we believe it's important to preserve our pass.

06:34 - The beauty of our past

06:35 - and the peanut our pasts

06:37 - to ensure

06:38 - that we can understand what has happened to learn from it

06:42 - and to reclaim it to do good

06:44 - and so thank you for gathering with us in centre

06:48 - to have these dialogues

06:49 - to learn what has happened

06:51 - from our framing from moving on

06:54 - and then to leave here

06:56 - in community

06:58 - and say what are we going to do next

07:00 - because it it isn't just the past

07:02 - it's about how we go into the future

07:04 - to do good

07:06 - to do justice

07:07 - to do it together

07:08 - so thank you for being here

07:10 - and i'm really grateful to the community that has come here tonight

07:15 - to support us in this work

07:17 - because we do not do any of this work alone

07:20 - and so ten nine i get to extend the gratitude

07:23 - to a deeply connected and aiming this in so many different ways historically

07:29 - as well as personally connected family

07:31 - so i want to thank the right the right glyn

07:34 - and tuck families for their support with us

07:37 - i want to thank the america two fifty p a

07:40 - community that is new to us

07:42 - i want to thank councilman Thomas and young for all

07:44 - the work that they've helped us within the last year

07:47 - there are new to our eastern state community and family and they've helped us so much

07:51 - but really in this partnership of support and not just

07:54 - in what we do but thinking about who we can grow into be

07:58 - the work that we do in the city and across this nation

08:01 - without further ado

08:03 - somebody that can really center us in this work over

08:05 - the last hundred and one hundred and fifty years

08:08 - and move us forward and how do we build a stronger community

08:11 - please everyone welcome Larry ragland to the stage.

08:15 - Three.

08:22 - Korea i'm going to have you introduced me all the time

08:26 - that was wonderful thank you.

08:28 - Well

08:29 - good evening everyone.

08:32 - It's an honor really to be gathered here Richards

08:34 - for tonight's program justice one o one faith

08:38 - reentry

08:39 - and prison reform.

08:41 - This is part of the

08:42 - time for Liberty

08:44 - our shared history our shared future series

08:48 - we are here in a place

08:50 - that

08:50 - once was held up

08:51 - as a global model for a new idea.

08:55 - An idea that incarceration

08:57 - penitents

08:58 - could transform people

09:00 - through isolation

09:02 - reflection

09:03 - and reform.

09:04 - We know now how deeply flawed that experiment was

09:09 - and how it's legacy still shapes our our systems today.

09:13 - This site grew out of a very particular religious experiment.

09:19 - In the early eighteen hundreds quaker reformers

09:22 - rooted in in the Christian convictions about the inner light

09:26 - of

09:27 - every person

09:28 - help design a new kind of prison intended to to inspire penitence and reform

09:35 - rather than inflict public torture

09:38 - or death.

09:39 - We know now that this great experiment in solitary confinement

09:44 - cause devastating harm

09:46 - and quakers themselves were among the first to speak out

09:50 - against what it had become.

09:52 - Tonight we have quaker voices with us who are part of a very different project

09:58 - owning that history

10:00 - and working towards models of justice and community safety

10:04 - that are truly humane.

10:07 - Tonight's conversation focuses on faith reentry and prison reform three threads

10:13 - that are tightly intertwined.

10:16 - Faith communities have long stood at the heart of

10:19 - movements for criminal justice reform prison chaplaincy

10:24 - reentry support

10:25 - and restorative justice

10:28 - they have welcome people home after incarceration

10:32 - offered a key accountability

10:34 - that is not purely punitive

10:36 - and created spaces where humanity and

10:39 - vote and belonging

10:40 - are not earned

10:42 - but assumed.

10:44 - This program is part of the Aaron rocklin restorative justice and faith conversations

10:50 - and our broader lecture to fifty initiative which invites us in the lead up to the

10:55 - two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the declaration of independence

11:00 - to ask

11:01 - what does Liberty mean

11:03 - in a nation where so many lives are shaped by policing

11:07 - prisons in terms of re entry.

11:11 - We are fortunate to be guided tonight by an extraordinary

11:15 - group of leaders who bring legal scholarship

11:18 - pastoral leadership

11:20 - community organizing and interfaith engagement into the same room.

11:25 - Our guests include voices from Muslim communities

11:29 - and from Christian traditions inc looting quaker communities

11:33 - all committed to imagining justice that restores rather than discards.

11:40 - We had also planned to have a Jewish voice in this conversation

11:44 - dr Yehuda price

11:46 - who brings both professional expertise and his own

11:50 - powerful perspective on incarceration and reentry

11:54 - but he is not able to be with us tonight because he and his family just welcomed a

11:59 - new baby a bit earlier than expected.

12:04 - So we send them our congratulations and we look forward to finding another moment to

12:09 - bring this voice into this space.

12:13 - After

12:13 - after curry's generous introduction of me

12:16 - it's a joy to turn the spotlight back on her

12:20 - in a different

12:21 - and

12:22 - slightly different role tonight

12:24 - in just a moment you will hear from dr curry

12:26 - softener and dr Michael moreland together.

12:30 - Dr moreland is university professor of law and religion

12:33 - and director of the Eleanor h mcallen center for law

12:37 - religion and public policy at villanova university

12:41 - he is a leading scholar of constitutional law law religious freedom

12:46 - torts

12:47 - and bioethics

12:48 - and has helped shape national conversations

12:51 - about how law ethics and religious traditions

12:54 - interact in American public life.

12:58 - In conversation with kerry he will help ground us in the

13:02 - legal and ethical context for what follows those tonight.

13:06 - We will then take a brief intermission

13:08 - and when we return kerry will moderate a broader dialogue with our full panel.

13:14 - Dr Terry softener is the president and ceo of eastern state penitentiary historic site

13:20 - and more importantly a friend and a partner in this work.

13:25 - She will lead our interfaith dialogue drawing

13:27 - on eastern state's role as a civic classroom

13:30 - using this historic site

13:32 - to explore the legacy

13:34 - and ongoing reality of mass incarceration in the united states.

13:40 - Our panelists

13:41 - are

13:42 - a mom kaiser Abdullah

13:44 - director of the mayor's office of Muslim engagement in the city of Philadelphia

13:49 - and an assistant professor at temple university.

13:53 - His work in conflict rice solution leadership and Muslim community organizing

13:58 - includes efforts towards criminal justice reform

14:02 - and building interfaith coalitions.

14:05 - Reverend damone b Jones sr who is senior pastor

14:09 - of Bible way baptist church in west Philadelphia.

14:13 - His decades of ministry we include chaplaincy with youth in detention

14:18 - service on the Philadelphia board of ethics

14:21 - and on the board of trustees of the Philadelphia prison system as well as advisory

14:26 - roles in statewide corrections and reentry policy.

14:31 - And Lewis webb Jr u s peace building director

14:34 - at the American friends service committee

14:38 - and historic quaker peace and justice organization

14:41 - he has led healing justice work that confronts the school to prison pipeline

14:47 - advances sentencing reform

14:49 - develops youth advocacy

14:51 - and articulates a bold vision for community safety beyond prisons and policing.

14:58 - Together they will help us think about how their faith

15:01 - communities can move us from punishment towards restoration

15:05 - and from abstract ideals of Liberty

15:08 - towards concrete practices that honor every purse person's dignity.

15:14 - Thank you for being part of this conversation tonight.

15:17 - Whether you join us from a particular faith

15:20 - tradition

15:21 - from a justice impacted community

15:24 - from the neighborhood around eastern state

15:27 - or simply as someone who cares about what justice should

15:31 - look like in this country you're pro residence here

15:35 - matters

15:37 - with that please join me in welcoming back to the stage dr kerry softener

15:41 - along with dr Michael moreland.

15:45 - Three.

16:02 - Okay professor Marlene i'm really excited about that.

16:06 - So professor Maryland and i have known each other for awhile he is tight so many

16:10 - classes for me usually it's teachers and students that are diving deep into American

16:16 - history and so we are really excited that you are

16:18 - students tonight and we are going to dive deep

16:22 - into the religious founding of america at

16:24 - all

16:25 - thirty minutes.

16:29 - You get what you got.

16:31 - Yeah

16:31 - we are just i have to say we

16:33 - we have hundreds of people online we have all of us in the room

16:37 - this is a conversation that is so

16:39 - wonderful fulfilled our area wonderful for Pennsylvania wonderful for the nation

16:43 - but we are also really lucky you're at villanova

16:47 - so we have one of the best schools

16:49 - to be on this topic right right here in our own community so thank you so much for

16:53 - being with us all the ladder of the pope as well.

16:57 - Dropping bombs yeah

17:00 - all you have all of the big weight.

17:03 - So

17:04 - let's let's

17:05 - begin where we talk about Philadelphia we talk about you know

17:09 - the framing of this city

17:11 - when we look at the framing of america and not you know or we we talk about this city

17:15 - we have so many years we can go back to

17:17 - the lineup a's before that and all of those religious beliefs and leanings

17:22 - but why would i want to do is freely around American history and around William penn

17:26 - so even before the American history and the British history

17:29 - can we talk a little bit about William penn and

17:33 - the

17:33 - holy city that William patton bought here because

17:36 - i think that explains so much of the religious freedom that we see in Philadelphia

17:41 - and quite frankly the religious experiment

17:44 - and freedom that we see here in eastern state

17:47 - because penn did it differently

17:49 - so can you give us a little bit of that framing.

17:52 - I think that's all right of course we we have

17:54 - some folks who later can speak to quakers

17:57 - more authoritatively than i certainly can

18:00 - but right i mean if you think back to the seventeenth century context within which

18:04 - from which William penn emerged of course he was from England and

18:08 - he

18:09 - as a young man

18:10 - became a quaker which was this movement in

18:13 - the mid seventeenth century English religious life

18:17 - and they were dissenters right from the

18:19 - established church of England

18:21 - and

18:22 - if you think of

18:23 - your the wider context of seventeenth century

18:25 - mean and continental Europe you have the word

18:27 - thirty years war from sixteen eighteen to sixteen forty eight

18:31 - a time of tremendous religious

18:33 - conflict and strife

18:35 - and

18:36 - so over and against that that.

18:38 - Experience of

18:40 - the established church in England and the ways in which it.

18:43 - Suppressed and persecuted

18:45 - those who are nonconformists

18:47 - with the church of England.

18:50 - Pen and

18:50 - others are puritans

18:52 - catholics Jews of

18:54 - various kinds of

18:56 - other

18:56 - religious believers.

18:58 - You know started to articulate

19:01 - a way of understanding

19:03 - religious toleration religious

19:05 - pluralism

19:07 - and ways in which

19:08 - the interaction between the

19:10 - the state and church could be more tolerant basically

19:14 - and you see that when he came here to to found Philadelphia and he was given this

19:18 - tract of land.

19:20 - By Charles second

19:21 - to

19:22 - to establish

19:23 - a colony here and unlike many of the other colonies.

19:29 - It was a place where the

19:30 - other was what we would now call

19:32 - a kind of religious freedom and religious

19:34 - toleration is also influenced by and interacts with

19:37 - John Locke whose famous treatise on.

19:40 - Religious toleration is roughly

19:42 - contemporaneous

19:43 - with all this they somewhat knew each other

19:46 - a bit although Locke i think was about twelve years older so than penn

19:50 - and so i guess that back and then here

19:53 - in Philadelphia and in this

19:55 - would now be called Kabul's Pennsylvania.

19:58 - He had an experiment

20:01 - in which you would not have an established church.

20:03 - There wouldn't be a kind of state endorsed

20:06 - religious

20:07 - institutional form of christianity that everyone would have to

20:11 - support financially and otherwise

20:14 - and he also had

20:15 - the beginnings of what we would understand as

20:18 - as freedom of conscience that with regard to

20:20 - religious opinion and belief that people should have.

20:24 - The ability to

20:25 - form their religious opinions

20:27 - form their understandings of god and their relationship to the divine

20:31 - in ways that would be free from state coercion of course some of these ideas go back

20:34 - way but you know it's not like William penn or John Locke came up with these ideas

20:38 - there are people who talk about the fact that turtle

20:40 - then in the second century already had an idea

20:43 - about something like non coercion with regard to religious belief

20:47 - but they picked up on those parts of the Christian

20:49 - tradition and then brought them here to to Philadelphia.

20:54 - So what we have is

20:55 - kind of like broader framing that William penn bank brings and it's

21:00 - because of it

21:00 - partly if his lived experience

21:03 - is this persecution that he has he comes and tries to frame

21:06 - this city in this way and we we see a lot of evidence of

21:10 - penn's lived experience frame some building of him physical

21:14 - building a Philadelphia in so many ways it's very brick

21:18 - it's a grid system like literally the physical structures the religious structures

21:22 - the laws in certain ways

21:25 - the penal laws in certain ways are written in ways that pen is established

21:29 - how does it

21:30 - pull in different religions do we see

21:34 - it not just in the structures of the laws the structures of the religious beliefs

21:38 - the structures of the systems of Philadelphia but do we see

21:43 - an actually working where we see other people coming to Philadelphia because it is

21:48 - more tolerant

21:50 - i

21:50 - think the historical record bears that out that

21:53 - unlike other parts of colonial era Erica

21:55 - this was a place where

21:57 - people who are against us would have been called dents were nonconformists people

22:01 - who are you know.

22:03 - Wanted to dissent in one way or another.

22:06 - From

22:07 - from established

22:08 - religious

22:09 - forms of state power that the Philadelphia and Pennsylvania became a place

22:14 - where those things were celebrated.

22:17 - Imperfectly to be sure

22:19 - felt like this was of you know sort of utopia or stuff like that but

22:22 - there were

22:22 - there was there was an recognition.

22:25 - From the sixteen eighties onward

22:28 - that this would be a place where people

22:30 - who

22:31 - are catholics for instance.

22:33 - Or the calvinists of various kinds who

22:36 - didn't again conform to.

22:39 - The established anglican church

22:41 - would find a

22:42 - welcoming and would be able to participate in the life of commerce

22:47 - to some extent the life of politics they did have some religious tests

22:51 - back then

22:52 - but yeah but the people could

22:54 - basically participate in civic life on equal terms.

