Putting faith behind bars
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The U.S. level of incarceration is the highest in the world and the
re-arrest rate for released prisoners is also astronomical.
Deterrence does not keep people from committing crimes that send
them to prison. Punishment does not keep people from committing
crimes after they leave prison. Perhaps faith and spirituality can
make an impact. After all, the source of our greatest strength as
individuals is an attachment to a higher power and a commitment to
our higher nature.
While the Constitution seeks to prevent government-sponsored
coercion, it does not require government to be hostile to religion,
nor does it mean that the government should refuse to recognize the
significant contributions of religion to our commonweal. One such
area can be located in bringing the values of religious faith to
those whose lack of such values permitted them to commit crimes.
There are many stories about the change of heart engendered in
convicts who have embraced the healing and strengthening power of
faith. A change of heart, of course, is what is needed since those
released from prison may face bleak circumstances and few
opportunities. Since the surrounding conditions may be resistant to
improvement, a change of heart in the way the person responds to
those circumstances may make all the difference.
The goal of society in terms of criminal justice is the prevention
of recidivism. For those whose bodies are incarcerated, the soul may
be receptive to embracing a new understanding of right and wrong, of
free will and personal responsibility, of commitment to a better
life, of mercy, compassion and restitution. The words of Psalm 142
may be fulfilled for them: “Bring my soul out of prison, that I may
praise Your name.” By accepting the First Commandment, they may be
led to never again violate the Sixth, Eighth and 10th.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
With few programs currently available for rehabilitation, it is
hard not to support alternatives for prisoners, especially if they
may freely choose whether to participate.
I know from experience that faith-based programs provided by
volunteers at publicly funded prisons are worthwhile. The Zen Center
of Orange County offered Zen and meditation programs at a
penitentiary for three years. Many men, including those serving life
sentences, eagerly welcomed resources for healing and growth. For
those unlikely ever to be released, a spiritual path offered a means
of living fully under any conditions, and facing a future holding
only more years of prison. For those who would be released, programs
on anger management, impulse control and addiction were well attended
by men desperate to find the key to avoid return to prison. Yet
lockdowns, lack of meeting rooms, staff shortages and various
scheduling problems seriously interfered with the volunteer program.
In India, the former inspector of prisons introduced meditation
training, retreats and residential programs at India’s largest
prison. The amazing transformation of inmates is documented in a 1997
film, “Doing Time, Doing Vipassana.” Due to security concerns, it can
be impossible to have meditation cushions, retreat days, a somewhat
quiet spot or meaningful support in offering this kind of program.
Our group sat on folded army blankets and we considered ourselves
lucky to have them. Whether from the public, as in India, or from
private sources, programs offering opportunities for faith-based
transformation should be supported.
I would hope that faith-based prisons would reflect the religious
diversity of our culture, and that a broad range of choices would
exist. Nonetheless, I think it is an illusion to believe that private
volunteer groups can fill a job of this magnitude, and one that is
our public responsibility. It is hard to imagine how prisoners will
change their lives in prisons if there is not adequate funding for
ongoing therapy, treatment for addictions of all kinds and a decent
chance at rehabilitation--for the good of men and women in prison and
for the good of us all.
THE REV. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
Without faith that one’s present reality is not God’s last word
for us, how can human beings live creatively through the inevitable
difficult times in life?
Every life has both dark “Good Fridays” and joyous “Easter
(Sun)Days;” understanding that light will return during dark times
and that we must be grateful for joyous times because there will be
other-than-happy ones provides a healthy perspective for living well.
There are ample stories of people of faith living creatively while in
prison, those of New Testament apostles like Paul and contemporary
prophets like Martin Luther King, Jr. being the first to come to my
mind.
“Faith is the assurance of things hoped for” (Hebrews 11:1) and
prison is a less-than-joyous place to life. So, combining faith and
imprisonment is not only natural and useful, but essential. This
week’s question raises political church-state concerns with
significant financial issues and economic ramifications. Californians
will be wise to learn more about Tampa’s privatizations. Ten-thousand
responses to a recent 70th California Assembly District Legislative
Survey showed that 65% supported privatization of our county jail
(81% supported privatization of waste management; another 81%
supported extending the ban on assault weapons). It seems to me that
our economic concerns and financial realities might favor faith-based
prisons financed with volunteers’ money. I think we will see such
“combos” beyond Florida, but will not hold my breath until we have
similar institutions in our golden state.
THE VERY REV. CANON PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Parish Church
Corona del Mar
It would be very interesting and important to follow the
developments of the program. America is full of prisoners and our
judicial system has not had success in preventing or rehabilitating
criminals. Crime and murder in our nation is on the rise. Statistics
indicate that released prisoners often return to prison within a few
years. Something radical needs to be done.
Since public money is not being used, the issue of these
institutions being religiously funded is not really of concern. The
concern should be on who is watching and rehabilitating the
prisoners, and are these prisoners just petty-theft offenders or
hard-core inmates? Also, are the facilities secured?
If they are staffed (or volunteered) by professionals in the field
and can ensure the safety of the public, then they should be allotted
the opportunity to build a better human being, under the watchful eye
of the government.
IMAM MOUSTAFA AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center
of Orange County
Costa Mesa
I find the idea of a private prison very strange. I am against and
uncomfortable with people profiting from running a prison, as I know
some of them are run as businesses. On the other hand, if they are
run as a nonprofit, by definition the rehabilitation of the inmate
would take precedence over profit. The normal system doesn’t seem to
be working, so it will be interesting to see if these new prisons can
make a difference.
The setup does not seem to be natural from a government
perspective, but from a Christ-followers perspective it is very
natural. Jesus compared the compassion given to a prisoner as being
equal to having compassion on himself. He also claimed that he was
the fulfillment of the Jewish prophet Isaiah’s prediction that
prisoners would find freedom in the Messiah. These direct and many
other indirect references lay a mandate for compassion that is
carried out in various contemporary ways as Chuck Colson’s Prison
Fellowship, M-2 Prisoner Mentoring, and the wide variety of prison
chaplain and counseling programs run by various congregations across
the nation.
I personally served in the chaplain ministry at Cook County Jail
in Chicago. Granted, many prisoners use their “jailhouse conversion”
as a means of early release or probation, but others are genuinely
set free from the addictions and behaviors that put them there in the
first place.
Our society would greatly benefit if people would remember the
prisoners and volunteer to reach out to them. Their rehabilitation is
key to the peace and safety we all desire.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity Church
Costa Mesa
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