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Posts Tagged ‘poverty’

Trench Worker: Father Mark Schmieder

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

I’m just coming down from the emotional intensity surrounding the Mass of Christian Burial for my friend and colleague, Father Mark Schmieder. It was held at St. Francis Seraph church in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio. It will not soon be forgotten.

Neither will Fr. Mark. As Father Bob, officiating the service, expressed in his remembrance, ”Mark wanted to have a funeral among the poor.”

This mostly says it all about Fr. Mark Schmieder and his M.O.  My colleague on our county’s jail chaplaincy team put Fr. Mark into an even greater perspective. Bob said to me on New Year’s Eve: “Mark was a trench worker. Sometimes it took you awhile to remember that he was a priest.”

He was on this earth for 69 years, and so many of those years were spent in vigorous service to helping the disenfranchised, the “marginal” as another acquaintance of mine put it. Fr. Mark considered impoverished people - homeless, addicts, broken emotionally and spiritually - marginal. He never judged them.

The year 2009 was nightmarish for Fr. Mark, especially when he learned he had pancreatic cancer, and yet the year was a blessing to him in a myriad of ways that perhaps only Fr. Mark could recognize.

Quan Truong, a wonderfully insightful reporter, wrote an outstanding profile of Fr. Mark in The Cincinnati Enquirer in which he illuminates some of those blessings. Quan hit so many things right about Fr. Mark. When reading it, pay special attention to Kairos.

Fr. Mark Schmieder was the innovator - the mind and heart - behind the launching of Kairos in Ohio’s prison system. This was no small task. It took years of planning and implementing. I attended a Kairos graduation last year at Warren Correctional Institution, and to this day I cannot forget the immense feeling of joy I received being among those inmate-believers whose remarks about their transformation and new positive thinking remain fixed in my mind.

To think that the joy I received in just being at Warren for Kairos had an indisputable direct tie to my colleague, Fr. Mark.

Fr. Mark was a do-er. I cannot fathom the number of people whose lives Fr. Mark influenced, although I have a clue: St. Francis Seraph church was so crowded January 2 that guests stood rows-deep all the way back to the door of the church. Standing Room Only: an understatement.

Fr. Mark was also instrumental in originating and expanding The St. Francis-St. Joseph Catholic Worker House (Hamilton County). The House’s website has a tribute to Fr. Mark. Please visit it. The House derives from the tireless Catholic Worker Movement spearheaded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in 1933. Fr. Mark: a true spiritual descendant of Dorothy Day, Mother Teresa, and St. Francis of Assisi.

Fr. Bob eloquently spoke of Fr. Mark’s passion for the marginal, his extraordinary genius for leadership and servitude, his robust humor, his wisdom and savvy, and his humility. Fr. Mark got things done. He may have been late for meetings or events, but things got done. 

Much got accomplished, and people that Fr. Mark ministered to often embraced new life changes because he overstepped fear and derision. He claimed once that “people live in a culture of fear, and that’s why things don’t change.” 

What mattered to Fr. Mark Schmieder came down to this remark: “Nobody is a nobody in God’s eyes.”

Tags: addiction, catholic worker movement, dorothy day, Greater Cincinnati Coalition for the Homeless, homelessness, kairos, National Coalition for the Homeless, peter maurin, poverty, social justice, st francis st joseph catholic worker house
Posted in People, Programs, Uncategorized | No Comments »

Global Hunger

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

I am proud of my friend and RED!’s senior technical advisor, William Lambers.

Bill exudes a charisma and proactive vision that have helped identify RED!’s recent achievements as a major publication.

He is also his own man in the world of writing, publishing, and outreach. His prolific work bangs the drum of a number of cultural and political issues, namely those involving world peace, nuclear disarmament, and fighting global hunger.

Bill Lambers is on the frontline.

He’s published a new book, The Roadmap to End Global Hunger, which is a must-read for not only his illustrating the bold, under-the-radar approaches the U.S. government is taking toward combating world hunger, but for the unsubtle and articulate way Bill addresses one of the current worst epidemics in world history.

Read this notice about the new book.  Also, here’s a new op-ed piece that showcases Bill’s other concern for peace and justice. His humanitarian push is gaining much ground. His readership grows weekly.

While you’re checking out his other books or his website, know that all of Bill’s works are incredibly reasonably priced. He wants you to read.

But, about global hunger: the stats are blindingly chilling. The stories should make you furious enough to get involved, even in a marginal way. Little by little.

RED! supports Bill’s efforts - and those of the U.N. World Food Programme - to fight the fight against world poverty. In so many cases where hunger exists, especially in third world countries, families that depend on a father’s or husband’s presence are left deprived often because the adult male in the home is incarcerated. This is certainly a reality and usually not talked about in the media.

We salute you, Bill. Let’s keep spreading the word. We’ve just started.

Tags: africa, catholic relief services, friends of the world food program, global hunger, history news network, mercy corps, poverty, save the children, school lunch programs, south america, william lambers, world food programme, world peace
Posted in Books, People, Programs, Publications | No Comments »

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