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3
Mar

A Long Day

Hello!

After much anticipation we have finally left Helena for our trips. The day began by gathering at 4:15 AM to take students going to Rochester and Cinci to the airport. As I returned home to finish packing my own things and pick up the Kansas City students, I was told they barely had enough time to get through security and next year we need to leave more time. So I will mark my calendar now for 3:30 AM next year!

The Kansas City group left Helena at 7 AM and travels went really smoothly. We arrived in Denver and celebrated a birthday dinner with Katie Majerus at Ted’s Montana Grill where we had burgers. We are now settled in to our hotel and ready to drive all the way across Kansas tomorrow. During the trip the students have been asking Fred and Laura a lot about their experience last year and the closer we get the more anticipation they have for the week ahead.

During our drive we had a quick check in from both groups that they had arrived safely but experienced some turbulence along the way.

Thank you for following us this week and for your prayers for our experience. The more I travel with students for these trips the more I realize the importance of meeting people who are passionate about helping others and of getting an experience of building relationships and dedicating this time to service. We are very blessed to have these experiences.

Peace,
Colleen

3
Mar

Hello From Rochester

The rooms are ready, the ministries are ready, the food is ready (and lots of it, they are coming from Carroll after all!) and most of all we are waiting and ready for our 12 wonderful folks from Carroll College! We have hosted your group now for, I think, 12 years now and we have loved every one of you coming to be with us! It looks like we may even be snow-free while you are here too! So have a safe journey and we will see you on Saturday! Peace, Sr. Donna

3
Mar

Hello From the Tau House

Welcome to Tau House!

We are excited to have you joining us!

Look forward to a wee k of meeting new people (you are sharing the House
with a college group from Minnesota State University), working at various
sites (including the Mercy Franciscan – St. John Sandwich Window, Ronald
McDonald House, Welcome House, Madisonville Education and Assistance Center,
Working in Neighborhoods, the FreeStore FoodBank, Rose Garden Mission, St.
Vincent dePaul, Churches Active in Northside, and Visions Day Care), and
growing in your faith!

See you soon! Safe travels!

–marci

28
Feb

Spring 2012 Trips

On Saturday we depart for our Spring Break Immersion Trips. We have groups traveling to Rochester, NY to visit the Sisters of Saint Joseph, to Kansas City, Missouri to visit the Sisters of Charity and to Cincinnati, OH to visit the Franciscans for the Poor. Aside from having to get to the airport at 4:45 AM all of the students are really excited for the new experiences and people they will meet.

Rochester, NY

Devan Hromcik – Helena, MT
Dan Minor – Helena, MT
Brittany Minor – Helena, MT
Chris Kiefer – Banks, OR
Travis Biedermann – Big Fork, MT
Kirsten Rotz – Rathdrum, ID
Natalie Stewart – Coeur d’ Alene, ID
Taylor Stewart – Couer d’ Alene, ID
Nicole Henry – Boise, ID
Andrea Ward – Springfield, OR
Jenessa Borodkin – Cordova, AK
Whitney Stormberg, Citrus Heights, CA

Kansas City, MO

Fred Collins – Helena, MT
Tessa Berg – Missoula, MT
Elyse Ramirez – Helena, MT
Tony Rosales – Great Falls, MT
Christina Frederick – Helena, MT
Nathan Kavanaugh – Cut Bank, MT
Colleen Dunne – Helena, MT
Katie Majerus – Valier, MT
Katie Hanson – Helena, MT
Laura Gillette – Miles City, MT

Cincinnati, OH

Chelsea Ford – Portland, OR
Kelsie Hahn – Olympia, WA
Cheney Gianarelli – Conrad, MT
Shelby Goodrich – Vancouver, WA
Maddie Woodruff – Banks, OR
Jessica Knapp – Olympia, WA
Raniece Richardson – Helena, MT
Angie Biskupiak – Helena, MT
Amy Reagor – Great Falls, MT

Thank you for following us as we travel!

11
Oct

Making A Better Neighborhood

It’s Monday afternoon, and I’m not sure that I’ve fully realized what all I experienced this past week. It was a week spent in Boyle Heights with the people of Dolores Mission Parish, the poorest parish in the entire Los Angeles archdiocese. It was the best service-type immersion trip I’ve ever experienced, and this is why.

Every trip like this one has a certain amount of unsettling experiences, seeing poverty and brokenness, addiction and pain. L.A. definitely had that. Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles is packed with people struggling with addiction and mental illness who will likely never leave, because they have no vision for anything better. There was no shortage of unsettling there.

