George
Thanks so much for sharing your story. Where we went and who we continued to be are indeed as much a part of the Order as our times together. I can't imagine anyone who's life wasn't radically changed even if only by new methods of understanding and engagement in daily life.
Zoe
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone
-------- Original message --------
From: George Holcombe via OE <
oe@lists.wedgeblade.net>
Date: 06/24/2017 5:03 PM (GMT-05:00)
To: ICA/OE List Serves <
oe@lists.wedgeblade.net>, ICA/OE List Serves <
dialogue@lists.wedgeblade.net>
Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] The Order and Oaxtapec
As Lingo used to say everyone in the Order has their own story and take on it. I’ve appreciated the replies to Epps email and his thoughts. Mine is slightly different, though I can identify with much that has been said. We came to the Order from Louisiana. We had been working with Civil Rights, helped start a project in South Baton Rouge that was one of the first Poverty Programs to get funded and took OE courses and participated in the New Orleans cadre. The turning point came for us when our Bishop decided to assign us to a church in North Louisiana where part of the leadership were officers in the KKK and we didn’t exactly hit it off with them. In fact they had a file on us. We were focused on finding ways to empower people who were on the outside. So we went to Chicago, principly for the learning of and participation in 5th City. That did not immediately come true but eventually got to work in 5th City. Learned a lot from George West and so many others. Then assigned to Asia, Mowanjum, stateside in Uptown and then back to Asia for a number of projects. We departed from the order in 1980, intending to return, but we were broke and extended family needs were needing to be addressed. We pulled our daughter out of the student house upon learning of the abuse there. By the time we were able to return, the order had changed and appeared to us not to be doing anything more than we were at the time. I was not enthused by our turning away from the human development projects and the turn to the corporations. I had appreciated the work done on the LENS, the NRM and the Social Process and benefited from them all. In the meantime we were sought out by Bishop in the Philippines to help out in a new Seminary, village development and Peace with Justice work in the Philippines through the GBGM. We worked there for several years. We were asked by GBGM to coordinate Mission work in Asia and returned to the US in 2000. All this while our Order experience was at the base of what we did. Through all this I did learn that their was not a general acceptance of the hard work and time it took to train and assist a village into practicing the methods. Folks were more looking for their own success. And this even short changed some of our endeavors in the Order, but particularly so in the denomination. I do appreciate that where the methods got a footing good things happened and people grew much beyond what many thought possible. I remember being in Manila in the 1990’s when a knock came at the door and there stood a fellow from Taiwan. We didn’t at first make the connection but he was from Hai Ou. Someone had told him where we were. He had been a young man when ICA was there. He had learned from the Prawn project and had built a business establishing fish and prawn farms in Indonesia, Vietnam, Philippines, etc. He wanted to thank us. Even to this day folks who were kids then find us on Facebook and email (how I don’t know). A couple of kids from Kwangyan Il are now US citizens living in Illinois. Some didn’t have good water or electricity back in the day and now they’re using computers. We have much to be thankful for and our colleagueship with what ever negatives you want to throw at it, has been sustaining and meaningful. I doubt that any of us can really account for the impact the Order has had on so many. The creative lives of those that peopled the Order continue to amaze me.
George Holcombe
geowanda1@me.com
"Whatever the problem, community is the answer. There is no power greater than a community discovering what it cares about." Margaret Wheatley
jean long -
John & Robyn - As in Neihbor's "church as the sensitive and responsive ones in each organization" I continue to look for and love the church as they search for a way to care for the growing suffering of neighbor and globe.
I remember Joe saying when the time comes when there is no longer a common mission- go home. It is only our passion for an agreed upon way to alleviate human suffering that allows us to accept each others' warts and bruises and sons of bitchedness and work together day after day in profound forgiveness.
That had begun to happen in Denver before the house was sold out from under us by some sons of bitchedness and we became the caring community in dispersion.
The Order is alive and well in the persons of our ICA staff people. They hunger for the spirit dimension that they sense in us old Orderly people. And they go after it in our Archives. They found Brian Stanfield's Courage to Care with its end of chapter reflections and use it now as the spirit intro for many of their meetings with the 77Neighborhoods and the agency folks.
Bless Tim Wegner, MIke Tippett, John Cock who maintain our structural connectedness - and our master ITs, Wendell Rafior, Doug Druckenmiller, Steve Eddiger - who lives in intentional community on the seventh floor - and all the rest of us working with the Global Archives who have sweat blood and underwritten the creation of the ICA Global Archives through which to make our methods available to those who may be searching for them as resources with which to deal with the suffering of these times.
You will be getting info soon about the Week of October 8-13 when the Archives Sojourn week will host three tracks - 1. The Celebration of the Band of the 24; 2. The ongoing work and unveiling of the Archives Website; and 3. Tagging committee whose task it will be to, after identifying the communities we interact with, list the tags (labels) that they might use to find our documents. Right now we have 2000 scanned and ready to drop into the website, but without relevant tags after their document name on a spreadsheet in the database, they will probably never connect to "The New Religious Mode" - or as I see it "The New Mode of the Religious". We are having the joyous task of calling many of you who were in the projects to make you aware of this wonderful week of celebration and giving our methods to the future.
Any questions, call me at 720-633-5008. Only costs, your time, air/carfair and board and room - $30/single, $45/double on the 8th floor - $10/day food. After rooms go, hotel rooms and friends/relatives guest rooms.
The Order is, indeed, alive and well and doing our damdest to get our methods into the future.
To you all I can say, Grace and Peace.,
Jean Long
Global Archives
Chicago
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