Metamorphosis: Walking The Line From Volunteer To Server
September 18, 2011
There are days when falling all over one another is a good thing. Volunteers plowed their way through installing doors and trim, covered windows for interior painting, laid underlayment, and engaged in a little painting. Having such a list of jobs going on all at once can only mean, eventually, everyone meets in the hallway. What happens when folks trying to paint, lay underlayment, and install a door meet at the same time in the small space of hallway—each wanting to get their job done? Relationship…and something more. In the space of hallway, folks begin to get a glimpse of something more than volunteering. There is a sense of change from volunteer to server. As if one walks away from, the I feel good of volunteering, into relationship where caring for my sister and brother overwhelms and server emerges. Who knows? It might be my imagination, but I think, at least I choose to think, servers are sometimes born in a hallway.
Texture and Fence: Shaping Interior and Exterior
September 17, 2011
Today is the Blitz Build’s last official day (much more to complete after today—so, if you would like to help during the next week or two, we can put you to work!). A lot of prep was done yesterday for today. From a run to the dump, to cutting trim-work, to texturing the interior walls, to placing posts for a fence, folks were busy. Today finish work begins, and then tonight the first coat of interior paint goes up, with a second coat tomorrow!
Rebar and Concrete
September 16, 2011
Yesterday the painting of the home’s exterior continued along with the second coat of mud on the drywall. Late morning a concrete truck arrived and the front stoop and garage slab were placed. Then during the afternoon, folks began cutting trim for installment on Saturday. A busy Thursday!
Drywall and Mud
September 15, 2011
Thanks to a group from Blaine Memorial UMC we have been able to make a push and now have drywall mud on the walls and the better part of the exterior painted!
Volunteer Hands Build Home: Day 10 and 11
September 14, 2011
As insulation goes up, daily temperatures are lowering…seems appropriate!
Day 8 and Moving Ahead
September 11, 2011
We are now eight days into the build and new energy comes with new volunteers!
Sacrament, Life, Home
September 10, 2011
A week ago, folks began building a home, not a house, but a home. Houses are structures which may or may not house a person or a family. Houses are lifeless without personalities. Much of that goes into their construction was once alive, but now is dead. Wood once a tree, copper once mingled in earth, steel that once was ore, is anything but alive. A home though is flowing with life. The death of trees, the ripping of ore from mother earth is transformed and allows life where once were ashes. In the construction of a home, people laugh and hug, hammer thumbs, and tell stories. In the construction of a home there is a sense of sacrament; whether it is the death of trees or the black and blue swollen thumb, there is little doubt, life has been given so life might be lived. Today begins the last week of building a home. Come join in life as you are able!
Warm Days, Warm Smiles
September 9, 2011
Day 5 rolled into day 6 and more folks came out of the woodwork!
Day 6
Day 4 and Another 2×4
September 7, 2011
With the holiday weekend over, the number of volunteers arriving in the morning dropped a bit. Thanks to all those who made the weekend and got the home off to a great start! In the meantime, one 2×4 at a time…
Day 3 and Trusses are Up!
September 6, 2011
The landscape began to warm yesterday. Light breezes and a moment in the shade helped everyone get through the day. Soon though, roof sheathing, and plenty of shade as the landscape warms a little more each day of this week.
Two Days and Building
September 5, 2011
After the second day of construction the walls are up! With clear weather and new friends, a home is rising from the ashes!
Rebuilding Homes
September 4, 2011
Yesterday a Blitz Build began in White Swan. The goal of the build is to build a home for a family who lost a home in the February 12 fire, in fourteen days. The first day of building a home for another person is always a day of strong feelings. The first day of a blitz build is not different. The excitement of building flows in the air. Yet there is an added dimension. When the homes future family is standing beside you, an emotional-spiritual dimension kicks-in. A dimension that may not be more fully described than to say or feel, “Oh, this is about family.”
Fourteen days of building…come and join in the building of family!
Caring on the Fourth
July 5, 2011
There are many ways to spend a 4th of July. Folks from Woodlands, Texas spent the day putting up drywall in a home and reroofing another home, both damaged in the White Swan February fire.
Supporting freedom comes in many ways!
What makes any person volunteer?
July 1, 2011
We were sitting around Fort Simcoe on a beautiful Friday evening. Hot dogs were cooking on the grill, laughter was in the air, the cold breeze was perfect for cooling down after a long day. It was a great way to end a busy week. Our company was the young men and women from all over the country who were visiting the Yakima Nation. They worked for a government agency called Ameri-Corp or NCCC, you may have heard of them. Their line of work includes traveling throughout the country looking for disaster relief projects to be apart of in the community.