22:58 - Here in way

22:59 - that would have been much more if not completely impossible much more difficult if

23:04 - not completely impossible in other

23:06 - parts of the colonies and back home in England

23:09 - yeah and it's it's pretty aggressive in other colonies they're literally driven out.

23:13 - Violently to the point of death if not

23:17 - death itself so it is

23:19 - it is.

23:20 - We we see that in Massachusetts we see it in in other state

23:23 - colonies as well

23:25 - so when we start to think we we get past the

23:27 - colonial states we get into a constitution

23:30 - how does that really codified in it and yes i'm going to go there hasn't really

23:33 - started codified in the state constitution

23:36 - i love to talk about these constitutions we're

23:38 - just going to do it for a minute i promise

23:40 - how does this Saturday codified in the state constitutions and then the united states

23:44 - constitution and where do we see that start to

23:46 - level into these framing documents

23:49 - but so some of the pens writings that emerged from

23:53 - this time both

23:54 - before he came here and then when he was here

23:56 - and documents like the charter privileges from seventeen to one

24:00 - day they we know had an enormous

24:02 - effect on us

24:04 - now we're moving into the eighteenth century

24:06 - an eighteenth century

24:08 - American thinkers.

24:10 - So that

24:11 - this idea of for instance of

24:13 - freedom of conscience or what we now in the first amendment would have.

24:17 - As the free exercise of religion.

24:19 - That those kinds of ideas and and and and and a non established church is sort of at

24:24 - the national level at least the state establishments continued

24:27 - into the nineteenth century in some places but that this

24:30 - idea of free exercise of religion freedom of conscience

24:33 - in religious matters and a non establish national church

24:37 - those kinds of ideas that pen.

24:40 - Yo

24:41 - put the seeds in the ground for here in Philadelphia.

24:44 - From the sixteen eighties onwards and

24:47 - do get picked up then and again as you mentioned for

24:49 - instance the Pennsylvania state constitutions are at

24:52 - colonial constitutions and.

24:54 - Say in seventeen seventy six for instance

24:56 - have.

24:58 - A sort of

24:59 - proto version of r we

25:00 - have our first amendment in the bill of rights

25:03 - because of the ways in which

25:04 - the the

25:06 - insight that penn and others had with regard to the significance of this

25:10 - Liberty with regard to religion

25:12 - was

25:13 - not just something that you know was

25:16 - you know could could be traded offered like that

25:18 - but there was a central inherit natural right

25:21 - of

25:21 - of persons

25:23 - as part of

25:24 - part of their serve inherent

25:25 - natural rights of people had

25:27 - and so then when

25:29 - the state constitutions as you mentioned not just in

25:31 - Pennsylvania but other parts of the colonies as well.

25:34 - Many of them reflect

25:35 - some of these same

25:36 - textual guarantees of freedom of

25:38 - conscience and free exercise of religion

25:41 - and then finally when it comes time

25:43 - of course the you know the

25:44 - in

25:45 - the

25:45 - in the summer they come here to Philadelphia they

25:48 - they have a constitutional convention.

25:51 - After the articles confederate of confederation turn out to be a

25:55 - unsuccessful experiment as Hamilton said an imbecilic form of government

26:00 - and so then when they come here to Philadelphia they're in the shadow of William penn

26:06 - now of course then i don't

26:07 - know how long we want to go to this of course the original constitution did not have.

26:13 - Spiritual constitution did not have the bill of rights right because

26:16 - the idea was that

26:17 - we had to get

26:18 - at least some of the structural provisions of the national government right

26:22 - there was a big fight between the federalists and anti federalists about whether the

26:25 - national government should be restrained with regards to the kinds of

26:29 - legislation that should be able to enact and as it's almost sort of condition for

26:33 - ratification the anti federalists insist on

26:36 - a bill of rights

26:38 - which then the first congress sets to working on

26:41 - sends twelve of them to the states the first two are unsuccessful in the

26:45 - next ten are

26:46 - and the

26:48 - what

26:48 - has actually lose their third

26:49 - amendment was our first amendment

26:51 - which has a textual guarantee congress shall make

26:54 - no law respecting an establishment of religion

26:56 - or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.

26:59 - So this

27:00 - this idea this like kind of concept of

27:04 - the the right to think as you want and to think that

27:06 - freedom of conscience that you keep speaking of it's a

27:09 - the

27:09 - the right to choose the right to think as you want there right to gather with who you

27:14 - want like a bundle of the first amendment

27:16 - it it's all connected to

27:19 - you know

27:20 - the

27:21 - the thoughts that you want to have the religion that you want to have and the ability

27:25 - to gather with who you want together with i think all

27:27 - those things are connected when we think about religion

27:30 - because you're gathering in community

27:32 - so it's the choice who you gather with when you have

27:35 - your religious gatherings as well which again i think

27:38 - we'll get to these conversations

27:41 - but are really

27:42 - really

27:43 - difficult when incarcerated settings

27:46 - and prohibited strongly incarcerated settings

27:49 - as well as after incarcerated settings so this is

27:52 - why when i kind of tease this out so importantly

27:55 - because we spend so much time talking about it in our framing of our country

28:00 - the freedom to have the right to choose

28:03 - to think as you wish to speak as you want all these concepts

28:07 - these are you know when we talk about luckily his ability to have your own brain

28:12 - to hang out with who you want to hang out with

28:14 - have thoughts and ideas and share them with others

28:17 - and they can be for the religious community

28:19 - for the ideas of invention for so many ideas

28:22 - this is what makes us a people of who we are

28:26 - and the right to choose not to have a religion that's in there as well those choices

28:31 - we used to

28:32 - say as they're running joking you know the first amendment

28:34 - guarantees your right to choose their religion or not

28:37 - the government can't pick one for you your parents might

28:40 - have to get

28:41 - your your government can say

28:43 - but

28:43 - so the first amendment is added to the constitution

28:46 - but there are mentions in the structural constitution the original constitution

28:51 - that

28:52 - that claim merely state that religion is your

28:55 - choice so can you talk a little bit about

28:58 - how that is codified in the structural constitution and then i want to dive into

29:02 - religion and incarceration while the

29:05 - initial articles

29:07 - of the constitution for example

29:08 - prohibit religious tests for office it's one of the

29:11 - few things that applies both at the nah national and state levels

29:14 - that's in the

29:15 - in the original articles of our constitution

29:18 - so this idea of of religious tests which was

29:20 - completely prevalent and thought to be not

29:23 - not not even an issue really.

29:26 - In some ways

29:27 - in

29:28 - European experiences

29:29 - that the idea that you would have

29:31 - a government that would not impose religious tests on those who sought to hold

29:35 - offices

29:36 - and you're right that i mean

29:37 - obviously right now especially in contemporary constitutional law we talk a lot about

29:41 - the history and tradition of these different provisions of the constitution

29:45 - including the first amendment

29:47 - and one of the things that people have been looking at a lot is what would what would

29:50 - have been the markers of a quote unquote establishment

29:53 - of religion and it would have been things like

29:55 - coerced attendance at worship services or paying fines if you didn't attend the

30:00 - worship services of the established church.

30:03 - Conformity with regard to matters of belief and

30:06 - the the

30:07 - articles of the of the church of England.

30:10 - In in their experience.

30:13 - Things like forced assessment and taxation for the support of clergy and churches

30:17 - all those kinds of things that were kind of markers of establishment that that's what

30:21 - in many respects the first amendment and the whole kind of

30:24 - several decades of.

30:26 - Debate

30:27 - running up to the

30:29 - ratification the first amendment

30:30 - that's what they were worried about that's what they are rebelling against and and

30:33 - the freedom of assembly as you point out but there's freedom of assembly part of that

30:37 - of the

30:38 - first amendment as well but

30:39 - assembly with regard to religion to form communities

30:42 - and

30:43 - again free from government

30:44 - coercion with regards to what kinds of forms of community.

30:48 - In in

30:49 - religious belief.

30:51 - Government sanctioned or not

30:53 - and just to clarify for every base so the first amendment

30:56 - before the eighteen sixties applies to whom

30:59 - only to the federal well

31:01 - before the

31:01 - almost the nineteen forties

31:03 - only applies to the

31:04 - to the national government

31:06 - so when we're when we're talking about this first amendment and we're talking about

31:09 - it they're clarifying that this first amendment

31:11 - the

31:12 - the national government

31:13 - can't tell you

31:14 - which religion to pack

31:16 - you can't can't say which religion you can have or not have

31:20 - this does not apply to state governments

31:23 - so before we get again before we dive into

31:26 - eastern state just clarifying that in the name

31:29 - and we can talk about the religion here and kind of unpack that a little

31:33 - kid you talk a little bit about

31:35 - how our state government's treating religions

31:39 - in the different states

31:40 - after the constitution was ratified

31:43 - so

31:44 - on the two could have problems with the first

31:45 - on the establishment trout there were as I've mentioned briefly there were state

31:48 - establishments of real estate established churches in this and

31:52 - then the

31:52 - colonies and then

31:53 - the states.

31:55 - End of the nineteenth century but by the roughly eighteen thirty or so

31:59 - all of those

32:00 - state established churches have been done away with

32:03 - no more state established churches

32:05 - and there was a right of free exercise i mentioned including the Pennsylvania

32:08 - constitution and seventeen seventy six and it's successors

32:11 - a lot state constitutions even though the

32:14 - the federal first amendment only applies to the national government

32:17 - until it does

32:18 - in

32:19 - twentieth century it becomes to

32:21 - incorporated as we say against the states and the local governments

32:25 - but many of the state constitutions has had similar protections

32:28 - so it's not like it was you know that there is a

32:31 - complete Joseph freedom of religion at the national level

32:34 - and then a lot of coercion here at the state level because of many if.

32:39 - Of the state constitutions had protections for free exercise

32:43 - and then we start thinking about states of incarceration

32:47 - and

32:47 - states of incarceration are

32:49 - pretty new

32:50 - when eastern state comes into existence and eighteen

32:53 - it starting to be built in eighteen twenty two

32:55 - it for it's first incarcerated person his name was Charles and eighteen twenty nine

33:00 - how are the framers thinking about this new idea of jails jails are not new but

33:06 - larger sites of penitentiaries and prisons are newer in this time period

33:11 - how are they thinking of religion and incarceration

33:14 - and.

33:15 - I confess that area i'm a particular expert on it is true i think it's fair to say

33:20 - that people who were incarcerated.

33:24 - Were

33:25 - were

33:26 - treated and let's say differentially to put it mildly with their hearts with the

33:29 - exercise of their constitutional rights

33:31 - and i

33:33 - knew that still endures up to this day right

33:35 - there are various ways in which

33:37 - some of the same guarantees that we would readily acknowledge

33:40 - are preparing tried and and the bill of rights.

33:43 - Or the state analogues to it that those did not apply

33:46 - in the context of prisons but there were all these in you know in the nineteenth

33:49 - century are all way through the twentieth century

33:51 - there are including as well go here from the subsequent panel i'm sure

33:55 - there were all these v various kind of reform efforts

33:57 - both in England and here i mean there's you know the

34:00 - utilitarian in England like Jeremy Bentham are

34:03 - engaging in all kinds of penal reform.

34:05 - Experiments and there are all those similar kind of reform movements here

34:09 - and

34:10 - much of that is religiously inflected and i think it's

34:12 - important to underscore that that much of that was about.

34:15 - Trees eating.

34:17 - Your trick treating prisons and penitentiaries and we

34:21 - would we would not call kind of the

34:23 - corrective justice system

34:24 - treating that as in a way that was often

34:27 - framed in a religious.

34:30 - Often quite expressive the kind of religious terms that

34:33 - people should be bringing about to you know penance and to be reformed

34:37 - so that they can be returned to society.

34:41 - And so a lot of allows these experiments that you see

34:45 - in

34:45 - the nineteenth and twentieth century

34:47 - penitentiary.

34:50 - Contexts

34:51 - have this religious aspect to them and so while i again i i'd be

34:56 - i think it's

34:56 - there'd be

34:57 - very limited ways in which we would think of

34:59 - your religious free exercise in the prison context although

35:02 - they had

35:03 - i think prison chaplains were of

35:05 - fairly familiar the thing.

35:07 - Going way back but i do think that there is a way in which

35:10 - there is this idea that

35:12 - religion and criminal justice.

35:15 - And in various ways

35:17 - were intertwined and linked

35:19 - and we we are in the middle of

35:22 - redoing our freedom through faith exhibit it is a new exhibit

35:27 - that is supporting our synagogue here this is the first synagogue

35:32 - on a site of incarceration in america.

35:35 - Later tonight if you have an opportunity to see it it is a powerful sites.

35:40 - The

35:41 - wreck the

35:41 - richlin family is a part of that story we are so honored to have you here with us

35:46 - tonight to be continue to tell that story

35:49 - and we have been deeply involved in the research on that work

35:53 - and connecting those pieces and a part of that research

35:56 - has shared kind of the centering of their religious belief leafs in the systems here

36:01 - at eastern state that helped us really

36:03 - dive into some of those cases not just here at eastern state across Pennsylvania and

36:08 - across the country of the people that have been

36:10 - incarcerated at different sites across the country

36:14 - and who have pushed back to say

36:16 - that it is not just one religion that gets to be

36:19 - deemed the appropriate or the favoured religion

36:22 - out of sight of incarceration

36:24 - but it is my religion and then what does that

36:27 - look like too so it it is not just the ability

36:30 - to practice your religion

36:31 - but to gather

36:32 - but to have a religious text

36:35 - but to have religious view to have religious ceremonies to

36:38 - be able to pray in the way you deserve to pray in as well

36:42 - and calling on these original founding

36:44 - documents these original founding pieces as well

36:48 - through that research our history and here has also found on record

36:53 - a eighteen forty one record that does believe the first

36:57 - record of a Muslim prisoner on record here as well

37:01 - so we're going through the

37:02 - the

37:03 - data to be able to really make sure that data is

37:07 - accurate and justified in three different ways

37:10 - but really fascinating look at it because this site

37:13 - began with a quaker influence

37:15 - but it also had a very strong influence of

37:18 - Christian and protestant religion

37:20 - cause that was a religion of favor at the time

37:23 - but it also had a very large movement of the Jewish religion as well

37:28 - and so we see those layers here in Philadelphia and at eastern state

37:32 - very differently because of the framing as well

37:36 - so when we start to look at this today and we look at this movement

37:40 - have you know religious freedom at different sites

37:43 - where some of those conversations happening today

37:47 - at sites of incarceration and within our communities and where are we seeing those

37:52 - the conversations about how do we move and frame our religious dialogues today and

37:59 - where are those questions arising today lie

38:01 - they are

38:01 - arose two hundred and fifty years ago right

38:04 - well I'll take I'll take about the free exercise part in the establishment clause

38:08 - part so on the free exercise component

38:11 - there is actually a federal statute

38:12 - the religious land use and is to slice persons act that was enacted in two thousand

38:17 - that provides for a heightened measure of

38:21 - religious freedom protection for prisoners

38:24 - and in fact i was at a

38:26 - meeting as

38:27 - it was

38:27 - giving a presentation to a group of

38:29 - state attorneys general.

