Writing for Mystic Activists July 27, 2023 By Event Details Date(s): Wednesday, Jul 10th, 2024-Tuesday, Jul 16th, 2024 Venue: Collegeville Institute Categories: Writing Workshop This workshop is co-sponsored by the School for Conversion. From the abolition movement of the 19th century to today’s movements for Black lives, living wages, LGBTQ equality, carbon reduction, and human dignity, writers have been at the heart of the struggle for justice. From Frederick Douglass to Angelina Grimke, people who have written from their own deep pain have invited a broader public into understanding and engagement. But writing is hard for people who live under the daily intensity of not only suffering injustice, but also trying to fight against it. Who has the time to write? And even if you can find it, how do you deal with the fact that millions like you don’t have such luxury? Is sitting in front of a blank screen an escape from the struggle? Or can it be a way of going deeper and sustaining transformative work? Writing for Mystic Activists is an invitation to join Chanequa Walker-Barnes and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove for a week of attention to writing as a contemplative practice for activists and clergy. It is an opportunity to connect with a long tradition of resistance writers, develop your craft, and build community with others who experience a similar vocation. Biographies Dr. Chanequa Walker-Barnes is a clinical psychologist, public theologian, and ecumenical minister whose work focuses upon healing the legacies of racial and gender oppression. A professor of practical theology and pastoral care at Columbia Theological Seminary, Dr. Chanequa is the author of I Bring the Voices of My People: A Womanist Vision for Racial Reconciliation, Too Heavy a Yoke: Black Women and the Burden of Strength, as well as nearly two dozen journal articles and book chapters in theology and psychology. Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove is a preacher, author, and moral activist based in Durham, North Carolina. He has been part of the “Moral Mondays” movement in North Carolina since 2006 and currently serves on the National Steering Committee for the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival. The author of more than a dozen books, Wilson-Hartgrove’s titles include Revolution of Values, Common Prayer, Reconstructing the Gospel, Becoming the Answer to Our Prayers, and The Third Reconstruction, with the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II. The program is limited to 8 participants and will be held at the Collegeville Institute. Due to COVID precautions, workshop participants are asked to be fully vaccinated and to show proof of vaccination before arriving on the Collegeville Institute campus. The Collegeville Institute will cover travel expenses to and from the workshop within the continental United States, all workshop fees, and room and board. International travel costs, and travel from Hawaii and Alaska may be shared between the Collegeville Institute and the workshop participant. Those who join the workshop will be expected to reside at the Collegeville Institute throughout the entire term. Who May Apply? People who are actively engaged in work for justice, whether or not you are employed to do the work Activist writers with various levels of experience (no publication history expected) Application Process: Apply HERE.