Thursday, March 12, 2015

Mid-Year Newsletter

Here is a newsletter that the Tucson Borderlands YAVs recently wrote to update and thank our supporters.  Thank you so much for reading, donating, and encouraging me this year! 

Hello

Hola

안녕하세요

 Greetings from the 2014/2015 Tucson Borderlands

Young Adult Volunteers

 







We are now halfway through our year of service and want to take a moment to thank you for your continued support.


Here is a quick update on our year so far…


Grace Dover

Hometown: San Mateo, California

“In the last few months, the border has come a part of me.  It is present in my thoughts, my tears, my worries, and my prayers.”

Grace works for Borderlinks, an educational non-profit that teaches people about the current state of the U.S.-Mexico borderlands and immigrant communities in the United States. She has led several immersion trips along the border with colleges and churches.  Grace is enjoying facilitating discussions, leading workshops, and supporting participants as they come to terms with harsh realities and organize to improve their communities.







Last fall, Grace led a trip with 30 fourteen-year-olds.  Here, they are observing the wall on the Nogales, Arizona/ Nogales, Sonora, Mexico border.






Emily Oshinskie

Hometown: West Hartford, Connecticut

“As challenging as this work may be at times, even just acknowledging that a lack of a bridge exists and figuring how to begin building bridges between cultures, ethnicities, religions, backgrounds, upbringings, socioeconomic statuses, etc. is a start!”
Emily works as a Volunteer Coordinator for Iskashitaa Refugee Network, a grassroots organization that strives to reduce food waste while simultaneously empowering refugees through harvesting produce and leading food workshops. She is enjoying the opportunity to work with refugees from Somalia, Burundi, Eritrea, Iraq, and Sudan.







Emily picks pumpkin leaves with a friend from Bhutan at a harvest she helped coordinate.  The leaves were later used for a food workshop.





Hanbyeol Nam

Hometown: Busan, South Korea

“While staying in USA, I have realized that it is not important to speak the same language. The most important thing is an eye contact, smile and salute by nodding.”

Hanbyeol is hard at work with Community Home Repair Projects of Arizona, a non-profit that does emergency house repairs, addressing health and safety concerns in low-income communities.  During the last seven months, Hanbyeol has not only learned many colloquial English words, but has also mastered technical terms like “weirsbo,” “sawzaw,” and “shut-off valve.” Also, she is interested in American and Mexican history, often practicing her Spanish words during our trips to Mexico.






Hanbyeol and her favorite client, Leo, spend time together fixing his roof, eating lunch, and wearing hats.





Allie Gosselin

Hometown: Dothan, Alabama

“Every morning on my bike ride to work, I get to see the sun rise over one of the mountain ranges and it is a reminder of the possibilities that each day holds.”

Allie, like Hanbyeol, works for Community Home Repair Projects of Arizona.  She is starting to work part-time in the office and part-time in the field.  Allie finds this work satisfying because she gets to speak with clients over the phone during the initial intake and then meet them in person when making repairs.  Also, it has been interesting for her to see how a non-profit runs from inside out.







Community Home Repair staff and volunteers cut open and examine the inside of a water heater and then make a CHRPA mascot during a training in early October.





James Martin

Hometown: Wenatchee, Washington

“…in my time being on the border I have found that our media and politicians are ignoring the most important things that are on the Arizona/Mexico border: strong sense of community, friendly people and a place of cultural and language exchange between two countries.”

James works with Frontera De Cristo, a bi-national mission in Douglas, Arizona and Agua Prieta, Mexico.  He works with children along the border, teaching English classes.  James also works at the Migrant Resource Center, connecting immigrants to shelters, food, and other resources.  He is an active community member, making these border towns a place where Americans and Mexicans can meet and learn from each other.  James has enjoyed utilizing his passions for education, cultivating relationships and living out God’s call for love.  










James with volunteers at the Migrant Resource Center in Agua Prieta, Mexico.



House Life


The four Tucson YAVs (Grace, Emily, Hanbyeol, Allie) live together with April, a volunteer through the Methodist Church (check out her blog) and Gabrielle, a student at the University of North Texas, who is doing an internship at a non-profit.  We enjoy hiking, biking, watching Friends, hosting dinner parties, and attending events downtown together.  We have learned a lot from living together and are excited to see what is next for our community.








Family photo (minus Gabrielle) taken during our first month living together.










Gabrielle taught us how to be MMA fans.  We are now all die-hard Rhonda Rousey supporters.













We love getting to see James every month when he visits us in Tucson or we go to Mexico.  Here we are about to embark on our Lenten Sojourn Retreat in Cascabel, Arizona.