38:31 - In Washington a few years ago and

38:33 - i mentioned that statue will loop a religious land use district is to say persons act

38:37 - and you can see the state agee's cause of course

38:39 - they have a lot of these cases in for one of them

38:42 - and sure some of them are frivolous no doubt

38:44 - but you know there are some important ways in which

38:47 - that federal statute.

38:49 - You know enshrines and protects

38:51 - religious freedom

38:53 - in the prison context so just to

38:55 - make the leading supreme court case on this as a case called holt vs Hobbes in which

38:59 - an Arkansas prison forbade a must i'm a prisoner from growing a beard

39:03 - they said that for safety reasons.

39:06 - He could cannot

39:06 - be allowed to grow a beard

39:08 - and the statute says that if you have if you

39:12 - substantially burden someone's religious free exercise the government has to show

39:15 - that has a compelling interest in

39:17 - doing it and that really you know that basically

39:19 - the government has really good reasons for doing it

39:22 - in a unanimous opinion by justice alito the supreme court says Arkansas prison you

39:27 - have to allow the Muslim prisoner to grow his beard

39:29 - your you know sort of

39:32 - not not completely made up but

39:34 - your your your safety

39:35 - justification for it

39:36 - are are

39:37 - simply not not persuasive enough for you to prohibit this prisoner from

39:42 - from going

39:44 - from

39:44 - pursuing his his religious practice

39:47 - in the prison now of course there would be other

39:49 - contexts in which the government's reasons for

39:52 - burning someone's religious

39:53 - freedom might

39:54 - be

39:55 - more persuasive

39:56 - but that's just an illustration of the way in which.

39:59 - Again as a matter of federal law that applies in that context of the states as well

40:04 - others a heightened measure of

40:05 - protection for religious free exercise and then just on the establishment clause point

40:10 - there was a period in the

40:12 - roughly let's say you could have forties and fifties and

40:14 - then really in the seventies and eighties and nineties of the

40:17 - twentieth century

40:18 - where the supreme court had a kind of

40:20 - very strongly kind of separation this view with

40:23 - regard to the interaction of of church and state

40:26 - and the inability of of of funding for state programs to

40:31 - to go to

40:32 - religious institutions and in all kinds of different ways

40:35 - and the court in my view quite

40:38 - quite appropriately has ratchet that back on that

40:41 - and that has

40:42 - big applications and for things like charitable

40:44 - choice programs for instance for prison rehabilitation

40:46 - programs so that prison rehabilitation programs

40:49 - many of which

40:50 - are operated in the context

40:53 - of religious institutions

40:55 - and have some measure of success

40:58 - is often

40:59 - i'm told at least.

41:00 - A better success sometimes than

41:02 - other kinds of programs that there should not be you know sort of

41:06 - barriers

41:07 - erected to

41:08 - allow the government

41:10 - to provide for that kind of funding for

41:12 - what after all is a government is you know it's the interests of the state

41:16 - for people to be successfully rehabilitated and reentered into their communities

41:20 - after they serve their sentences and the ways in which the supreme court and the

41:24 - establishment clause context that they kind of over read

41:27 - what those prohibitions on funding should look like i think it's all to the good

41:32 - that many of those programs now

41:34 - state funded programs called refund programs

41:37 - include religious participants

41:39 - in the provision of those k kinds of services.

41:42 - I'm really excited that you brought up Hobbes

41:44 - as well because that is in the exhibit as well

41:47 - which opens on July second i know when you brought that up i was like i'm married and

41:51 - out of here because that's all in the exhibit

41:53 - and it's really important that we unpack this because

41:56 - that is a modern conversation this is a modern

41:59 - dialogue that we're looking at today this isn't

42:01 - something that we're just talk king about one

42:03 - hundred and fifty years ago two hundred years ago

42:06 - these are the questions and when we talk

42:07 - about sites of incarceration their black boxes

42:10 - there are boxes we can't see into in so many states in so many places

42:15 - and when we talk about this tension what we see is

42:18 - where our people's religious freedoms

42:22 - able to be had and where are they not depending

42:25 - on safety and security and that question was

42:27 - was that person able to grow their beard and

42:30 - the question from the president's side was

42:32 - it is causing an undue harm at the prison center and

42:35 - so that had to go all the way to the supreme court

42:38 - but it is not always evident

42:41 - to people on the outside so we we are lucky enough in Pennsylvania

42:45 - to have the prison society

42:47 - which is one of the few states that this is written into the charter

42:51 - of our p a constitution

42:55 - that we have

42:56 - a people's organization

42:59 - that can go into prisons to check on our community

43:02 - this is very very unique to Pennsylvania again something different about our state

43:07 - to ensure that our community checks on each other

43:10 - very important i invite you all back

43:12 - July second or if you're busy that weekend i get it

43:16 - anytime after that it's going to be a powerful exhibit

43:20 - professor Mike moreland we can say up here all night i'm really excited to talk ok to

43:23 - you further and we will have you back after when that exhibit opens to talk even more

43:28 - about all the refresh that we can talk about thank you

43:30 - so much everybody please give professor make more let.

43:40 - Hello everyone and welcome back it's exciting to have you all back with us

43:44 - and this part of the evening is devoted to looking

43:47 - at justice restorative justice and coming home

43:50 - my name's Korea santner i'm the president and ceo here at eastern state

43:54 - and i am privileged to have the three of you here

43:57 - with me tonight and tonight is a very special night

44:00 - tonight is actually the celebration of ead

44:03 - which is a wonderful religious holiday and to do

44:06 - it's service and justice i'm going to turn it over

44:10 - to a man Abdullah to give us a little bit of story and some history and

44:15 - a religious ceremony with us tonight thank you.

44:18 - Everyone thank you very much curry.

44:20 - Dr sultana thank you very very much

44:23 - for having me here to the

44:24 - anti eastern state family really appreciate

44:27 - being here

44:28 - as

44:29 - the soul dimension today is the Eve celebration

44:32 - and

44:33 - this is the second ied

44:35 - of the year so the only two eads we have

44:38 - to fit the

44:39 - witch hat guns at the end of the fasting month

44:41 - and then we have

44:42 - alcohol

44:43 - which is the celebration of the sacrifice.

44:46 - That is actually happening right now

44:49 - many of you may be familiar with the hajj

44:51 - or the pilgrimage

44:52 - where millions make the journey

44:55 - to makkah

44:56 - to celebrate that tradition so that's actually what we in the middle love

45:00 - right now.

45:02 - And anyone who is in the room who are celebrating to eat

45:05 - the greeting is ied mobile truck are all blessed deed

45:09 - to you.

45:10 - Than others especially meaningful and i'm going to be.

45:14 - You'll see me glancing at my tablet a bit and the reason is

45:18 - the often say you don't give a microphone to

45:21 - a politician and a professor

45:23 - or a priest right

45:25 - and somewhere along the line i became all three i teach.

45:30 - I teach.

45:32 - Part of the clergy

45:33 - and know i find myself in politics so

45:36 - i'm going to really try to stick

45:38 - to the time limit that i have

45:40 - with me to do.

45:42 - This either particular they

45:44 - mention is the aida sacrifice

45:45 - but as this i'd have a moment of return is this return to glory center community

45:50 - to what is most essential in our community.

45:53 - So as you mentioned these are the days of hodge

45:55 - on one of the things i want to touch on as

45:57 - what does this really commemorate

45:59 - a really high level

46:02 - this is a story of Abraham

46:04 - and his wife hija

46:06 - or hagar

46:07 - depending on how we are

46:08 - pronouncing it

46:10 - this Eve evening

46:11 - but this story and i know intellectually

46:14 - we have different versions of the story.

46:17 - But the the from the Muslim perspective ride the the version of the story goes that.

46:22 - Abraham's wife hugger

46:24 - oh

46:25 - yeah hydra

46:26 - she

46:26 - she had a child and

46:28 - Abraham was commanded by god

46:30 - to

46:30 - take his wife

46:32 - and child to makkah and leave them.

46:34 - So he takes them to mecca

46:36 - and he leaves them there

46:38 - and as he's leaving them

46:40 - hugger says

46:42 - what are you doing.

46:44 - Because there's an infant who she is with

46:45 - like what are you doing

46:47 - is a police that she was taken to

46:48 - they will unfamiliar with what are you doing

46:50 - and then she asks

46:51 - is this the command of your lord and he just says yes

46:55 - and she says in paraphrasing

46:57 - well if this is the command of your lord

46:59 - then your lord will not abandon me.

47:02 - Or your lord and that abandoned us

47:04 - and that was it

47:05 - and he left.

47:06 - So the reason why i touch on that and

47:08 - this idea of hajj

47:10 - everything that happens around it

47:12 - is about the family of Abraham.

47:15 - Rides the

47:16 - to walk around the kaaba

47:18 - the running between the two mountains that had or did

47:20 - everything of all the hajj

47:22 - is really in celebration recognition or commemoration of the family

47:27 - of the prophet Abraham

47:28 - peace be upon him.

47:30 - So

47:31 - in that summary right

47:32 - what this reminds us is that

47:35 - to be.

47:36 - Human.

47:39 - Is to be really

47:40 - dependent on god or the creator

47:43 - in so many ways

47:45 - but and also to be

47:46 - challenge and to struggle with things

47:49 - that are put before us

47:50 - by the creator himself.

47:52 - In our tradition we understand that rely on the creator

47:55 - as well as rely on each other.

47:58 - The pilgrimage itself is an active struggle

48:00 - endurance accountability support

48:02 - unwritten

48:03 - people walk together they worship together the arrest together

48:06 - we help strangers

48:08 - we carry one another true exhaustion

48:10 - on uncertainty heat

48:11 - and difficulty and.

48:14 - As someone who has made

48:15 - the hide before

48:16 - all of these things

48:18 - are just words

48:19 - when you experience it

48:21 - it's

48:21 - way more than the woods can actually

48:23 - convey

48:25 - but in many ways it stands in stark contrast to the system of

48:29 - incarceration

48:30 - that we have built and dr sorta touched on this

48:33 - earlier on in the convent shall adopt the moreland

48:35 - when we speak about this idea of isolation

48:38 - this idea of abandonment

48:39 - this idea of permanent exclusion

48:42 - the pilgrimage stands in stark contrast

48:45 - to that

48:46 - and

48:46 - so when we start speaking about this

48:48 - we have decided one of the tragedies of incarceration

48:51 - and caused the recent

48:53 - incarceration in this this country.

48:56 - Is not only the confinement itself

48:58 - but the erosion of this idea of belonging.

49:01 - Right that we are part of a community

49:04 - and that we are connected to each other

49:06 - and have faith or faith traditions is supposed to remind us

49:11 - of that right

49:12 - especially when it

49:13 - contrasts with this idea of incarceration

49:15 - the marriage that many people receive

49:17 - long after their release is that

49:19 - they are disposable they are disconnected

49:21 - and they're beyond restoration.

49:24 - Our faith traditions

49:26 - challenge that idea.

49:28 - Of faith traditions pushes back against this idea that

49:31 - human beings are disposable and listening to commentary

49:34 - you'll have mentioned about this idea that we are all born we are all created

49:38 - with this dignity

49:39 - that the creator bestowed upon us

49:42 - that

49:42 - faith traditions tell us that we should not be disconnected

49:46 - but we should be connected

49:47 - to the creator

49:48 - onto each other

49:49 - on faith traditions tell us that

49:51 - none of us

49:52 - are beyond restoration

49:54 - no matter what happened

49:56 - we are not beyond the

49:57 - rest of the region so.

49:59 - Because each human being

50:00 - is given dignity

50:02 - and because we're here

50:04 - in this space joining of this conversation i look forward

50:07 - to

50:08 - continuing in this conversation with you and i am pleased

50:11 - to be here on this city

50:13 - i have questions about doing it on this the right

50:15 - because i needed to get permission from my family

50:17 - to leave them

50:18 - but i really am please just based on what

50:21 - the conversation has been already

50:23 - to continue this conversation with you so thank you very much

50:26 - thank you

50:26 - please give them a round of applause.

50:32 - And

50:33 - i do want an accent thank you to your family that's in the room

50:36 - and your family that's online for allowing you to be here as well.

50:40 - There are a lot of our

50:42 - leaders for tonight both you and

50:46 - doctor price

50:47 - who is at home

50:48 - with his baby and his wife right now taking care of them

50:51 - there is a lot that our religious leaders do to hold onto community

50:56 - to take care of other people's communities and

50:58 - families because they see them as their own

51:00 - and they do also need to take care of their

51:03 - he says well so thank you so much for that work that you do

51:06 - and dr price if you're listening at home we thank

51:08 - you as well and please kiss that baby for us.

51:11 - So

51:12 - thank you for leading into that and thank you so much

51:16 - for talking about belonging we talk about

51:18 - that that is a modern word that is so powerful

51:21 - and really does centers in this conversation tonight

51:25 - and also reframing that word restoration for me

51:29 - we talk about restoration here all the time at eastern state i'm

51:33 - looking at like some of our board members in the room

51:35 - that literally do the work of physical restoration

51:38 - and to think about it in the sense of human restoration

51:42 - is just go going to be something that we talk about so much more at eastern state

51:47 - i would really like to go through with each one of

51:49 - you and talk about the work that you do in your field

51:53 - and take a moment to dive into the work that you're doing

51:56 - and share with our larger group here

51:59 - about how you're doing that work how each of your organization

52:02 - is connecting to your community building belonging

52:06 - and using your organization to do that work.