This trip had something else too. Boyle Heights was the epicenter of terrible gang violence in L.A. in the 90’s, and today it is a safe and beautiful community. It turned itself around because the people of the neighborhood, inspired and encouraged by Fr. Greg Boyle, chose to make it happen.

Their actions essentially ended the violence in the neighborhood, drastically reduced the drug trade in the area, and made a safe place for their children to grow up in. As a community, they found the one solution: prayer, courage, devotion to the Gospel, and selfless giving. In a word: Christianity.

The people of Boyle Heights were some of the most authentically joyful people that I have ever met. Despite all the hurt they have seen, all the lack of resources, and prejudices stacked against them, they are truly joyful because they have their lives and they have each other. They have little, and they constantly share that. They house homeless men in the church because they don’t need it at night and the gospel tells them to care for those in need. They treat every person around them like family, because that’s just who they are.

The women of Boyle Heights have been a huge driving force in this Christian neighborhood renewal. They had the courage to take guns away from their children who were gang members. They had the courage to treat gang members like their own children regardless of who they were or what they had done. They had the courage to gather at the entrance to the neighborhood with signs that said “If you’re here to buy drugs, go home.”

One woman who works at Dolores Mission Parish who spent a lot of time with us was Ellie, a relative newcomer to the area. She had worked for the Catholic newspaper in L.A. and was drawn to Boyle Heights specifically because she saw so many press releases coming from this one small parish. She was drawn to the vibrant community that did so much with so little and moved there when she got a chance (and when a job offer came up at the parish, she took that too). I have to agree with Ellie’s decision, knowing that I would never live anywhere in Los Angeles except Boyle Heights, as close as I could get to Dolores Mission Parish, where faith and life are no different.

Nathan Scheidecker

6
Oct

The Experience Thus Far

So much has happened between our arrival late Sunday night and the evening tonight. I feel our entire group has grown together as a family. It is not uncommon of people to think of each other as a family who are not blood related. This is perhaps one of the most important lessons learned from the Dolores Mission community. It is plain to see that every member of this community is a family.
Sitting tonight at a homemade meal from our host mother is a perfect example of that. Tonight at the Quintero household, the mom said something simple, yet profound. She said, “The community has little money, but great heart.” This is true. Every community member lifts each other up. Because of this, what was the poorest and most crime ridden part of L.A. is now a much safer than ever before. Not only that, but these people are by far the greatest examples of servants I have ever encountered. These people love, simple and true as that. They do not discriminate, they serve.
Anyone coming to this mission would benefit as a human. It is common on mission trips for the people coming on the mission to get much more out of the experience than they give. I know this is especially true for me. My heart has been truly changed by the people of Dolores Mission. I feel I am a better person for the experience, and truly a member of the family here. I wish I felt as if I contributed more to the community, but I have truly enjoyed the experience here. Stereotypes I have had have been totally erased. The people here are beautiful.
I am excited to head home tomorrow. It seems we only arrived a couple of days ago. Everyday has been long and exhausting, but at the same time has flown by. I hope we have been able to make an impact on people, on you. If you as readers can take anything from this blog, take that. Exercise control on which you judge. Even the most hardcore, tattooed gangster will surprise you with the amount of humanity and love he possess. Anyways. I am excited to return home.

Cheers,
Travis

6
Oct

Walking the Streets With Officer Joseph

The week has flown by! Tomorrow we will have mass with the students in the morning and then begin the journey home. There is still so much to reflect on and process and hopefully on the way home more blogs will be written.

Our days have been long and there has been so much that we’ve seen. The transparency of this community is really amazing. Of course, there is the desire that people’s lives would be easier so there isn’t a need for such transparency to tell the story of human suffering and perseverance. However, suffering is a real part of life and while here we have encountered suffering we have also encountered hope and joy!

Yesterday we visited the skid row community. We arrived to the Central LAPD station ready for what we thought was an hour long tour and were not sure what to expect. After waiting in the lobby for over an hour for Officer Joseph to arrive I could tell the students were wondering if this was really worth their time. I was a bit worried since he hadn’t arrived and it was pouring rain this part of the day might have to be cancelled. Finally, he arrived and we immediately saw this was not going to be an ordinary experience.