On May 25th, we will be saying goodbye to our fearless leader, friend, and mentor, Brandon. We are so excited for his family as they move to Singapore and embark on a new adventure.  Thank you, Brandon, for dedicating so much time to this program and supporting us!


Thank you all, again, for your prayers, emails, phone calls, care packages, and for following us on this journey. If you’d like to continue to support this program and YAV placements, check out the Tucson Borderlands YAV website.

Friday, February 27, 2015

Do Not Hesitate To Leave Your Old Ways Behind

Some people spend Valentine's Day kissing their boyfriends.  Some spend the day bingeing on chocolates with their gal pals.  I spent the day speaking about migrant justice at University Presbyterian Church in Tempe, Arizona.  This church graciously invited the Tucson YAVs to be their weekend guests during Mission Month.  We led a workshop on Solidarity, Charity and Advocacy, preached, spoke during Adult Education and went on a short hike with the youth group.  I'm thankful  for the opportunity to share my reflections on my year service.

The four Tucson YAVs, Allie, Emily, Hanbyeol, and I preached a sermon together.  First, we read a poem called Passover Remember, which we first heard during YAV Orientation in August.  Then, we used different verses to individually reflect on the our experiences during the first half of our YAV year.

Workshop on Solidarity, Charity, and Advocacy
Source: University Presbyterian Church


Below is my part of the sermon.  Click here to hear a recording of our sermon.  


Do not hesitate to leave
Your old ways behind –
Fear, silence, submission

… Then begin quickly,
before you have time to sink back
into the old slavery

Why do we feel the need to create borders?  How do we build equal and respectful relationships with people who are unlike us?  How can I work as an ally with those who are oppressed? What does modern day slavery look like? These are some of the questions I’ve grappled with during my year of service with Young Adult Volunteers. 

I have been blessed with the opportunity to serve at BorderLinks, where I organize and lead educational trips about the border.  During the last six months, I have spent time with a wide variety of people who have taught me more than I could have imagined. 

While observing the 25-foot border wall that separates Mexico and the United States, I have prayed with seminarians, reflected with teenagers, and taken pictures with retirees.  I have led workshops for squirmy middle schoolers where we explore what the words “immigrant,” “border”, or “family” mean to them.  Brave migrants have told me their harrowing testimonies at shelters in border towns like Nogales and Agua Prieta, Sonora.  I’ve wept as a woman recounted her experience of crossing the desert, getting detained by Border Patrol, and separated from her husband.  I have visited migrants at Florence Detention Center who migrated north to escape cartel violence in Honduras and Guatemala.  I have felt the panic that constricts your chest when you learn that your friend’s undocumented husband was just detained.  In the last few months, the border has come a part of me.  It is present in my thoughts, my tears, my worries, and my prayers.

In addition to learning about the challenges on the border, I had the chance to meet people who are bringing human dignity back to this region.  Raul, one of my friends and coworkers, spent last Christmas in a cold detention center, visiting detainees who have no one else to support them.  My friend, Josue, grew up undocumented, and is now organizing with other young migrants to get more access to higher education.  My local Presbyterian church, Southside, has opened its door to provide sanctuary to an undocumented mother so she can stay with her two boys and husband.  

If your Christ is not Chicano, what is he?

Amidst the darkness, I have also witnessed a powerful display of God’s love in the borderlands.  We are lucky to be part of a community of students, pastors, church members, atheists, migrants, and allies who have bonded together to turn barriers into bridges and make our earth look more like God’s kingdom.  As the Bible says in Ephesians 2: 13-15,  But now in Christ Jesus, you who once were far away have been brought near by the blood of Christ.  For he himself is our peace, who has made the two groups one and has destroyed the barrier, the dividing wall of hostility, by setting aside in his flesh the law with its commands and regulations.”  

During the last six months, my eyes have opened, my heart has ached, and my resolve has been strengthened.  With the support of my fellow volunteers and coworkers, I have begun to acknowledge my privilege, my citizenship and the effects of my country’s policies.

My work here has encouraged me not to “sink back into the old slavery” of injustice, prejudice, and ignorance.  I truly believe that the most radical act of love is to introduce people to each other.  If be build relationships, we realize we are linked.  Their struggle is our struggle.  Our society’s borders affect us all by perpetuating division, fear, and even hatred.  If we leave behind our fear, silence and submission we can reach a state of collective liberation where we are all free.  

Adult Education
Source: University Presbyterian Church


 
Hike with University Presbyterian Church youth group
I am in the hat.
Source: University Presbyterian Church