52:10 - Mister webb could you begin with this conversation we'll.

52:13 - Bring it

52:14 - to you over here.

52:17 - Absolutely thank you

52:18 - is the mic working okay

52:19 - alright

52:20 - so i'm neither a politician

52:22 - nor professor

52:24 - nor clergy so i have no excuse.

52:27 - That talk quickly and.

52:30 - I'll leave extra space for you in April.

52:33 - Remember the clergy also

52:35 - leave a lot of space.

52:38 - So i am the u s peace building director for the American friends service committee

52:43 - i joined the fsc in two thousand and ten.

52:46 - In our new York office

52:48 - where i was tasked with

52:50 - addressing the new York approach to healing justice which is

52:53 - how we talk about the criminal legal system

52:56 - and fsc

52:59 - in nineteen seventy

53:01 - nine i believe a seventy eight i forget

53:03 - issued a minute

53:04 - and that's a quake away of

53:06 - public statement

53:08 - and

53:09 - it issued that minute as result of the attica uprising.

53:13 - Does that mean

53:14 - something to everyone.

53:16 - And what that minutes said was that

53:18 - we are calling for a moratorium on prison construction.

53:23 - We are calling for a repeal of the exclusion clause of the

53:28 - thirteenth amendment which

53:29 - kind of justifies incarceration as slave labor

53:34 - and we also talked about a vision of prison abolition.

53:39 - So when i

53:40 - was given that minute my first day at work i kind of giggled inside

53:44 - because i had a

53:46 - long

53:46 - career in the criminal legal system

53:49 - started off as a prosecutor in new York city

53:51 - then started defending the largest jail in the country

53:55 - rikers island

53:56 - in court with

53:57 - a brown the ways that they were treating people lol

53:59 - and so i showed up at a fsc kind of thing

54:02 - yeah

54:02 - alright

54:03 - I'll do what i'm gonna do you guys can have this unbelievable and unrealistic vision

54:08 - of the world but i'm just going to show up and do what i do

54:10 - month

54:12 - and.

54:13 - Year after i started

54:15 - it was the.

54:17 - Fortieth anniversary of the attica rising

54:20 - and so in new York we decided that we would bring some of the attica brothers together

54:26 - to talk about that experience

54:28 - in nineteen seventy one

54:29 - and my task was to find the.

54:32 - Right

54:32 - so i started reaching out to people who i thought might know

54:36 - and they started giving me names

54:37 - and one of the names was hutch.

54:41 - So i reached out i found out where hutch was

54:44 - and i reached out to him and i said

54:46 - we would love for you to speak at this event

54:49 - and hutch said you know i'd love to

54:52 - but i don't know how to get to you

54:54 - and i said oh don't worry about it we can help you do that he said

54:57 - well i'm sure i can figure out the directions

55:00 - but i don't know how to get around.

55:03 - I didn't quite understand what he meant

55:05 - and he said well I've been in prison for forty four years.

55:08 - I came home about a year ago.

55:10 - I dunno how to cross the street.

55:13 - Cars weren't doing what they're doing now when i went to prison

55:17 - the world was very different.

55:19 - So we figured out a way to get hutch to our

55:21 - offices into the event at the riverside church

55:25 - and in those conversations with hutch and some of the other attica brothers i

55:30 - realized that my real role at fsc it

55:33 - would be to connect with those who have been

55:36 - sentenced to long term incarceration

55:39 - so that's why i decided to dedicate my work

55:41 - to the reentry

55:43 - and the experiences of serving more than fifteen years in prison.

55:48 - Thank you to her

55:52 - and so the easiest way was to find people who had

55:54 - recently come home after long term incarceration

55:58 - and i started making

55:59 - with establishing relationships with them

56:02 - and.

56:05 - None of you have been to my house for Thanksgiving ice.

56:08 - It is amazing you have

56:09 - i don't remember.

56:11 - Yeah you might have right.

56:13 - It's amazing as long as i do the cooking right

56:16 - but my

56:17 - bike's not here.

56:19 - She might be watching that

56:22 - i think the zoom link is on my desk somewhere.

56:25 - It's a possibility

56:26 - but

56:27 - might have been

56:28 - maybe.

56:30 - Twenty twelve at twenty thirteen

56:32 - i decided that i would invite some of the men that i had come to know.

56:36 - Add.

56:38 - In my work at a fsc c

56:39 - to my home for Thanksgiving dinner.

56:43 - Not sure it was the right decision to make but it was

56:45 - one that i decided to bring to my family in advance

56:48 - and i'm going to share this story with you because i want you all

56:52 - to kind of

56:53 - find out where you land in this story

56:55 - you know we're going to talk about faith

56:57 - and often we talk about faith as an institution

57:01 - but for me it's a personal relief kinship

57:03 - and so i'm going to invite you into that personal

57:06 - space with me

57:07 - and you're going to end up with a few choices

57:10 - okay

57:11 - so i went to my wife and i said

57:13 - i'd like to invite a few people over for Thanksgiving sure who.

57:17 - Larry jazz.

57:19 - I dunno them

57:20 - she

57:21 - said well i'm going to be honest with you.

57:23 - Jazz was a lieutenant for.

57:27 - Who was one of the major drug dealers i'm drawing a blank

57:30 - in new York in the seventies and eighties i forget the name

57:33 - but

57:34 - Nicky Barnes is that right

57:37 - and

57:38 - he had spent about thirty years in prison.

57:41 - And Larry.

57:44 - Had broken out of rikers island twice.

57:47 - Had murdered.

57:50 - Maybe three or four people.

57:53 - Yeah alright.

57:54 - Yeah and

57:56 - i'm inviting them to dinner.

57:59 - So my wife who's very.

58:02 - Claire and her perspective.

58:05 - He said to me don't you're not.

58:07 - And she started talking about her own life experience

58:10 - she had been the victim of a violent crime when she was young

58:13 - and we had a five year old at home and she started talking about.

58:19 - Take them out to dinner

58:20 - do something else i don't want them in the home

58:23 - and.

58:25 - It was an interesting conversation

58:27 - it was an opening conversation for me.

58:30 - Because i brought a certain perspective that wasn't hers.

58:34 - And as we have this conversation i don't know what your perspectives are

58:38 - but i invite you to decide are you more meat.

58:42 - Are you more my wife.

58:44 - Are you more Larry a jazz

58:46 - and what does it mean to be in any of those spaces

58:49 - whereas we have this conversation about reentry

58:52 - and faith

58:53 - okay

58:54 - so i just ask you to carry that with you throughout

58:56 - the rest of this conversation this evening.

58:59 - We survived they came and.

59:01 - Yeah

59:02 - they ate well

59:03 - and

59:03 - they've been back since.

59:07 - At fsc we

59:09 - we talked about the quaker tradition and it's relationship to this institution.

59:14 - As a matter of faith we believe that people find their god

59:18 - in themselves

59:20 - and we don't have religious leaders in the

59:22 - context of clergy members for the most part

59:24 - some.

59:25 - Meetings do but most of us

59:27 - vision of the world in which we commune with god and get to know them in our own way

59:32 - and

59:33 - when people are identified as having committed offences

59:37 - quakers believe the best way to reform

59:40 - and to rehabilitate

59:41 - was to give them opportunity to commune with god

59:44 - and unfortunately we thought that we met in solitary confinement.

59:49 - In silence

59:51 - so that there would be no distractions for that

59:53 - relationship and the opportunity to reform

59:56 - clearly a mistake one that has led to

59:58 - 618 horrific consequences for

01:00 - 04.828 people who have experienced it in for all of us i dare say why.

01:00 - 07.278 And so now my work is

01:00 - 08.478 pretty broad

01:00 - 11.298 it doesn't just limit myself to

01:00 - 12.198 prison work

01:00 - 14.898 now my task is to figure out a way to

01:00 - 16.588 bring peace

01:00 - 17.448 to the entire

01:00 - 18.108 us

01:00 - 22.398 so if you ever see me without a job you know i failed my performance review because

01:00 - 24.708 we're not quite at peace yet but that's that's

01:00 - 26.958 that's how i'm showing up in this space

01:00 - 27.858 and i.

01:00 - 30.078 Again encourage you to

01:00 - 32.238 think about how you're showing up in this space.

01:00 - 33.258 Thank you

01:00 - 34.338 thank you

01:00 - 35.628 i appreciate that

01:00 - 36.898 you

01:00 - 37.878 and in

01:00 - 41.107 the very method that you do so much restorative work is

01:00 - 44.388 it's always about reflecting back on oneself and saying

01:00 - 47.328 with no judge man where do you sit in a journey

01:00 - 51.918 and just looking about where you are and where you're moving forward

01:00 - 56.548 or where what direction you're moving at all even without a directional pointing.

01:00 - 58.758 Thank you i really appreciate that

01:00 - 59.808 now

01:00 - 00.528 and

01:01 - 03.708 reverend dr Damon Jones

01:01 - 06.288 i appreciate the amazing level

01:01 - 12.438 of accolades you all have up here you all are just so accomplished i was also fanning

01:01 - 14.748 out that he also has a street named after him

01:01 - 18.058 which is not a lotta people do envy.

01:01 - 19.594 That are still alive let's do

01:01 - 20.864 it.

01:01 - 21.590 But

01:01 - 24.364 you do such amazing work for your community

01:01 - 28.714 you have built up such an amazing impact in this city

01:01 - 33.514 could you talk a little bit about your organization and the work that you have done

01:01 - 35.644 with your entire family that you have brought

01:01 - 38.134 here tonight as well thank you so much for that

01:01 - 38.997 and

01:01 - 40.858 talk about the youth at your engaging and

01:01 - 43.354 the impact that you're having on their lives

01:01 - 44.944 tell us more about that

01:01 - 46.144 what sourcebooks for

01:01 - 47.734 remember excited to be you're

01:01 - 51.824 one of the few men in the world and looks forward to coming to prison.

01:01 - 53.014 But

01:01 - 55.784 fuck you for for having man

01:01 - 57.184 to to my colleagues here

01:01 - 58.664 and.

01:01 - 00.974 I just turned sixty years old

01:02 - 01.730 and

01:02 - 03.014 like you

01:02 - 04.184 and.

01:02 - 06.284 Somebody said whether.

01:02 - 09.604 So i said when you when you're past sixty you're getting older

01:02 - 13.364 you start telling stories based on how long you've done stuff.

01:02 - 14.534 So.

01:02 - 16.174 It was probably

01:02 - 19.294 about why i was a teenager will say that way

01:02 - 21.884 and i'm in Sunday school

01:02 - 24.704 and this class and my teacher.

01:02 - 28.294 You know is not such a wonderful job talking about the kingdom

01:02 - 29.744 and.

01:02 - 32.554 I didn't fully understand so he's explaining it and.

01:02 - 36.194 I said well i think i think i may have a call to preach

01:02 - 38.794 and he says we'll do the work of an evangelist

01:02 - 42.454 make full proof of your ministry quoting Bible i dunno what that means

01:02 - 44.764 so he says why don't you go

01:02 - 46.654 to the jail why me and i said no

01:02 - 48.574 i said i wanted to preach i didn't.

01:02 - 51.434 Say anything about going anybody jail.

01:02 - 52.624 And

01:02 - 57.434 finally he explained it all i go to jail with him it was the old homes work prison

01:02 - 01.204 and that's where i did my actual first public sermon was in

01:03 - 02.764 the gym at home-start prison

01:03 - 06.874 and from that moment i couldn't stop thinking about it

01:03 - 08.374 and i really wanted to

01:03 - 09.944 go back.

01:03 - 11.234 So

01:03 - 13.324 somebody else tells me i have a car then

01:03 - 14.104 and

01:03 - 17.344 you know this other young lady in our church says why go to the Philadelphia study

01:03 - 20.584 center at twenty the parkway and you could go

01:03 - 21.154 there

01:03 - 21.784 since you're

01:03 - 23.524 since the road is so far away

01:03 - 25.244 and i said.

01:03 - 30.194 What is it you study so i i have such a sheltered life i had no idea

01:03 - 32.044 that there was a juvenile prison

01:03 - 33.494 downtown

01:03 - 33.964 i just

01:03 - 35.384 had no idea.

01:03 - 39.574 So they take me there i meet this guy he's a chaplain reverend James hazard and he

01:03 - 42.274 starts teaching me all of this stuff about how to work with

01:03 - 44.584 kids who are incarcerated

01:03 - 46.564 and he assigned me the first day

01:03 - 50.206 to the unit where there are kids who were charged with

01:03 - 53.134 homicide i'm blown away i had no idea kids were killing

01:03 - 54.284 people.

01:03 - 58.774 So i work with those kids on that unit and that kind of started everything so

01:03 - 02.854 fast forward i ended up thirty two years ago as pastor of Bible way baptist church in

01:04 - 06.314 west Philadelphia where i tried to continue some of that work.

01:04 - 08.614 In the community working with young men

01:04 - 10.114 you know particularly who who have

01:04 - 12.664 you know are at risk and then

01:04 - 15.434 we had a mayor Michael nutter.

01:04 - 16.804 Who appoints me

01:04 - 17.954 too.

01:04 - 20.594 The board of ethics

01:04 - 23.254 and i'm sitting around these attorneys

01:04 - 24.484 and you'll appreciate this

01:04 - 26.824 and i dunno what they're talking about

01:04 - 27.304 you know

01:04 - 29.434 they're saying that campaign finance i mean

01:04 - 32.024 all this stuff city city council

01:04 - 33.785 and one day i'm just sitting here i don't know

01:04 - 36.274 what they're talking about i said does anybody here

01:04 - 40.744 get that can tell me what will inaugurate the eschaton and they all looked at me like

01:04 - 42.884 what do you mean i'm say exactly

01:04 - 46.924 i'm talking theological stuff none of you understand what i'm talking about and i

01:04 - 48.634 don't understand what you are talking about.