Officer Joseph told us a little about himself as we all stared at his biceps that instilled a sense of awe. He told us why he works the most dangerous streets of LA with what is categorized as, “the least desirable population.” As he spoke it was clear this work is a ministry for him. He talked openly about God and about his love for the people on the streets that he is entrusted to keep safe. He told us that he was a Christian and apologized to us that he might use some inappropriate words but he wanted to be “real” with us about what the streets are like. He told us about his family and his own need to always defend himself and the other police officers he works with. He spoke to us about how he knows he can’t change people of this community because they don’t want to be changed but he can protect them. They suffer from drug addiction and mental illness and have not experienced a lot of unconditional love in their lives. He also talked with us about the programs that have been started for them and about the people who have committed themselves to run shelters and work with the police to clean up the streets. The amazing part about this was even as there was so much he could have been doing out on the streets, Officer Joseph talked with us like we were the most important thing he had to do on this day. We looked at pictures and videos of crimes and of the reality of drugs on the streets.

When it was finally time to go out “on the streets” it was definitely more than a bit unsettling that as we walked we had officer Joseph leading us and Officer Richards following behind and constantly placing himself between us and the street. We walked not more than a four block radius (maybe even less) but in that four blocks we saw enough to leave us speechless for most of the rest of the night about our experience. Gang members selling drugs, mentally ill people who have no where to go, volunteers working to clean up the streets, piles of trash laying out by buildings that smelled horrible, empty bottles of alcohol, probably more than a few prostitutes, and lines of people waiting for meals at shelters.

As we walked, Officer Joseph would stop and give us the stories of the people. He pointed out a man who formerly was a very prominent member of the Crips, he pointed out people he had worked with to try and find housing or beat addiction, he showed us one of the many places Alcoholics Anonymous meetings are held, he introduced us to a woman who lived on the street but now works for Volunteers of America in helping others, and he pointed out people ready to exploit those on the street at any chance. As we walked he also talked to us about the difference between offering charity and supporting the services that already exist. He was passionate about people coming to help on Skid Row but only doing so if they are interested in being an advocate for people to change their lives and not simply just giving people a meal or some clothes to wear. His view was that simply giving things to the people makes his job more difficult because it enables people to continue to live in the destructive patterns of their lives and never seek help for change. What was amazing about this walk however was not all that we saw that shocked us but how Officer Joseph was treated on the streets. People came up to him to shake his hand, one man talked with him about his son, people yelled out hello to him from across the street, and as we walked people would follow and have conversations with Officer Richards about their lives.

This walk challenged my own image of what police officers do on the streets of large cities. These men were not out looking for the worst in people they were out serving a community, building trust and protecting very vulnerable people. Even today as we relaxed and had fun these images came up in conversation about this experience on the streets with Officer Joseph and Officer Richards. This encounter did not offer me any thoughts on what solutions might come up to change this situation but rather offered a picture of a man who chooses to lift up the dignity of others and does his job because he desires to lift up the best in people.

The deepest sense of humanity was visible on these streets and we were privileged to walk them with a man who sees something different than most who walk them sees. I woke up this morning thinking, if Jesus were walking down these streets how would he interact with the people?

http://framework.latimes.com/2011/03/25/lapd-officer-deon-joseph/

Peace,
Colleen

6
Oct

Thursday is a day of rest… or so it seems!

Today was a day of free time and relaxation. We spent some time on Venice beach doing some wave hopping (in my skibbies) and after getting ripped off at a beachside restaurant, we went to Hollywood for a few hours. It was good to chill out for a few hours, but nothing will erase what I saw yesterday on Skidrow, a section of LA that is infamous for crime and poverty. I saw several people talking to themselves and a man even pointed at a tattoo on his hand and threw up his gang sign to me. All I could do was put my head down and stay silent. I kept thinking to myself, “This is not how humans are meant to live…we are supposed to be something more”. As hard as it was to see in Skidrow, these were in fact humans and deserved the dignity and respect that anyone else would. However, the officer that gave us the tour, Deon Joseph, showed me that it is possible to shine the light of Christ in such dark places. He was a man willing to give the human beings of Skidrow the dignity that no one else would. He knew the people individually and would say hi to them on his rounds and if he saw something that was hurting the community, he would stamp it out in a forceful fashion, which I appreciated. I am thankful for the trip to Skidrow because it showed me the realities of my Catholic…my universal…my human community.
I had my last underwings meeting with my students today. I asked a little guy named Jose what he was going to be for Halloween. He said, “A Birthday Cake!” and proceeded to dance, I assume, like a birthday cake would dance if it could. This made me realize that God is here teaching my heart to love simply on this trip, but he is also filling Los Angeles with hope. It has been a blessed place to spend time, and the eyes of my heart are open wider than they have been in some time.