They were nice folk, very easy to get along with and we really enjoyed our evening. As the night ended, we invited them to church on Sunday, only to hear that they considered themselves as “un-churched” people and gave the usual response of “we will do our best to make it!” We left with hope in our hearts that they would come. We also left with questions on our minds…What makes a person, even an “un-churched” person (whatever that means to you), feel the desire to volunteer in a community that it far away from their own?
We so often see, through the media or person experience, that the religious communities are ones who are helping our communities in disaster. It makes sense to us because we know it fits into their theology. People of faith want to help. It is the good thing to do – taking care of your neighbors as the bible says.
What if this action is something more than a yearly practice of religion? What if there is a deeper practice of faith (a faith of diverse meaning to anyone) that fuels us with grace help one another. Perhaps volunteering (serving) is a common denominator to all beings of humankind.
Within the human spirit lies the capacity to feel outside itself. We call this empathy, to feel into a living situation and understand what they could possible be going through. This realization is more than enough for any human spirit to feel compelled to serve and volunteer.
The religious communities of today are a great guiding light for people to find an avenue to serve and volunteer, but it seems to me that outside their efforts continue to be humans who reject the church, but love the service. Does this somehow lead us to the new direction of congregational, missional, and transformational religious communities? To a new society as we know it?
We can only have conversation, ideas, and hopes about tomorrow.
By CoreyJosh
Watching On Going Disasters and Want to Volunteer?
Opportunities to Serve
The response has been strong to the tornados that recently cut ugly scars across the south and the floods that now threaten there. The impulse to jump into action and do something is wonderful. The challenge is holding on to that desire until the time is right to act. People are asking, “What can I do now?” My answer: go to Yakama.
Much of the immediate response after a disaster is done by local residents and neighbors of affected communities. Out of town mission groups are most needed for the long term recovery, which takes time to come together. The immediate response includes meeting basic needs and clearing downed trees, tarping roofs, and mucking out flood damaged properties in order to secure homes and buildings. Then there is a transitional period where people step back from the chaos to assess their needs and resources and make some decisions about what they would like to do. At the same time, local residents are working with faith-based and non-profit recovery organizations to determine a process and develop an infrastructure for directing the community recovery. After a large disaster, it typically takes three months or longer before a community is ready to receive out of town mission groups and begin rebuilding or tackling major rehab projects. Which brings us back to Yakama.
Three months ago, wildfires and windstorms swept across parts of Washington. More than 20 homes were destroyed and many more were severely damaged. The people of Yakama and the surrounding communities have been assessing and planning and they are now ready to move forward – but they need help. In a few months, mission teams will be needed across the south to aid in the tornado and flood recovery work that will take place. The people of Yakima need help right now. The Yakama Christian Mission is participating in the recovery. Director David Bell is coordinating rebuilding efforts. Mission teams are needed now to begin the hands on work of rebuilding homes. Email Josh Baird or call (985) 778-6915 for more information.
Josh Baird
Disciples Home Missions Updates May 15, 2011
Junior Livestock Auction Tomorrow
May 3, 2011
White Swan FFA and 4-H youth have been at the Junior Livestock show since Saturday. Preparing stalls, weighing animals, and during the last two days showing their animals for quality of meat and showmanship. With the auction arena setup for tomorrow’s auction, all that is left is an early rising so youth can wash and groom their animals for one final turn in the arena.
We will be there with them as the auction gets off the ground. If we are lucky, we will walk away with enough pork to feed all the volunteers and visitors who will visit the Mission this summer!
© David B. Bell 2011
Help Make Ministry Happen at Yakama Christian Mission
Serve the Body of Christ by sharing your time and skills with other caring people at Yakama Christian Mission in White Swan, Washington April 9 through 16. You can help improve this great facility for mission and ministry during all or any part of that time. Our focus during this time is remodeling of the Parsonage (This will allow for future emergency housing and retreat activities.).
$150 for the week or $25.00 per day will provide you the following:
• A bed: you provide the bedding
• Showers: you provide the towel
• Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, Snacks
• Great fellowship
• Opportunity to help enable lives to be changed
• Up-building the Body of Christ
All this for $150.00. Register today!
Name ______________________________________________
Address_____________________________________________
City ___________________________ State ___ Zip ________
Phones: ______________________________________________________
Email: ________________________________________________________
Congregation: __________________________________________________
Mail to:
David/Belinda Bell
c/o YCM
P.O. Box 547
White Swan, WA 98952
Or email the form to
dave@yakamamission.org
509-874-2824
www.yakamamission.org
This will allow for future emergency housing and retreat activities.