01:04 - 50.494 So i run into

01:04 - 51.214 another

01:04 - 54.074 and i said look i gotta get off this board i don't.

01:04 - 56.164 I have no passion for this adult

01:04 - 58.484 i'm not a lawyer i don't want to do this.

01:04 - 03.304 He says you gotta state because we're going into campaign season and we need the

01:05 - 06.574 board of ethics to be functioning and if you come off we don't have enough people and

01:05 - 08.314 we can't function nor campaign season

01:05 - 12.283 i said well if i'm taking one for the team what am i going to get.

01:05 - 14.044 And he says what do you want

01:05 - 15.034 well i'm thinking

01:05 - 17.224 if if the mayor says what do you want you

01:05 - 19.514 probably should have at least two things.

01:05 - 20.974 So

01:05 - 21.634 i said

01:05 - 23.559 well i'd like to have the property across the

01:05 - 25.414 street from my church if you could help me

01:05 - 27.364 somehow navigate that and he

01:05 - 29.812 he worked through city council and helped me

01:05 - 31.774 to get the property Crosby from our church.

01:05 - 35.824 I said the other thing is i want to get off the board of ethics and the first leaked

01:05 - 38.954 it opens on the board of prisons i'd like to have that seat

01:05 - 39.604 and

01:05 - 42.514 so he he signed off and i became part of the

01:05 - 43.594 border persons

01:05 - 46.124 that was fifteen years ago

01:05 - 47.952 and i'm still there we don't we're just getting

01:05 - 50.894 to the point of putting another board in place

01:05 - 53.044 but i'm no longer a board member

01:05 - 55.354 but in the process of that

01:05 - 59.294 i was able to create this program called the brotherhood foundation

01:05 - 02.804 which is a mess entering program that uses basketball

01:06 - 04.874 to get the kids.

01:06 - 08.374 Kind of to a place where we can have conversation with them

01:06 - 10.174 so every other Thursday

01:06 - 14.054 i take a team of anywhere between fifteen and twenty men.

01:06 - 15.184 From our church

01:06 - 18.904 and community and we go up to state road philosophy prisons

01:06 - 21.274 and we have a a bang basketball game

01:06 - 23.674 and then we have a mentoring session

01:06 - 25.144 what i didn't know

01:06 - 29.264 is that relationships would begin to build through this program

01:06 - 32.374 and so now we have and it's the same group that i started with

01:06 - 35.104 when i was at the study center years ago

01:06 - 38.764 these are all the kids that you all of you from Philadelphia you see on the news

01:06 - 40.864 these are these are the juvenile gang things

01:06 - 44.974 the shootings to the roxboro high school shooting just as all of this stuff that you

01:06 - 49.244 hear about on the news so these are the kids that that i'm actually working with

01:06 - 50.374 and so

01:06 - 51.544 that's the

01:06 - 54.574 that's what draws me into this space it's

01:06 - 56.944 it's building these relationships with

01:06 - 02.024 with kids that are for the most part kind of thrown away kind of forgotten

01:07 - 04.664 kind of left out kind of marginalized

01:07 - 06.064 and so

01:07 - 06.904 i

01:07 - 09.794 do this program and i bring

01:07 - 13.144 things that the system does not provide for them normally

01:07 - 16.514 unless you get it on commissary so.

01:07 - 20.104 My goal is to make sure that every kid has at least

01:07 - 22.894 seven changes of underwear because when you come in

01:07 - 24.844 prison only gives you one change

01:07 - 26.434 what you came in with and

01:07 - 28.664 whatever they give you.

01:07 - 30.874 Michael was a have sep so i raise money

01:07 - 33.484 to make sure that these kids have at least

01:07 - 34.174 you know

01:07 - 35.014 cause i'm thinking

01:07 - 36.394 what teenage boy

01:07 - 39.074 is going to wash his underwear out every night.

01:07 - 40.424 I.

01:07 - 40.984 Know

01:07 - 43.894 so so we provide that and then everytime we come

01:07 - 45.094 we bring a big

01:07 - 47.736 plastic bag gallon sized bag full of tasty cakes

01:07 - 50.834 and all kinds of snacks and those kind of things.

01:07 - 52.144 So people say how do you

01:07 - 54.994 how did you build a relationship with these kids these

01:07 - 57.424 are hardened kids they have killed people they have this

01:07 - 57.964 that

01:07 - 59.974 and and what they really say and is.

01:08 - 02.644 Already so connected to you because

01:08 - 04.414 most people don't I've never been

01:08 - 05.864 incarcerated

01:08 - 08.854 I've never been detained i dunno what handcuffs feel like

01:08 - 09.874 I've never

01:08 - 15.494 did any kind of drugs I've never hung out my sisters had to make me go to the prom.

01:08 - 17.464 I was a home guy

01:08 - 18.394 never

01:08 - 20.224 had two parents married

01:08 - 21.974 until they died

01:08 - 22.624 and

01:08 - 23.734 went to school

01:08 - 25.084 got my education

01:08 - 26.584 so there is nothing

01:08 - 29.524 that i had in common with these kids that i'm working with

01:08 - 33.374 and that's the part where i didn't realize what we were actually creating

01:08 - 35.284 because when i walk in

01:08 - 38.734 with what you i need toothpaste deodorant soap

01:08 - 40.064 snacks

01:08 - 41.294 underwear

01:08 - 43.784 it's like oh dad's here.

01:08 - 46.744 So you are providing the things that they don't have

01:08 - 51.794 and it's not long because normally a Metro relationship takes you with consistency

01:08 - 53.524 a good two years to build

01:08 - 55.004 a good relationship

01:08 - 56.854 ours happens in a couple of weeks

01:08 - 58.294 because i'm coming in

01:08 - 01.176 showing you that i'm concerned about you as opposed

01:09 - 03.214 to just telling you that i'm concerned about you

01:09 - 08.104 and so the program just says continue to to grow and develop

01:09 - 11.014 and it has morphed into something that is

01:09 - 12.334 at this point bigger than

01:09 - 13.484 me.

01:09 - 16.209 So that's what kind of draws me into this space.

01:09 - 18.724 There there's a level like

01:09 - 22.204 from an outside perspective somebody could look at that and say that's transactional

01:09 - 24.554 but in reality it's human dignity

01:09 - 27.034 and that is like when we look at

01:09 - 27.844 bass

01:09 - 31.024 you know in education we talk about maslin his theory of hierarchy

01:09 - 33.364 you're taking care of base needs

01:09 - 35.344 and that is human dignity

01:09 - 36.034 and

01:09 - 37.594 that children

01:09 - 41.074 are not getting that base human dignity need

01:09 - 44.224 and i mean that nobody is but children on top of that

01:09 - 45.554 is.

01:09 - 49.954 Is frightening it's quite honestly frightening but thank you frank thank you for that

01:09 - 52.804 service to our kids and they are our kids too

01:09 - 56.734 and we need to look at that and but again that thread thrill of

01:09 - 00.034 where are we in this journey where are we in this work

01:10 - 02.600 and what is how do we really connect and where is

01:10 - 06.644 that belonging and you really started us with that

01:10 - 07.485 and

01:10 - 08.404 again

01:10 - 09.154 mine

01:10 - 10.394 dr

01:10 - 11.164 keizer

01:10 - 17.254 like you you'll all are just doing so much good work out there and so much impact btw

01:10 - 18.514 your work

01:10 - 21.838 is in mediation is in teaching as you said in the

01:10 - 24.484 politics and the religion and all of this work

01:10 - 29.644 you have you have brought a new level into the city to connect the community to

01:10 - 31.954 to resources into support

01:10 - 32.974 how

01:10 - 34.414 where are you

01:10 - 39.554 connecting the city and how were you looking to go as well in your work.

01:10 - 41.684 Sorry big question.

01:10 - 43.984 Yeah.

01:10 - 46.864 I have this

01:10 - 48.614 vivid memory.

01:10 - 50.804 I had to be maybe.

01:10 - 52.204 I can put their

01:10 - 54.364 fifty so i had to meet maybe around

01:10 - 56.384 fifteen years old.

01:10 - 58.144 And

01:10 - 00.540 i remember i wasn't born in the united states

01:11 - 03.824 the accent may have given it away a little bit.

01:11 - 06.494 I was born in Trinidad and.

01:11 - 09.704 I have this distinct memory of my grandmother

01:11 - 11.194 she is supposed to be now

01:11 - 12.644 and

01:11 - 14.414 we were going to visit.

01:11 - 15.694 The prison

01:11 - 17.024 in Trinidad.

01:11 - 20.284 Because was his son my uncle who i looked up to a lot

01:11 - 21.914 he was incarcerated

01:11 - 24.254 and i remember.

01:11 - 28.050 Walking across the street with her

01:11 - 29.160 and

01:11 - 31.710 taking her accompanying her to the prison

01:11 - 33.700 to visit my uncle.

01:11 - 36.910 I think that was the first encounter

01:11 - 37.890 i had

01:11 - 39.030 with the

01:11 - 40.410 justice system

01:11 - 41.790 in that way

01:11 - 45.640 and as i said right this is an uncle i looked up to.

01:11 - 48.510 He at one point that he migrated to the united states

01:11 - 49.990 and.

01:11 - 54.040 Found himself incarcerated in the united states as well.

01:11 - 57.070 Came back home and.

01:11 - 59.380 Fallon himself.

01:11 - 00.750 Incarcerated

01:12 - 01.920 back home

01:12 - 03.660 again so he had

01:12 - 05.220 a consistent

01:12 - 07.660 relationship unfortunately

01:12 - 09.640 with the.

01:12 - 13.060 Cultural system of the prison system and.

01:12 - 14.280 He eventually died

01:12 - 14.850 in

01:12 - 16.390 and.

01:12 - 18.630 It wasn't a drive by shooting it was that they're shooting

01:12 - 20.460 at a card game he was at

01:12 - 22.720 and he he was killed.

01:12 - 26.320 And i mentioned that because.

01:12 - 28.909 I didn't think i was going to share that story

01:12 - 32.950 until i started really thinking of what was my first

01:12 - 34.120 initial

01:12 - 35.380 encounter

01:12 - 37.990 with this system and that.

01:12 - 39.580 Was it

01:12 - 41.880 and i think that has just sat with me

01:12 - 42.840 and

01:12 - 44.010 overtime

01:12 - 45.810 i'd have sat with me overtime

01:12 - 47.800 in terms of.

01:12 - 50.140 My other uncle.

01:12 - 51.960 Not somebody who

01:12 - 52.980 liked

01:12 - 54.450 being in the streets at all

01:12 - 56.260 that he was.

01:12 - 58.210 Closer to my age.

01:12 - 01.830 He was just not the person who would be involved in

01:13 - 03.040 anything

01:13 - 04.320 and

01:13 - 06.490 being young and.

01:13 - 08.470 A bit.

01:13 - 10.150 Followed.

01:13 - 15.340 I left my grandmother's home and i moved in with my uncle the same young uncle.

01:13 - 17.650 Who wasn't involved in anything.

01:13 - 22.240 And i remember i was at home one night and i heard this whimpering.

01:13 - 23.980 In the bathroom.

01:13 - 26.260 And

01:13 - 27.060 i'd be

01:13 - 28.360 transparent.

01:13 - 31.510 What woman does he have in the house.

01:13 - 33.040 This is what i'm thinking

01:13 - 36.640 and i go to the bathroom and he's sitting on the floor

01:13 - 38.640 and it's because he was shot

01:13 - 41.350 in his back in a drive by shooting.

01:13 - 43.270 I.

01:13 - 46.330 Took him to the police station and.

01:13 - 51.580 The we're just not paying any attention to him or anything like that

01:13 - 54.120 and then eventually an ambulance took him to the

01:13 - 55.080 to the hospital

01:13 - 57.180 i don't think we ever found out who

01:13 - 58.320 committed

01:13 - 00.220 the crime.

01:14 - 02.130 Fast

01:14 - 04.300 that i migrate to the united states

01:14 - 06.764 and this idea of justice

01:14 - 07.740 this idea of

01:14 - 09.840 how do we get people

01:14 - 11.520 to stay connected

01:14 - 13.180 to each other.

01:14 - 16.890 I think it was just sitting there and i never really dove into it

01:14 - 18.780 i got involved in ity

01:14 - 20.580 because ID was allowing me to

01:14 - 22.290 hitter bills and stuff like that

01:14 - 25.800 but something just continue to be missing and i think eventually

01:14 - 29.040 that's when i started getting more into the conflict resolution

01:14 - 29.700 work

01:14 - 31.680 and i'm glad adopted Jones

01:14 - 34.780 i mentioned this idea of connection

01:14 - 37.110 because throughout the work

01:14 - 38.880 that i found myself doing

01:14 - 41.320 it always came back to that.

01:14 - 41.940 That

01:14 - 45.030 the only way the main way that folks

01:14 - 47.230 continue to find restoration

01:14 - 49.950 continued to find reformation continue to defined

01:14 - 51.780 the things that

01:14 - 53.610 have some meaning to them

01:14 - 54.990 issue connection

01:14 - 57.190 but consistent connection

01:14 - 58.710 and i would posit that

01:14 - 01.410 the reason why this his

01:15 - 04.050 relationships these relationships form

01:15 - 06.630 is because of the consistency of every other Thursday

01:15 - 07.410 right

01:15 - 08.640 if it was once a year

01:15 - 09.870 very different right

01:15 - 11.280 but consistency

01:15 - 12.450 and connection

01:15 - 14.560 it moves us to where.

01:15 - 15.360 We need

01:15 - 18.060 to be in it from all of the work that I've been

01:15 - 20.430 doing it this way so now answering your question

01:15 - 21.900 that the thought in a mall

01:15 - 23.050 directory.

01:15 - 25.080 So what do i do here

01:15 - 28.080 and the mayor's office of Muslim engagement here in the city of Philadelphia

01:15 - 30.790 that I've been here for two and a half years.

01:15 - 32.200 I.

01:15 - 35.050 Two.