When we left the beach, I realized I smelt great. So I thought of a new fragrance for men. It’s called “The Beach”. It gives you that excellent smell of coming fresh off of the beach. I have a proposition with Calvin Klein tomorrow before I leave, so I’ll let you know how that goes.

For Now, Truly Yours, and Sincerely,
Tyler J. Frohlich

5
Oct

Thank You God

Hola From Los Angles!!
Well we are on our fourth day in East LA, and let me just say it has been fantastic! God is working in so many ways in this community. Whether it is the women of the community, the Dolores Mission Catholic School, the Jesuit volunteers, or the Dolores Mission catholic parish; each is filled with so much love.
As we rolled into town on Saturday night all the nervousness that I had had since I decided to come on this trip hit me hard. I was scared to get out of the car, all because everyone had told me that I should be worried about gang members walking down the street with a gun. I went to bed that night with a bit of shameful worry. Now I look back and think how off base I was being scared about this neighborhood. The people here are so community oriented, and so adamant about stopping any violence. Today I have no fear for my safety.
The most shocking experience thus far on this trip has for sure been the talk we had last night with two women; Sophia and Gloria about their journey from Mexico to America. It was so heart wrenching, making several of us shed tears. At one point Sophia, (in tears) said to us, “God would not want us to have borders or immigration laws, he wants us to all be together.” Even though I have never had a personal opinion about border control I definitely do now! Not only did these talks touch me spiritually but they also made immigration laws something that I now can personally relate to. I hope and pray that these women find peace in the United States!
Today has already been such a great day. We started out our day with the Kinder, 1st, and 2nd graders of Dolores Mission School, with a prayer service in the church. It was so awesome to see the student’s excitement as they repeated time after time; “Thank You God,” for each of the gifts that God gave when he created the earth. After the prayer service we came back over to the school and worked in the classroom for a bit, I practiced my awesome poster making skills and pencil sharpening skills. I’m definitely becoming a pro, preparing me for my future of being a teacher. At 10:00 we came up to the community room and had an amazing meditation with Fr. Scott. During the meditation we focused on how we had felt welcome in the last four days in this community. Fr. Scott then gave us each the chance to share an experience that had left us feeling peaceful, joyful, and more fully alive. It was very moving to hear what each of us had to share. It was very obvious at this moment how filled with the Holy Spirit each of us is. After passing the healing oils around we shared the sign of peace with everyone! This was a most wonderful way to end the meditation.
Now I anxiously await our visit later today to skid row, and the juvenile detention center. I know that both of these visits will be sad, yet very memorable. Keep us in your prayers today as we visit both of these places. Boyle heights is one amazing place and it is clear that so much work and prayer has gone into making it what it is today!
Peace and Love Homies ☺,
Liz Thompson

5
Oct

Touching Testimonies


I am having a really hard time writing this right now because I am having a beyond difficult time putting to words what this experience has been for me. Prior to coming on this trip, I wasn’t really sure what to expect. I basically just prayed to God that I would be open to whatever He wanted to me see and learn on this trip. I was not at all prepared for the impact that this trip has had on my heart. On Monday, we visited Homeboy Industries and heard a story from a former active gang member. The best word I could use to describe this guy was “authentic”. He was so open about where he has been and the mistakes he has made, and that was truly a witness of courage. As I was standing there listening to his story, I was in awe of what this person had been through and had to overcome. Instead of trying to hide his past, he is using to help other people in need. He has so much wisdom and I am having a hard time fathoming the fact that he is only twenty years old (the same age as I am!).
Last night we heard stories from two immigrant women from Mexico. Immigration is something that I have heard about in the news and been somewhat educated about, but not something that I have ever really experienced first-hand. Both of these women had their unique stories but what they had in common was their unrelenting desire to give the best possible lives for their children. I don’t know personally from a mother’s perspective but I think that is something that all mothers have in common. However, it was heart breaking to hear what these women had to endure in order to do that for their children. What a witness of love and sacrifice.
A common theme that I have seen is the reality that even though most of these people have so little, they are so willing to give all that they do have. I feel so blessed for the opportunity to experience a glimpse of these people’s lives. They have been such a light to me, and I cannot wait for what else God has in store for us on this trip!

With love,
Darbi Brady ☺

P.S. This has been an awesome opportunity to work on my Spanish (Yo hablo pokita Espanol!).