Sorting Clothes, Does It Get Any Better?
There is a need of 30 to 40 people this week to sort clothes and donations this week in White Swan. If you or someone you know is available, please call David at 509-969-2093.
Might 2011 be the Year of Embodying Bold Justice on the Western Ridge?
January 01, 2011
Today, this first day of the year, Belinda and I are on the road returning to the landscape we adopted (I wonder, has it adopted us?) a few years ago. We have spent much of this week driving the state of our birth and, as far as today goes, we spend a full day driving north and never leave the state of California. Normally, in a day or so, we would return home to the valley of the Yakama’s. However, this time around, we need to make a stop in Seattle on Monday. The need for Monday’s stop in Washington has a unique, maybe infamous, tie to a stop we made earlier this week in California.
California is a long stretched out state. You can cover the width of it easily in a day, but if you are traveling by car, north to south, you have a lot of time on your hands and a lot of country to experience. One of our favorite routes is the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada mountain range. With Mount Whitney, anchoring this north-south range, the range does its best to slow the Pacific’s eastern moving storms, requiring a tribute of rain and snow, before crossing the ridge. The Sierra does a great job of obtaining every drop of storm water, thus creating a rain shadow, which makes the eastern Sierra slope an open and arid land whose water stems from Sierra snowmelt. The eastern slope changes as you head south and the aridity becomes prominent when Hwy 395 drops into the Owens Valley near Bishop, California. The temperatures of the Owens Valley, at the most western edge of the Great Basin, range from summer highs in the 100’s to winter lows in the 20’s, which lends to landscape where paying attention, matters. Less than an hour south of Bishop, between the towns Independence and Lone Pine, we made the stop that makes Monday’s stop in Seattle matter.
In March of 1942, the first of 120,000 Japanese-Americans arrive at the Manzanar concentration camp. Manzanar, located at the base of the Sierra Range, between Independence and Lone Pine, is infamous for imprisoning U.S. citizens until November 21, 1945. Throughout California (and other states) Japanese-Americans—men, women, elderly, and children—were rounded up and shipped by train and bus, not altogether unlike other cultural people in other countries during WWII, to Manzanar where they were employed to maintain their own imprisonment. During the years of imprisonment, Japanese-American prisoners lost their civil liberties, homes, and businesses. When finally released from imprisonment in November 1945, the U.S. government left the families of Manzanar on their own to find their way back home.
Growing up in California, Belinda and I both had a California history class in junior high school. I do not know how history is told today in California middle and junior high schools, but I can say neither of us were told the Manzanar story. I imagine this was, in part, because in the years around 1970, much of society continued to believe the concentration of Japanese-Americans during WWII was correct, and, in part, much of the rest of society did not want to remember or accept their country of birth was capable of inflicting atrocities on its own ordinary families. For myself, it wasn’t until late in high school in a class on California Tribal people, when an American Indian instructor asked the class to begin thinking about similarities on how the U.S. government has historically treated people of color, that I first learned of Manzanar. Continuing the questioning that started that day in a southern Californina High School class brings me to the tie between Manzanar and Monday’s stop in Seattle.
****
I met John (not his real name…you’ll understand in a moment) in 1999. I don’t remember our first meeting, but during the years that followed I got to know John as we worked together on different Mission work projects. Even though John was fifteen at our first introduction, having grown up in the community John helped introduce us to much of the landscape. As the years grew, so did John and in time he came to lead out discussions based in anti-racism—these conversations would deal with questions concerning the affects of how structural racism affects immigration issues, farm worker issues, and issues around how our food is grown and eaten—with groups who came to the Mission for weeklong Learning and Serving experiences. As a Disciple, John worked a summer as a Disciples of Christ intern through the office of Disciples Volunteering. During, that summer John labored with people who experienced loss due to flooding, and helped volunteers learn the difference between charity in relationship with justice and charity standing by itself. Over the years, John has spoken to hundreds of people about justice and charity and helped folks consider questions they never thought to ask before. Then life changed for John.
About a year and a half ago, while traveling, John was asked for identification. I imagine it does not need saying, but just the same, when an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer asks a person of color for identification, neither party takes the request lightly. John quickly found himself in the Northwest Immigration Detention Center for nearly a month.
Over the last nine years, Jill and I have worked together to deepen the theological consequences of serving within a poor community. The serving of people is important. For only through the giving of our resources and ourselves do poverty, abuse, subjugation, and hunger begin to wane. Learning and Serving experiences though strive to raise an awareness that charity without justice lacks integrity—uprightness, honesty, truthfulness, and authenticity. Justice and charity must be bound to one another in a manner that the fullness of one is impossible without accountability to the other. They, charity and justice, and their relationship to one another are representative of the relationship we are all called into—the wellbeing of our sister or brother is our own wellbeing.