01:15 - 38.340 Two months ago we finally got

01:15 - 40.810 three Muslim chaplains

01:15 - 42.450 to be employed

01:15 - 43.350 on state route

01:15 - 44.550 right so

01:15 - 45.880 on.

01:15 - 49.050 I need to name this right when you look at the population

01:15 - 51.210 i'd see it rude when you look at the population

01:15 - 53.970 of July of the July June justice services center

01:15 - 55.770 at fortieth and have fun now

01:15 - 58.860 i know London center city but fortieth and hopefully now

01:15 - 00.010 right.

01:16 - 02.770 The majority of them.

01:16 - 04.030 Identify.

01:16 - 08.080 From what we understand as Muslim.

01:16 - 09.340 Right.

01:16 - 11.400 Two months ago

01:16 - 14.850 when i visit my three ovens the road this is where the

01:16 - 16.650 the juveniles who are

01:16 - 19.710 being tried as adults for the most serious crimes

01:16 - 23.230 out of the eleven of them who were in mod three.

01:16 - 24.870 Eleven of them

01:16 - 26.320 identified

01:16 - 28.090 as Muslim.

01:16 - 32.010 Why am i sharing this

01:16 - 33.130 publicly

01:16 - 33.780 because

01:16 - 36.580 i find i find myself

01:16 - 38.920 in the work that i'm doing.

01:16 - 40.450 In the middle.

01:16 - 43.200 Of this work i like my work kind of

01:16 - 44.100 my work is not

01:16 - 45.360 divorced from

01:16 - 47.140 how do we engage

01:16 - 49.060 in making sure that.

01:16 - 50.880 Our families our youth

01:16 - 54.460 when they return that they returning to communities

01:16 - 55.650 that care for them

01:16 - 57.180 and love on them

01:16 - 59.260 as we often see.

01:16 - 00.150 I think somewhere in

01:17 - 04.110 twenty twenty i was the cool convener of

01:17 - 07.080 the muslims for criminal justice reform

01:17 - 07.980 right on

01:17 - 09.840 the idea behind this was that

01:17 - 13.590 we needed to use the principles of the faith and a tradition

01:17 - 14.370 to

01:17 - 20.200 help folks reintegrate themselves into society right into the communities.

01:17 - 24.450 In my role here in the city of Philadelphia

01:17 - 27.010 right now we're also working on.

01:17 - 29.010 Getting an islamic studies instructor

01:17 - 32.190 for the juvenile justice services center alright

01:17 - 34.770 because we do believe and we do know

01:17 - 35.400 that

01:17 - 37.240 traditional faith.

01:17 - 39.940 Is something that moves right

01:17 - 43.660 but i want to go back to some of that dr moreland said earlier on.

01:17 - 45.310 That really resonated.

01:17 - 47.380 It is not a theology

01:17 - 49.890 or otherwise a faith practitioner

01:17 - 51.960 we love to believe as a theology

01:17 - 54.130 that most people write.

01:17 - 58.690 Let me hope i don't get stripped of my credentials up.

01:17 - 02.020 The theology is important right.

01:18 - 03.720 But anyone who is looking

01:18 - 05.700 who i might be reporting to write

01:18 - 07.540 the theology is important

01:18 - 09.820 but it is not the theology

01:18 - 11.140 alone

01:18 - 13.860 that really gets people to where we need them to be.

01:18 - 15.000 Right

01:18 - 16.990 it is the community

01:18 - 18.870 engaging in the proper

01:18 - 20.640 practice of that theology

01:18 - 22.560 that connects them that grounds then

01:18 - 23.820 it is the

01:18 - 28.950 the way we act upon that theology that practice that we see we believe in

01:18 - 30.300 that people connect with

01:18 - 33.940 i can stand up and give assuming all day long.

01:18 - 36.570 That will not move anyone necessarily

01:18 - 37.870 the change.

01:18 - 38.430 Right

01:18 - 39.810 it is when i

01:18 - 41.890 am going to change that.

01:18 - 44.470 I was given a someone one day

01:18 - 48.730 and ended much that i i operate on mustard cobalt in west Philadelphia.

01:18 - 52.890 And there was this brother who i met we used to do this thinking about this.

01:18 - 54.670 This

01:18 - 56.280 praying to pop thing that we did

01:18 - 57.390 for many years

01:18 - 59.973 and there was this young brother talked it up

01:18 - 02.400 and everything like that he had returned home

01:19 - 04.420 and he had a key spending

01:19 - 06.310 and he came

01:19 - 07.890 introduce them to the community

01:19 - 10.810 and just connected with him he was a young guy.

01:19 - 13.330 I remember one guy was giving a sermon

01:19 - 14.530 and.

01:19 - 17.160 I thought of him while i was given the similar because

01:19 - 18.570 he was someone who

01:19 - 19.930 he came

01:19 - 21.550 and he stayed.

01:19 - 23.580 He came

01:19 - 25.330 and he stayed

01:19 - 27.840 and i remember performing his marriage ceremony

01:19 - 29.310 to young Lydia who we

01:19 - 30.360 eventually

01:19 - 32.140 got married to.

01:19 - 38.135 I don't remember.

01:19 - 44.110 Maybe months after i got the job in the city.

01:19 - 47.140 I was walking through.

01:19 - 49.380 The courtyard

01:19 - 51.790 by city hall they're going to the office

01:19 - 53.980 and i saw this guy.

01:19 - 58.690 And for a moment i didn't recognize him.

01:20 - 01.420 And then.

01:20 - 04.240 I saw who he was

01:20 - 06.270 and let's call him James for

01:20 - 09.760 the sake of this ride and i James.

01:20 - 11.560 How you doing.

01:20 - 12.750 And he's like

01:20 - 14.730 guys i'm just alright i'm cool

01:20 - 16.923 like know how you doing

01:20 - 19.920 and i said how is your mom doing it's like well i'm not there anymore

01:20 - 21.720 i'm just living out here no

01:20 - 24.310 women are living out here.

01:20 - 26.800 He's like yeah i'm just.

01:20 - 27.780 Out here

01:20 - 29.350 now.

01:20 - 33.880 I said okay so what can i do how can i support you what can i.

01:20 - 35.340 Do tell me anything you need.

01:20 - 38.170 It's like i just want a cup of coffee.

01:20 - 46.870 And i asked myself.

01:20 - 50.920 Where did we feel.

01:20 - 53.380 In creating a system.

01:20 - 56.350 That he could stay connected to.

01:20 - 58.860 Like what was it

01:20 - 01.270 and i know it's not on us.

01:21 - 02.670 What is a question that

01:21 - 04.540 as faith leaders

01:21 - 06.120 we have to ask like

01:21 - 09.480 what is it that we didn't do enough

01:21 - 10.600 of

01:21 - 13.050 to create a community where someone

01:21 - 15.225 no matter what their navigating

01:21 - 17.580 they can still find a point of connection

01:21 - 19.770 on a point of restoration

01:21 - 21.730 in that space

01:21 - 22.500 and

01:21 - 24.330 for me when you ask me

01:21 - 24.930 does this

01:21 - 28.000 where do i see my work going.

01:21 - 28.830 Is

01:21 - 31.390 in all of the different spaces

01:21 - 32.850 that i find myself

01:21 - 36.280 what does it mean to create a community

01:21 - 36.960 that s.

01:21 - 41.638 No matter what steered condition or speeds they find themselves in

01:21 - 43.858 can find a space to connect

01:21 - 45.668 in that community

01:21 - 48.608 because i think that is the only way that we can really

01:21 - 49.858 truly give

01:21 - 52.168 a full way of restoration and

01:21 - 54.328 reconnection the things that matter

01:21 - 55.836 the most.

01:21 - 57.238 Thank you

01:21 - 58.228 and

01:21 - 07.438 i feel like that needs a round of applause i'm sorry yeah for a few things there that

01:22 - 11.248 i want to know thank you for sharing your story your family story

01:22 - 13.048 and the one that

01:22 - 15.308 so many people are impacted.

01:22 - 20.908 By the joy justice system in so many ways and we don't share those stories

01:22 - 23.458 we don't talk about that moment that

01:22 - 24.058 and

01:22 - 27.111 one of you shared it earlier that constellation of moments

01:22 - 29.608 of those interactive points with the justice system

01:22 - 32.326 and it's sometimes for some people a shame

01:22 - 34.798 sometimes it's fear sometimes it's trying to

01:22 - 36.628 push it out of your memory

01:22 - 40.138 but so many of us are impacted by it

01:22 - 45.388 and we need to share those conversations so we can engage in no larger community

01:22 - 48.448 about how to solve problems as that community

01:22 - 52.468 so i wanted to acknowledge and thank you all for sharing those stories

01:22 - 56.728 to air out those things and to shine the light on those

01:22 - 59.814 and to be brave in sharing those pieces so we can

01:22 - 02.638 move forward and other people can share those as well

01:23 - 06.788 so i appreciate that from you and so powerful

01:23 - 09.898 and you know as you all share those stories

01:23 - 13.558 we we dive into it and professor moreland you shared this earlier

01:23 - 17.638 we do know that there is a lot of research out there that shows

01:23 - 22.528 that people that find faith within incarcerated settings and have

01:23 - 24.868 faith communities that come home to

01:23 - 30.038 it is a mixed bag of survival with those faith communities

01:23 - 32.518 sometimes it is a higher rate

01:23 - 37.678 of the ability to to be in a traumatic setting of incarcerate ration

01:23 - 39.058 and come home

01:23 - 42.538 and stay home because of those faith communities

01:23 - 45.058 and some of the data also shows

01:23 - 47.098 that that is not true

01:23 - 50.308 and the when you dig into the research

01:23 - 56.548 what you find out is where those touchpoints and so it is quite brilliant that all

01:23 - 01.528 three of you or really analyzing the work that you're doing within your communities

01:24 - 04.378 within your systems to analyze that

01:24 - 06.298 to say how are we building this

01:24 - 11.618 what are the relationships how are we building belonging and what more can we do

01:24 - 12.208 because

01:24 - 12.958 even the

01:24 - 15.388 even all the research tells us

01:24 - 17.938 it is a hard mixture to do

01:24 - 20.838 so thank you for that brilliance that honesty

01:24 - 23.368 and that work that you're putting into it

01:24 - 26.068 and also that you are not alone

01:24 - 31.108 that there is community here and out there that can build upon it

01:24 - 36.058 and this is quite honestly this is the whole of the community if you're within a

01:24 - 38.780 faith community or outside of faith community i think it

01:24 - 42.518 is the role of the larger community to support one another

01:24 - 47.398 one of the things that i feel is so important about the history here at eastern state

01:24 - 51.028 and the celebration of this re-clean series is

01:24 - 54.958 this is not a new idea you know we talk about

01:24 - 59.278 the trauma of the past but there was also strong commit entity of the past the reason

01:24 - 01.658 we have a synagogue here is the power

01:25 - 04.795 of the families in the Jewish community in this community

01:25 - 10.268 that you know eight nineteen twenty two there was

01:25 - 13.018 a synagogue here on site that is

01:25 - 16.558 mind blowing in america absolutely mind blowing

01:25 - 19.288 but do you know know that they also

01:25 - 19.798 bought

01:25 - 21.538 the family and the community

01:25 - 24.178 and community volunteers like John Paul

01:25 - 27.008 they also bought homes

01:25 - 31.628 and they helped community members within the larger community

01:25 - 34.288 groups of people both incarcerated people

01:25 - 37.438 and Jewish community members within the community

01:25 - 41.998 park art of jcrc our local Jewish federation community

01:25 - 45.348 they work together raising money from incarcerated

01:25 - 48.178 people here at eastern state and people at home

01:25 - 51.958 to take care of families within Philadelphia

01:25 - 55.168 and to give them housing when they came home

01:25 - 56.728 to get them jobs to

01:25 - 58.748 train them when they were here.

01:25 - 03.148 This is something we do for each other we help each other we lift each other up

01:26 - 06.338 that was stuff they were doing in the nineteen twenties

01:26 - 08.348 and the nineteen tens

01:26 - 10.333 and so how do we build on that how do we

01:26 - 13.108 learn from that and how do we continue to grow

01:26 - 15.778 so i'm going to toss it back to each one of you

01:26 - 17.578 to kind of pull through this

01:26 - 21.898 how do you you see so mr webb as you as your work continues

01:26 - 25.198 you're also working not just at coming home

01:26 - 28.088 but also to stop

01:26 - 30.208 people going to with the

01:26 - 31.318 ending the prison

01:26 - 33.988 school to prison pipeline so could you talk a little bit about

01:26 - 36.418 toggling that back and forth in

01:26 - 38.578 the work that you do to ensure that

01:26 - 42.608 our youngest aren't going to prison in the first place.

01:26 - 44.168 Absolutely.

01:26 - 48.068 I'm full of stories that's another.

01:26 - 50.408 Side effect of getting older.

01:26 - 53.138 So.

01:26 - 54.028 Again

01:26 - 56.278 most of my life has been in new York city

01:26 - 59.468 and for a number of those years i lived in the Bronx

01:26 - 01.628 and i was working for fsc

01:27 - 04.028 doing policing work

01:27 - 08.338 and in new York during that time there was a practice known as stop and frisk does it

01:27 - 09.598 have context for your.

01:27 - 11.258 Income

01:27 - 12.608 and.

01:27 - 14.912 You know when the idea was brought to me in my

01:27 - 18.878 office you know we need a fsc to step into this site.

01:27 - 22.888 Forty something years old i don't know what it means to be stopped the rest

01:27 - 25.808 they don't bother me i'm not a threat to anybody

01:27 - 27.938 but i have three sons

01:27 - 31.389 and so before i decided that i would bring a

01:27 - 34.018 fsc and it's resources to this work in new York

01:27 - 36.838 said i need to talk to people who know what this is

01:27 - 37.988 right.

01:27 - 40.859 And so one evening i got home and my middle son

01:27 - 43.108 who i think was fifteen or sixteen at the time.

01:27 - 44.818 I said to him

01:27 - 48.338 by accident have you ever been stopped by the police

01:27 - 49.468 and he said

01:27 - 51.638 yeah all the time.

01:27 - 55.178 And that landed heavily on me right

01:27 - 58.828 and so my follow up question was how does that make you feel

01:27 - 01.058 wow has it made you feel.

