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An initiative of Bishop J. Jon Bruno
and
the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles
addressing domestic violence, gang activity, hate crimes
and other forms of aggression
National Tour: April 19 - June 5, 2002
Driving from Hollywood-area gang
turf to the Wyoming roadside where co-ed Matthew Shepard was fatally
gay-bashed, L.A.'s Episcopal bishop and 12 young Southern Californians will
travel on to Las Vegas, Omaha, Chicago, Detroit, New York's Ground Zero, and
the Washington National Cathedral-all in an April 19-June 5 cross-country
trek addressing violence perpetrated against youth and families.
By charting this course at the
outset of his new ministry as chief pastor to the six-county Diocese of Los
Angeles and its 85,000 members, Bishop Bruno - himself a former Burbank police
officer - is calling people of faith everywhere to "simple
acts of courage" to stop domestic violence, gang activity, hate crimes, and
other forms of aggression.
"Rosa Parks kept her seat on a
bus, and that moment defined the rest of the civil rights movement," Bishop
Bruno said in a recent interview outlining the tour, which includes
return-route pilgrimages to Atlanta, Montgomery and Memphis sites honoring
the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. "As our own van moves across
country, the young people and I will contemplate, from our own bus seats,
how we can act more courageously to see that peace and justice prevails over
violence now and into the future."
The bishop, who has hand-picked
the young adults participating on the tour, has designed the trek to include
site-specific theological reflections that address cycles of violence. In
Oklahoma City, for example, the group will consider not only the carnage of
the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, but also the
death penalty by which the accused perpetrator, Timothy McVeigh, was
executed.
Joining Bishop Bruno in planning
and guiding the theological reflections are Sara Clinehens and Michael
Cooper, both of whom recently began work on the diocesan staff as advisors
for youth ministry. Clinehens and Cooper, who will travel along the tour
route, are collaborating with Wendie Roberts, new diocesan missioner for
Christian formation, in shaping both the program and its cadre of young
participants.
The trek will reach its
mid-point on Memorial Day weekend in Washington, D.C., where Bishop Bruno is
scheduled to preach that Sunday, May 26, at the National Cathedral.
Under the theme of "Hands in
Healing: Reaching Peace for Youth and Cities," the trek will involve
participants who have experienced violence in close proximity. One
participant has lost two brothers killed in gang shootings; two have lived
under apartheid in South Africa; others have taken stands against domestic
violence, racism and homophobia; all have experienced in various ways the
trauma of the Sept. 11 terror attacks.
In each community they visit, the L.A. young people will seek to engage
peers in other cities to learn their respective experiences with violence,
and to share in dialogue, prayer and theological reflection.
One objective of the trek is to
gather stories to inform an interactive, multigenerational and on-line
curriculum that is being developed through the diocesan Office of
Communications and Public Affairs
(telephone: 213.482.2040, ext. 220 or 240), which is coordinating the full
Hands in Healing initiative on the bishop's behalf.
As the van crosses the nation,
the bishop and some participants will travel by plane in order to balance
weekend "Hands in Healing" events with work-week schedules in Los Angeles.
Adult supervisors will travel with the van full time.
The national tour follows a
six-part series of diocesan county-based forums addressing issues of
violence within the Southland, the last of which was held April 6 in Los
Angeles.
Itinerary for the national tour
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