We stop in Seattle on Monday to attend John’s deportation hearing. I don’t know if this is the final hearing or not; I don’t know if John will be deported at the end of the hearing; I don’t know if John will be granted some type of status that will allow him to stay when the hearing is completed; What I do know is that I find it amazing we live in a day and time when a western educated society cannot see the injustice that is occurring to the children of undocumented immigrants. Why society allows politics to destroy lives of human beings is beyond me. I find it astounding, that as an ordered society, we have not been able to comprehend the injustice of deporting young adults who came to this country as babies, children, and youth. How is justice achieved when young adults are sent to countries of which they have no memory, no family, and no community? Well, I just don’t know. However, I will say this one issue, I am just stubborn enough, just bigheaded (pigheaded) enough, to say there is no justice, no benefit to society, no enhancement to the family of God when we allow the wellbeing of our sons and daughters to diminish. I would go further to say, that one day—I don’t know when, twenty-five years, fifty years, a hundred years?—people will look back on these times, and say the same that is said today of the Japanese-American concentration camps—What were they thinking?
****
If you have ever participated in a Learning and Serving experience at the Mission you know it is unlike any worktrip or missiontrip you might have taken before. You found yourself jumping right in the middle of issues current to our day, and you have often found them to be much more complex than some would have us believe. There is much to learn and much conversation needed. Clearly, on the one hand, the immigration issue in the United States is not an easy one and it is not going to be solved in a journal entry. On the other hand, the gospel, from my perspective, has a simple message: nothing should hurt. There is a gospel call to care, first and foremost, for the hurt, the oppressed, the subjugated, and those whom are held voiceless; and, there is a call to understand all people as our sister and brother, and no line in the sand—no border—should be allowed to separate us from family.
Today is the first day of the year. It is 2011! Let us be a bold people this year and standup and embody our faith. We will not and probably should not agree on everything, but every issue of justice concerning those whom hurt must be on the table. Let us talk, converse, argue, love and eat meals together. Let us not give up, but stand up for all who ache and struggle and dream for the realm of God’s righteousness to include them.
Allow us to recognize the fullness of our wealth, the comfort of our homes, and fearlessness of not being deported from the landscape of our being. Once we have done this, let us learn that the basic fee for an attorney to work to keep John in his home landscape is $8000. From the fullness of your good fortune, please give all you can to help. With the faith of abundant giving, know that all monies received beyond the costs of this hearing, will be placed in a designated account for others who live lives similar to John’s.
We can, and, we will be a people who no longer allows the systemic ridge of injustice to create a rain shadow that blocks the fullness of God’s wealth for all of Creation. We can, even if it is one shovel full at a time, become a people who shovel away at this systemic ridge of injustice. With a vision in our eyes, we will live and work toward a day when our children’s children stand side by side on a level, shoveled plain enjoying the full pleasure of being brothers and sisters in the fullness of God’s Grace.
© David B. Bell 2011
Clouds and Stars
What should have been
Important and fruitful
became bitter.
Wasted.
Spots appeared on their lungs.
Marrow dried
in their bones.
They ranted.
Pointless utterances.
Truth did not speak for them.
It is a wonder
they even made it to California.
But, of course,
they did,
and they named it success.
Conquest.
Destiny.
Frontiers ended for them
and a dread settled upon them
and became remorseless
nameless
namelessness.
(Simon J. Ortiz, from SAND CREEK)
We might easily place the workweek at the Yakama Christian Mission on our list of “see how we have helped the poor or the homeless or the disenfranchised or the Native or the Mexican, if it were not for the voices of the ancestors. We might think of the week as an opportunity to improve and roof the old Parsonage, paint the Friendship house, finish roofing the Pumphouse, if it were not for today being September 11. We might believe we have moved ahead from our placing others outside, thinking ourselves better, living arrogantly, knowing “we’re” right, believing “my faith is better than yours,” if it were not for our brother wanting to burn the religion of another.
Instead, it is enough to know this last day of folk from, Nickerson, Kansas, Stewardson, Illinois, Boise and Nampa and Hanson, Idaho, Anderson, Indiana, Duarte and Bakersfield and San Jose, California, Mount Vernon and Seattle and Yakima and Issaquah, Washington, Indianapolis, Indiana, who work to better the Mission campus, allows for a home where people might arrive on foot, motorcycle, or car and converse about generational issues not always welcomed in our schools, public squares, televisions, emails, facebooks, and churches.