01:28 - 04.228 And his response landed twice as heavily

01:28 - 06.248 he said to me.

01:28 - 08.708 It's no big deal that's what they do.

01:28 - 12.764 And what that convinced me of is that we have now

01:28 - 15.718 created a generation of mostly young black men

01:28 - 18.338 who have devalued themselves

01:28 - 20.978 because of a system of policing

01:28 - 23.288 and cultural states that

01:28 - 24.148 have told them

01:28 - 25.588 for way too long

01:28 - 27.928 who they are what role they have in society

01:28 - 29.638 and how they need to be cont trolled

01:28 - 30.208 right

01:28 - 33.466 so that led me to understand there is this thing

01:28 - 36.328 called a school to prison pipeline where we are

01:28 - 37.658 actually

01:28 - 38.968 preparing young men.

01:28 - 41.978 Mostly young black men mostly.

01:28 - 43.138 For that journey

01:28 - 44.738 okay.

01:28 - 46.108 I dunno if this is

01:28 - 49.148 a true story but i read somewhere that.

01:28 - 51.158 Probably in the sixties

01:28 - 54.178 they would decide how many prison beds they needed

01:28 - 58.418 by the number of black boys that were born in a particular.

01:28 - 59.548 Year

01:28 - 00.388 is that true

01:29 - 04.148 okay i i prayed that it wasn't but yeah.

01:29 - 05.338 So

01:29 - 07.915 that's where i decided that at least part of my work

01:29 - 11.533 needed to be on what we call the front end of the system.

01:29 - 13.058 That feeder.

01:29 - 16.538 Cassville states in prisons and jails and the light

01:29 - 16.978 and

01:29 - 18.908 how do you do that.

01:29 - 24.028 You can talk to the young people stay out of trouble avoid spaces where you're going

01:29 - 28.688 to encounter the police but that puts the burden in the wrong spot in my opinion.

01:29 - 30.788 The real burden is ours.

01:29 - 35.618 And at fsc we have this initiative called think twice.

01:29 - 37.829 Which invites each and every one of us and

01:29 - 41.078 therefore i'm inviting each and every one of you.

01:29 - 43.258 Before you dial nine one one

01:29 - 45.338 think of it's consequences.

01:29 - 52.148 What is the value of bringing a armed law enforcement officer.

01:29 - 54.098 Into that space.

01:29 - 57.008 Who are you putting in harm's way.

01:29 - 59.618 What role do you want them to serve

01:30 - 02.832 and if we pause before we got those three digits

01:30 - 05.668 something we've all been taught since childhood right

01:30 - 09.788 that that's how you respond to conflict you dial nine one one.

01:30 - 13.718 What happens if we thought of another way of dealing with that conflict.

01:30 - 15.538 How much less

01:30 - 18.458 with the school to prison pipeline be a reality.

01:30 - 21.853 So that's step one right to really decrease the

01:30 - 24.868 likelihood that certain populations are going to continue

01:30 - 28.078 to be targeted by the we the entry into this

01:30 - 29.678 into the system.

01:30 - 31.928 I will not.

01:30 - 36.458 Leave this conversation without talking about what we call re-entry though.

01:30 - 38.908 And i say we call because

01:30 - 43.018 when i'm talking to funders when i'm talking to colleagues i use that term because

01:30 - 47.578 that means something to people but for me it's nothing about me entry because

01:30 - 50.258 somebody the people that are returning from prison.

01:30 - 53.138 Were never really part of society in the beginning.

01:30 - 56.128 They had been ostracized long before they ended up in a prison

01:30 - 57.658 and so

01:30 - 59.248 i talk about

01:30 - 00.968 how do we.

01:31 - 04.448 Enter into right relationship with those who are returning.

01:31 - 07.268 And where does that burden lie.

01:31 - 08.348 Right.

01:31 - 14.338 Some people say well it's the responsibility of the person coming home to prepare for

01:31 - 16.408 history to his or her return

01:31 - 18.038 while incarcerated.

01:31 - 22.658 Others say the responsibility of reentry actually begins.

01:31 - 24.878 At the point of sentencing.

01:31 - 30.128 I believe that reentry begins before the person is even arrested.

01:31 - 32.438 And that begins

01:31 - 33.688 with my

01:31 - 34.988 commitment

01:31 - 37.018 to welcoming every and everyone

01:31 - 37.888 anyone

01:31 - 39.698 into my space.

01:31 - 43.660 If they are taken away because of whatever

01:31 - 47.260 i'm already prepared to be there when they get out

01:31 - 51.450 and that has nothing to do with how you know if it's a correctional system or

01:31 - 52.650 a punitive system

01:31 - 54.390 it's about where do i

01:31 - 56.440 land in all of this.

01:31 - 59.280 Am i willing to have Thanksgiving dinner with jazz and

01:31 - 00.550 Larry.

01:32 - 04.720 Am i willing to open up my.

01:32 - 06.520 House of worship

01:32 - 08.350 to every and anyone.

01:32 - 10.960 Do i need to.

01:32 - 15.700 Do i need them to rely on the state to meet their needs.

01:32 - 18.600 A state that has punished them

01:32 - 20.170 has.

01:32 - 21.760 Been.

01:32 - 23.310 Harmful to them

01:32 - 25.120 most of their lives

01:32 - 29.890 and the answer is if we want success in that re entry right relationship.

01:32 - 32.680 We can't rely on institutions.

01:32 - 36.100 We really have to rely on.

01:32 - 42.100 When i wake up today am i as equally prepared to welcome Larry as i am.

01:32 - 44.200 My best friend down the street.

01:32 - 48.720 And if the answer is no then no matter what the person incarcerated does

01:32 - 50.640 on his or her reentry guarantee

01:32 - 52.300 it won't be successful.

01:32 - 53.890 Because

01:32 - 55.328 there's nothing.

01:32 - 57.790 Welcoming to come back to

01:32 - 58.890 and so

01:32 - 01.650 when i get to have these conversations

01:33 - 03.810 i very often start with

01:33 - 06.160 my colleagues at work.

01:33 - 09.000 My friends doing whatever we do

01:33 - 10.470 and i'm going

01:33 - 11.384 including

01:33 - 12.000 just going to

01:33 - 14.010 borrow this because when i read that you

01:33 - 16.390 do your work around basketball

01:33 - 18.750 and i realize where i am

01:33 - 21.030 and how successful the Knicks are

01:33 - 22.600 i'm sorry.

01:33 - 26.160 Yeah sorry about that.

01:33 - 29.290 Dangerous ground.

01:33 - 32.897 Back to the topic at hand.

01:33 - 34.770 If.

01:33 - 37.000 You're on something.

01:33 - 39.360 I welcome all your seventy sixers fan

01:33 - 41.490 reentry into the reality of.

01:33 - 43.903 Basketball right.

01:33 - 49.348 Yeah it took a minute or two but

01:33 - 50.650 yeah

01:33 - 53.530 we don't think beyond the immediate right

01:33 - 55.650 but really if we're going to

01:33 - 59.100 have a deep honest conversation about

01:33 - 02.830 what happens when people are returning from incarceration.

01:34 - 05.920 The answer in my opinion is.

01:34 - 07.660 Am i ready.

01:34 - 09.730 Are we ready.

01:34 - 14.050 I know the system did not make them ready.

01:34 - 17.160 And so the burden is mine.

01:34 - 19.330 The burden is ours.

01:34 - 20.100 So

01:34 - 22.150 call the police less.

01:34 - 24.670 Decrease the pathway to prison.

01:34 - 28.170 Decrease the pathway back to prison by

01:34 - 30.480 working on my own ability to

01:34 - 32.590 welcome the stranger.

01:34 - 36.180 Thank you thank you so much for giving it

01:34 - 40.990 and gaffer

01:34 - 43.146 i love how you bring it back to it is our

01:34 - 45.682 responsibility and we started this conversation with

01:34 - 48.660 rights and responsibilities and it is those

01:34 - 49.530 pastor

01:34 - 51.390 thinking about that

01:34 - 53.790 the next two hundred and fifty years rs

01:34 - 57.460 how do you see the work of reentry

01:34 - 59.151 and the goals of where

01:34 - 01.950 you want to see our country moving forward

01:35 - 05.610 where do you see this work moving forward so

01:35 - 08.590 you were doing well too much of the sixers.

01:35 - 10.120 Really.

01:35 - 12.310 Cut that out.

01:35 - 15.070 Start by quoting or something like that.

01:35 - 16.920 So

01:35 - 19.039 you know something he mentioned kind of trigger

01:35 - 22.680 something to me when i was a seminary professor and

01:35 - 23.170 i

01:35 - 28.140 took a group of students up to it it was an intensive funerals intensive

01:35 - 30.750 classes so we only had a couple of days to

01:35 - 32.561 to work with the students

01:35 - 33.120 and

01:35 - 34.750 took them to

01:35 - 36.970 have a filler if your public school

01:35 - 37.339 and

01:35 - 40.179 the next day we went to turn off your prisons

01:35 - 42.000 and after both visits

01:35 - 46.210 at a korean student in the class and he comes home and he says i feel tears

01:35 - 47.070 and i

01:35 - 50.490 dunno what he meant by that another student says he says he feels like crying

01:35 - 51.120 i'm like

01:35 - 52.710 why why do you feel like crying

01:35 - 55.510 he says what are you what are you Americans

01:35 - 57.090 training your kids for.

01:35 - 58.500 That so what do you mean

01:35 - 00.583 and and i'm thinking you already got me because

01:36 - 02.460 i think he got what i was trying to show him

01:36 - 03.630 and

01:36 - 05.760 he says well we go in the school

01:36 - 06.270 and

01:36 - 09.540 the kids are wearing light blue tops and dark blue bottoms and.

01:36 - 15.100 We go on the cafeteria and they have these trays and you peel the top of the trip.

01:36 - 17.190 There's bars on the windows

01:36 - 17.760 there's

01:36 - 20.650 there's one teacher for about thirty kids

01:36 - 23.010 and then we go to jail and guess what.

01:36 - 26.070 The inmates are walking around and light blue tops and.

01:36 - 28.200 Dark blue bottoms and

01:36 - 30.930 when they eat the peel this tray

01:36 - 31.860 and

01:36 - 34.920 there's bars everywhere and there's one officer for

01:36 - 36.210 sixty inmates

01:36 - 41.220 what are we preparing these kids for and he was exactly right and that's what i

01:36 - 43.423 wanted them to see that there was a problem

01:36 - 47.080 that we have to work at we have to admit exist

01:36 - 48.390 and we have to

01:36 - 49.980 make sure we do something about it.

01:36 - 52.270 So that's the one thing the other thing is i

01:36 - 55.360 wanted to come back to something that you said.

01:36 - 57.330 About it not being about

01:36 - 58.540 religion

01:36 - 59.980 and

01:37 - 00.660 you know i'm a

01:37 - 01.770 baptist preacher

01:37 - 02.970 you know so

01:37 - 05.453 and he's right on state road the last time you were there

01:37 - 08.560 there were eleven there's five thousand up right now.

01:37 - 11.280 But there was a time when there was about thirty

01:37 - 12.060 and

01:37 - 13.650 just about all of them

01:37 - 14.850 were muslims

01:37 - 16.740 how does a baptist preacher

01:37 - 18.300 connect to all of these

01:37 - 19.420 muslims.

01:37 - 22.957 I can't connect over theology because our theology is

01:37 - 26.590 not the same but he's right we connect over consistency

01:37 - 28.840 and even more than consistency

01:37 - 31.450 over love with consistency.

01:37 - 33.430 So.

01:37 - 36.380 We do we do a lot of that kind of work what do we want

01:37 - 39.250 to do going forward we want to keep collaborating.

01:37 - 41.776 People often ask me or what are you it's

01:37 - 44.460 great what you guys are doing inside the jail

01:37 - 45.900 what are you doing to keep

01:37 - 47.250 people from getting there

01:37 - 49.470 and my standard answer is

01:37 - 50.850 no what are you doing

01:37 - 54.120 you know i'm doing what i can can do what i know that i'm

01:37 - 57.700 assigned by god to do what i'm gifted to do

01:37 - 03.010 but i also have to partner with other people who are doing the parts that i can't do.

01:38 - 05.160 Clues what you do and includes what you do

01:38 - 06.630 and what other people do

01:38 - 09.390 and i think if we continue to do that

01:38 - 12.090 then we're moving the ball forward

01:38 - 13.680 and doing a much better job

01:38 - 14.096 than

01:38 - 15.060 what we've been doing

01:38 - 17.670 sometimes everybody does it a little silo thing

01:38 - 20.490 and everybody everybody wants credit for what they do

01:38 - 22.950 but i think the more we work together

01:38 - 27.460 the stronger the coalition becomes and the more impact we can have.

01:38 - 29.460 I have a letter if i can

01:38 - 30.000 only

01:38 - 30.390 have.

01:38 - 32.670 It won't take long really won't take long at all

01:38 - 36.220 i got permission from one of the kids to.

01:38 - 38.460 Work with to share this with you

01:38 - 41.010 and not just with you he told me i

01:38 - 43.950 need to carry around and share with anybody i cant make contact with

01:38 - 44.790 but

01:38 - 47.410 this is a kid who's on state road

01:38 - 49.560 and he says they call me doc

01:38 - 50.430 on state road

01:38 - 52.917 all right so your dog i would like to i told

01:38 - 54.900 you was my sixtieth birthday back in April

01:38 - 56.730 he said i want to say happy birthday

01:38 - 59.940 i really wrote this letter to tell you how much you mean to me

01:39 - 01.710 and how much i appreciate you

01:39 - 04.800 my dad was in jail most of my life

01:39 - 07.410 and I've been in and out of jail since thirteen he's

01:39 - 09.160 right now he's seventeen.

01:39 - 12.330 So i really never had a role model well a good one

01:39 - 16.080 i just feel loved and cared about when i'm around you and the team

01:39 - 18.880 y'all show me it's bigger than the streets and

01:39 - 22.540 people care about black boys like me and my peers

01:39 - 25.380 and it's your birthday you get an old man i

01:39 - 26.010 hope

01:39 - 29.100 i hope everyone to have a dog and they live life because

01:39 - 31.170 you're remote role model i needed

01:39 - 34.024 you were like a real cool overhead.

