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Putting Faith to Work: Building Connections, Working for Justice E-mail
Wednesday, 18 October 2006
by Cathy Holt

Desmond Tutu once said, “Following Christ begins in worship and ends in politics.” For Sandra Smith of Holy Ground, a feminist retreat ministry, “faith comes into everything we do. Faith can inform our relationship to work and activism. Spiritual practice means getting in deeper touch with ourselves.”


Tyrone Greenlee is Executive Director of Christians for a United Community, an inter-racial group of Christians whose mission is social justice. “At CUC, I’ve found people who are fervent about social justice work. I’m standing with other Christian people, not of my race, who are interested in getting a living wage, or overcoming the disparities in education.”


These two spiritual activists spoke about some of their projects that are addressing key concerns of Asheville’s workforce.



Sandra Smith
Sandra Smith, Holy Ground


Holy Ground conducts a six-month intensive program called “Spiritual Resources for Community Leaders,” whose aim is to help people be more effective in their work by nurturing them, giving them spiritual practices, and creating community. The retreats meet Friday afternoon through Saturday afternoon, once a month for six months, at Common Light, a Quaker meeting center in Black Mountain. Joyce Hollyday, the group facilitator, is writing a book on the Truth and Reconciliation movements in South Africa and in Greensboro, N.C.

The first intensive retreat began two years ago with activists Bob Smith (Asheville-Buncombe Community Relations Council), Laura Gordon (AFL-CIO), Chris Lescher (Affordable Housing Coalition), Jackie Sims (Building Bridges), Robin Cape (now on Asheville City Council), Dale Roberts, and Jacqueline Howard, among others. Some of their issues were self-neglect, the need to nurture themselves, to feel less isolated in their work. Gay, straight, black, white, male, and female formed such a tight community that they continue to meet with each other. “Now,” Smith relates, “Robin Cape says, ‘When I see Bob Smith in the room, I know I’m not alone.’”

A newly begun group for health care professionals includes doctors, nurses, and an acupuncturist, of all different faiths. “We have ethical and theological conversations, and we weave in spiritual practices. For the health practitioners, we’re focusing on how to cope with feelings of grief and loss when we deal with them daily. Where do we hold those feelings in our bodies? How can we heal? And, where’s hope in all that?” said Smith.


Spiritual practices include meditation or prayer; keeping Sabbath (choosing one day a week to keep free of work); practices of gratitude, and practices of “hospitality” (intimate sharing in a trusting space). Members of the groups covenant with one another and, though they meet only monthly, telephone each other weekly, creating an intimate network of support.


Holy Ground aspires to be a place of reconciliation for some deeply divided groups in our community. Among the tangible artifacts Smith has gathered is a quilt made by women whose loved ones had been murdered, together with women whose loved ones had committed murder. “It was a beautiful quilt of reconciliation; in the sharing which took place while making the quilt, tears were shed and much healing took place,” Smith explained.



Tyrone Greenlee
Tyrone Greenlee, Christians for 
a United Community

Greenlee sees it as part of the Christian mission to address institutions that perpetuate suffering, injustice and racism. “Jesus did that; he talked about the balance of power, and what was happening to the ‘least of these’. If we ask, ‘What would Jesus do?’ it is all about bringing comfort to people. We’re called to bring comfort to those who are hungry, who need a home. For social change work, which is long-haul stuff, you really need a support system; having a Christian community is crucial for the sustenance to keep going,” says Greenlee with a smile.

CUC organized the Asheville-Buncombe Living Wage Steering Committee, an interracial, interdenominational group including members of NAACP, Working Families Win, Affordable Housing Coalition, Pisgah Legal Services, and Temple Beth Ha-Tephila. The committee’s goal was to get an ordinance passed by Asheville City Council mandating a living wage for all city employees and all who contract with the city. The living wage would be slightly over $10 per hour without benefits, around $9 per hour with benefits. (The Federal minimum wage is $5.15; North Carolina’s minimum hourly wage will increase to $6.15, effective in 2007.)


CUC also provides tutors and mentors for the after-school tutoring programs at Stephens Lee Center and Reid Center. Many are recruited from the neighborhoods the centers serve.


CUC members have participated in the Damascus Road Anti-Racism process, a four-weekend course on dismantling racism based on a Biblical perspective. “It helped me to look at my own internalized oppression issues,” says Greenlee. “For whites, it helps them become aware of their internalized superiority issues, and how that plays out in the ways we relate to each other. It leads up to a final organizing weekend, in which we create anti-racism programs we take out into other churches in the community.”


Greenlee has been involved with Building Bridges since 1993, both as a steering committee member and a small-group facilitator. Building Bridges has offered two to three anti-racism trainings a year for 13 years now. “It’s been a real blessing for me. This work helps me to be healthier, to be more engaged, and truly respect and honor other human beings who are different from me. It takes vigilant work, both personally and in society, to deal with racism. I used to think, ‘Didn’t we do this whole civil rights thing in the ’60s and ’70s? Isn’t it dealt with?’ But I wasn’t aware of the subtle racism and institutional racism as much then as I am now.” He characterizes Asheville as a community that is still divided along racial lines, especially when it comes to worship. Through the work of CUC, Greenlee hopes to heal that division.


For more information on Holy Ground, contact Sandra Smith at 236-0222.


For more information on Christians for
a United Community, contact Tyrone Greenlee at 253-0749.




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