After a week of volunteers, this last day of community placing the final shingles, raising the l
ast soffit, painting the last board calls for a moment of remembrance during a moment of celebration.
Today is about balance, owning namelessness, opening the frontier of neighbor, recognizing Wisdom and turning an ear to the cloud of witnesses and the ancestors who are like the stars in the sky.”
Everyone is Needed
We have reached the day before the last day of roofing and gutting the parsonage. The day began at thirty-eight degrees with the sun shining and the wind still.
I think we often hear of great work volunteers. They come and work hard to better the lives of others. They build, design, remove, paint, console, and a multitude of other tasks that change landscapes. However, they could do their work without the money the rest of us are willing to contribute. Folk like to say the church isn’t about money, and in a way, they are right, but in our context today, we all know money is at the crux of alleviating hurt. The church cannot be all it might be if money is not given to feed, house, and care for the poor and oppressed—the reality is, volunteers would be standing outside the parsonage at this very minute, twiddling their thumbs, if it were not for those who have given money to better world, mission, and community.
It would be wrong to confuse those who give money and those who volunteer physical time though. One isn’t better than another, but they are different, and mission needs both. When done in combination, monetary giving and volunteer time, huge change occurs. On building projects, a rule of thumb is the cost of materials equals the cast of labor. Which means on remodels like the parsonage
(and the labor on remodels is higher than on new construction), the money given by those of us who do not have the chance or cannot volunteer, is double by our sisters and brothers who can and do volunteer!
As today moves towards the noon hour, money and labor is hard at work. The roof is quickly moving towards completion, the installation of soffits have begun, the grounds are being mowed and cleared, gutting the inside of the building continues, and painting of the Friendship house is finishing up! The week has been an experience and the Mission campus is changing by the minute!
Changes
From roof to floor, the parsonage is changing. While the reality of retreat center is down the road a ways, there is little doubt the building is not what it used to be!
Wisdom by Way of Youth and Elder
September 7, 2010
I’m not all that sure when I first saw them on a volunteer project. It’s been awhile though—maybe back in 2003 when Disciples Volunteering came to the region and partnered with United Christian Church of Yakima to build their facilities. Since Friday, though, the two of them have been busy doing some of the hardest work on the roofing project—wheelbarrowing old shingles from the backside of the building to the front and placing them in the dumpster. As that job went by the wayside with the last shingles thrown off the roof, they moved inside to begin the initial process remodeling the parsonage into a retreat and after-school center—gutting the building.
As I watched Quentin and Gabe haul away and bang out old cabinets, I wondered how they have become so settled in with volunteer folks of a different generation. Over the years we have watched well over a thousand youth, young adults, and older folk commit their volunteer time to making a direct difference in the lives of the disenfranchised. Great work has been achieved, but interestingly enough, most work has been accomplished by groups who have separated themselves by age. There are those times that in the same year two groups from the same congregation, one young and one old, will arrive and volunteer in different seasons. Inter-generational volunteer groups are few.
Easy to understand the separation in ages, we all do it in many other venues. Most of us are most comfortable with people our age. Yet in this case, two youth are hanging with people where the next youngest is probably three times their age (I try not to ask folks age, at least not too often!). And the relationships they have with the older folk are what many of us hope for in our old age—a relationship of elderhood. Each day I watch the boys talk and ask questions of women and men, hang around the circles of conversation, and of course, go off by themselves. The time with those older than themselves is a time of richness. Where ancient relationship is lived out—where wisdom is passed on between generations. And one finds there is an equality to the wisdom of elders. Young folks light up as an elder explains how figure the angle to cut a board, and elders raise eyebrows at the water break when the youth explain why gaming is important to them. The experience of elderhood, seems to me, isn’t wisdom on a one way street, but rather more like a river eddy where wisdom is gathered from the whole circle of folks before heading down stream.
© David B. Bell 2010
A Day of Worship
The wind didn’t give it
up. Then again, neither did the volunteers! Through wind and dust, the remainder of the roofing came of the building. Beginning with breakfast, continuing to noon, and then on until the early afternoon, everyone stayed at it. Others joined in and by the end of the day nineteen people were bu
sy being in community.
Near suppertime everyone cleaned up and headed out to the JustLiving Farm where the days worship culminated in a formal worship service around the labyrinth. Folk then moved from
sacred supper to a supper of the body spending the remainder in conversation and relationship.

































