01:39 - 38.380 To your swag your walk your talk

01:39 - 40.150 and you're not corny.

01:39 - 44.860 Even though we only knew each other for six months i can tell you.

01:39 - 46.410 You care about me

01:39 - 50.820 like you knew me my whole life i just wanted to tell you how much you meant to me

01:39 - 56.170 as a young black man i love your dog keep up the work and happy birthday old man.

01:39 - 59.190 That's really not just about me it's about the whole team.

01:39 - 01.800 Because he mentions that in here or that goes in

01:40 - 04.410 and we can make a difference

01:40 - 06.280 if we are consistent

01:40 - 09.480 and regardless of theology one of the things that that we

01:40 - 11.130 will always agree on

01:40 - 13.150 is loving one another

01:40 - 16.400 and so if we love one another enough to to to

01:40 - 17.650 be consistent

01:40 - 20.970 and then to to look at all the other different aspects of these

01:40 - 21.870 spoken about

01:40 - 26.610 we can push the can down the road much farther than where we've currently got it to

01:40 - 28.230 and i just i just enjoy

01:40 - 30.060 collaborating with anybody

01:40 - 32.230 that loves our kids that much.

01:40 - 33.300 Thank you

01:40 - 33.960 they're right

01:40 - 34.380 there

01:40 - 37.491 throughout tonight we heard it in Larry recommends opening

01:40 - 40.560 statements we've heard it throughout tonight over and over

01:40 - 43.198 these big values Larry started us off today

01:40 - 45.840 with this great line i wrote down right away

01:40 - 47.700 humanity is not earned

01:40 - 50.040 but it's assumed we need to start there

01:40 - 52.590 each one of you has pulled out

01:40 - 54.030 big ideas of

01:40 - 59.520 human dignity of love of belonging of connecting these are all values

01:40 - 01.440 that are so implicitly

01:41 - 03.240 needed in

01:41 - 07.255 our world in in healing in religion and what

01:41 - 10.980 pulls us and binds us together to do good

01:41 - 15.720 so i wanted to to end we'll go to questions after this but i want it to end with you

01:41 - 19.170 as you do this work as you move this forward

01:41 - 22.680 what is that guiding value that you hold on to

01:41 - 27.730 and really used to the the work of your community and the work of re-entry.

01:41 - 31.030 Thank you very much.

01:41 - 33.510 There's a

01:41 - 34.230 there's a

01:41 - 34.494 a

01:41 - 36.540 quote from the koran that says

01:41 - 40.360 and god has made the sons of item dignified

01:41 - 44.700 and when you mentioned that earlier on that was the thing

01:41 - 46.140 that came to mind right that

01:41 - 48.580 this idea of being dignified

01:41 - 49.350 is in it

01:41 - 50.760 we don't lose it

01:41 - 52.290 because of what we do

01:41 - 53.768 well.

01:41 - 55.118 Yes

01:41 - 56.188 we we've

01:41 - 59.398 made mistakes yes we've done something wrong yes

01:41 - 01.328 we've caused harm.

01:42 - 03.628 But that doesn't mean

01:42 - 07.028 that we are no longer a dignified creation.

01:42 - 09.358 Of the creator right

01:42 - 13.208 it means that there needs to be some restoration some accountability

01:42 - 16.618 and something else so that we need to live back into the standard

01:42 - 17.848 in which we were

01:42 - 19.438 we were created so

01:42 - 23.798 for me the guiding value that guy in principle is.

01:42 - 27.268 And when we think of the word justice.

01:42 - 28.558 From the

01:42 - 30.008 islamic.

01:42 - 32.518 Perspective

01:42 - 34.658 it means putting things

01:42 - 36.548 in their rightful place.

01:42 - 38.788 That is a guiding principle

01:42 - 39.658 for me

01:42 - 40.408 right

01:42 - 41.668 putting things

01:42 - 43.288 in their rightful place

01:42 - 44.098 and

01:42 - 45.778 at any point in time

01:42 - 46.918 we can ask

01:42 - 48.488 that question.

01:42 - 50.008 What does it mean

01:42 - 55.078 to put something in it's rightful place in this moment

01:42 - 56.408 right.

01:42 - 00.008 I often use a very simplistic example

01:43 - 01.238 of.

01:43 - 03.788 Many of us drive in Philly.

01:43 - 07.198 And how many of us have double parked

01:43 - 09.098 on the street before.

01:43 - 13.558 If i took this from a

01:43 - 17.378 a religious faith based perspective

01:43 - 19.508 that is a form of injustice.

01:43 - 21.928 Right i might see that

01:43 - 24.398 and i know i know i know.

01:43 - 24.928 I know

01:43 - 25.588 they

01:43 - 26.488 do it it's really

01:43 - 28.328 we need to double park.

01:43 - 31.628 Why say that.

01:43 - 33.538 Cause when i double park

01:43 - 36.098 am i impeding someone else.

01:43 - 39.908 Am i taking away someone else's ability

01:43 - 41.708 to do something

01:43 - 44.078 that they need to do

01:43 - 45.908 and if i am.

01:43 - 47.278 Am i doing it

01:43 - 49.348 because i have a right to do it

01:43 - 50.518 not at all.

01:43 - 53.768 So if we look at it from that purely

01:43 - 55.808 black and white perspective

01:43 - 57.568 even that is a form

01:43 - 00.788 of injustice rights are taking it back to myself.

01:44 - 03.028 What are the ways in which

01:44 - 06.458 i can be just in this moment.

01:44 - 09.128 Because everything is moment by moment

01:44 - 11.338 right and if i can be just in this moment

01:44 - 13.258 then hopefully the next moment

01:44 - 14.788 i can be just again

01:44 - 17.338 and then the next moment i can be just again so

01:44 - 21.268 keep asking myself that question because that is how

01:44 - 23.348 i get to ask

01:44 - 24.508 am i ready

01:44 - 26.170 for when.

01:44 - 28.138 Pookie

01:44 - 29.518 comes back home.

01:44 - 30.598 Right

01:44 - 32.728 am i ready for when i called to him

01:44 - 33.838 on the street

01:44 - 36.028 am i ready for when he turns to me and says

01:44 - 38.018 what do you have for me now.

01:44 - 40.598 And if i have nothing

01:44 - 42.538 what can i still give him

01:44 - 44.278 that holds up his dignity

01:44 - 46.108 and what does that look like so

01:44 - 47.758 for me it's always about

01:44 - 48.838 what is it

01:44 - 50.098 to be just

01:44 - 51.478 in this moment

01:44 - 54.848 in a very intentional unreal way

01:44 - 57.548 and as i end this is my third identity

01:44 - 59.558 in this space right.

01:45 - 01.868 Because.

01:45 - 04.418 Why do what i do.

01:45 - 07.978 In a former identity that i had before i took up this role

01:45 - 09.458 with the city.

01:45 - 12.538 I would be right in the room as reporters come in

01:45 - 15.238 and a room where we met and even in this room here

01:45 - 17.828 working with some of.

01:45 - 19.078 The skill tree kids

01:45 - 20.588 folks

01:45 - 21.958 and communication

01:45 - 23.488 and conflict work

01:45 - 24.178 right

01:45 - 27.538 and then that was my first identity coming into this space and then

01:45 - 29.428 the second time i was in this space

01:45 - 31.508 was when there was a graduation

01:45 - 32.128 for

01:45 - 34.178 i think this was rebuild.

01:45 - 35.428 Philadelphia right

01:45 - 37.138 and then there's a third identity i

01:45 - 37.978 am holding

01:45 - 38.848 in dispute

01:45 - 39.298 year

01:45 - 39.748 in

01:45 - 41.528 an eastern state.

01:45 - 43.198 This is

01:45 - 44.308 to me

01:45 - 46.078 the word that you're doing here

01:45 - 47.998 and the consistency around it

01:45 - 49.528 is also how

01:45 - 52.558 we keep this moving forward bringing us together

01:45 - 54.548 to have these conversations

01:45 - 55.708 in meaningful ways

01:45 - 58.048 is how we do this so what does it mean to be just

01:45 - 00.658 and continuing to work with folks

01:46 - 02.008 who bring us together

01:46 - 03.478 one we need to be brought together

01:46 - 05.398 is what i'm hoping for more info

01:46 - 05.818 thank you

01:46 - 07.658 thank you.

01:46 - 08.158 He was

01:46 - 10.378 we have a preservation trade center

01:46 - 11.818 where we

01:46 - 15.775 partner with rebuild and the city of Philadelphia to

01:46 - 19.678 teach preservation trades and we do it on site our team

01:46 - 21.658 has a workforce development wing

01:46 - 25.408 and so what we talk about all the time and what we partner in is

01:46 - 28.288 how do we utilize this site

01:46 - 30.358 a site of trauma i say to pain

01:46 - 34.828 to work with people across the city and across the state

01:46 - 40.798 to rebuild and teach skills for not just any job but for a career

01:46 - 42.658 to build up themselves vhs

01:46 - 45.448 to build up their community and to build up their lives

01:46 - 50.278 and to go out and rebuild this city rebuild this state

01:46 - 51.808 and to do good

01:46 - 56.368 and so our intersection has crossed over in so many different ways

01:46 - 58.888 and to find justice is

01:46 - 02.518 so much of what you said tonight is to keep moving forward

01:47 - 06.118 and keep intersecting with ways to lift each other up

01:47 - 07.418 but.

01:47 - 09.088 Lewis to your point

01:47 - 11.428 is and to your point reverend

01:47 - 12.688 keep showing up

01:47 - 16.978 and realize where you are in the journey and which direction you need to go

01:47 - 20.968 thank you all three so much for this wonderful conversation

01:47 - 22.701 let's turn it to the audience

01:47 - 25.978 does anybody have any questions before we wrap

01:47 - 30.118 but i'd love to hear if there's any questions Campbell is ready with the mic

01:47 - 31.048 right there

01:47 - 32.528 white blazer.

01:47 - 45.598 You mentioned earlier about not

01:47 - 49.028 about thinking twice before calling nine one one.

01:47 - 50.698 I think that

01:47 - 53.458 we are focusing a lot our form

01:47 - 55.558 and on

01:47 - 56.768 restoration

01:47 - 00.068 and there is an element of justice where.

01:48 - 03.658 When the harm is potentially going to be caused i

01:48 - 06.758 as a black woman agree that it's not always.

01:48 - 10.768 Preferable to comment on one bit sometimes we do need more force

01:48 - 13.358 so i'm wondering if you have experience.

01:48 - 16.198 Or if there's any research that you know of

01:48 - 20.938 for calling ninety eight instead or a behavioral response team or

01:48 - 22.078 any other

01:48 - 27.338 crisis intervention that can be redirected to because nature abhors a vacuum.

01:48 - 31.648 Great question and i appreciate the question and i get it right

01:48 - 35.248 i have been in spaces where nine one one kind of makes sense

01:48 - 37.678 right and i understand that.

01:48 - 40.568 I think nine eight eight.

01:48 - 44.248 Yeah it's a mixed bag right

01:48 - 46.203 it depends on who's receiving the call at

01:48 - 48.358 nine eight eight what instructions they have

01:48 - 51.718 it offer very often nine eight eight gets transferred to nine one one

01:48 - 55.718 without a lot of consideration as to what that really means.

01:48 - 59.788 I think one of the things that i have seen some real good success in

01:49 - 00.958 is

01:49 - 03.908 what we call crisis response teams

01:49 - 05.398 that are

01:49 - 09.818 an alternative when there's a mental health crisis involved right.

01:49 - 10.958 Often.

01:49 - 12.628 Law enforcement is

01:49 - 14.218 terribly ill equipped

01:49 - 16.058 for that space

01:49 - 18.268 and they resort to what they know right.

01:49 - 21.238 Which often leads to harm for everyone involved

01:49 - 24.478 and so i think that's a starting point

01:49 - 27.838 i know in Chicago they just recently decided to

01:49 - 30.848 make their crisis response team citywide

01:49 - 33.808 and i keep bringing up new York because that's

01:49 - 35.648 still consider it home.

01:49 - 39.058 The new mayor of new York decided that he would

01:49 - 43.118 decrease the police response to mental health crisis.

01:49 - 44.008 Calls

01:49 - 46.528 and so i think you start where you can write

01:49 - 47.998 you start where you're comfortable

01:49 - 51.238 you start where you can galvanize people around something

01:49 - 52.528 and so

01:49 - 53.218 yeah

01:49 - 56.228 nine one one will continue to exist.

01:49 - 57.578 Just.

01:49 - 00.698 Can i call someone else.

01:50 - 04.118 Do i have the capacity to deal with this

01:50 - 06.088 and if the answer is no then yeah i get it

01:50 - 07.108 but

01:50 - 10.558 i don't often think that we even think about that before we thought it was three

01:50 - 15.068 digits until that's just what i'm asking us to think about if in fact.

01:50 - 16.708 We can take that moment

01:50 - 17.668 to say

01:50 - 19.778 is there a better alternative.

01:50 - 21.368 Because

01:50 - 22.798 that nine one one

01:50 - 23.728 leads to

01:50 - 24.928 filling up

01:50 - 26.918 places like this.

01:50 - 28.828 Thank you.

01:50 - 31.358 Any other questions there.

01:50 - 34.528 Well if wonderful this has been an amazing evening thank

01:50 - 37.078 you all so much thank you professor moreland and earlier

01:50 - 41.068 everybody thank you so much for coming tonight have a wonderful evening

01:50 - 44.908 and there is a final reception so please join us as well thank you

01:50 - 46.538 big round of applause.

01:50 - 54.428 I didn't say go next did i.

01:50 - 57.848 It up.

01:51 - 34.388 The following program was financed by a Grant from america to fifty pa.


Related Video

Fort Pitt Museum Its History

Fort Pitt Museum, It's History!

Yolanda Barco Cable 75

Yolanda Barco, Cable 75

Blobfest Pennsylvanias Neighborhood Chester County

Blobfest, Pennsylvania's Neighborhood: Chester County