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Restorative justice' focus of Disciples conference agenda


From DISCNEWS.parti@ecunet.org
Date 06 Jan 1997 09:43:34

December 18, 1996
Disciples News Service
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Contact: Clifford L. Willis
Email: CWillis@oc.disciples.org
on the web: http//www.disciples.org

96b-103

   INDIANAPOLIS (DNS) -- Building prisons is not the answer to handling
the surging numbers of persons who become part of the U.S.' criminal justice
system each year.

   "We can't build our way out of this," says J.T. Ferguson, Indianapolis.
The executive director of Offender Aid and Restoration suggests another
model or paradigm for dealing with offenders. 

   Ferguson was among 25 Indianapolis persons from local
criminal-justice-related organizations who gathered here Dec. 11 to discuss
another model
called "Restorative Justice." The conference was convened by the Homeland
Ministries division of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). 

   What's so important about restorative justice is its emphasis on meeting
the needs of victims. That aspect is critical for the Rev. Gerald Cunningham
of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). Neither the needs of victims
nor
offenders are met by the current criminal justice system, says the Homeland
Ministries senior associate. "There must be a better way." 

   Crime victims are among the most neglected persons during justice
proceedings, according to Josephine Cuesto, an Indianapolis sentencing
consultant and former probation officer. Victims are angry, she says, because
the courts seem insensitive to their particular needs.

   Restorative justice, says Cunningham, "addresses the hurts and needs of
victims and offenders in such a way that they and the community are healed."
Toward that end, reconciliation between victim and offender is an essential
part of the effort.

   Restorative justice is about seeing people, as opposed to the state, as
victims, says the Rev. Kathy Lancaster, Louisville, Ky., keynote speaker for
the event. She is associate director of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Criminal Justice Program and editor of Church and Society magazine.

   While heading her church's national program, Lancaster says "restorative
justice is a local initiative. What counts is what you do right here."  

   For Cuesto this means that offenders' cases need to be considered
individually during sentencing. Day-reporting sites, alternative sentencing,
transitional and pre-release programs, and educational initiatives can all
help
truly restore offenders to society.

   Without these efforts, former inmates also become "victims of the
system," says Amaryllis Lewis of Public Action in Correction Effort or
PACE, Indianapolis. Many inmates -- ill prepared for life after incarceration
--
wind up back in jails or prison. "When does the victimization stop?" Lewis
asks. 

   Prisons and jails, say ex-offenders, have become throw-away places for
inmates where little to no rehabilitation really takes place -- if it is even
feasible.  

   "Offenders don't need rehabilitation, they need  habilitation,'"says Renee
Williamson, Indianapolis, co-founder of New Beginnings -- a support
program for women ex-offenders. For her that comes in the form of
transitional, job training, and counseling programs for inmates. Without them
offenders will emerge from prison virtually unchanged.

   Williamson and New Beginnings co-founder Jendayi Mayibuye, are both
ex-offenders who have changed and are now giving back to the community.
The organization is their contribution toward restorative justice. Through it
Mayibuye hopes to help other women offenders and local communities to
know that "we have something to offer." 

   One inmate advocate says local church efforts are crucial in helping
inmates see their worth as creations of God. "I believe most persons in prison
have spiritual problems that are expressed in unacceptable behavior," says
Marilyn Hotz, a longtime prison volunteer from Indianapolis.

   Very few prisoners identify with God or a "higher value system outside of
themselves"; have no sense of community; and have no understanding of how
to use the freedom others take for granted, according to Hotz. 

   Churches can help start the process by "respecting the personhood" of
these individuals "even when they don't respect themselves," says the
Homeland Ministries retiree.

   Restoring relationships between offenders, their victims and the larger
community is critical if the system is to be reformed, proponents say. The
current punitive atmosphere is counter-productive.

   The answer for Indiana's dilemma may well be contained in its own state
laws, according to one offenders' advocate. Lobbyist and former legislator
Leslie Duvall is quick to remind politicians that the state's penal code "is
to
be based on articles of reformation and not punitive justice."

   "What we're doing is dealing with symptoms," says OAR's Ferguson.
"We need a change from being  symptom-based' to becoming  prescription-based.'
It's all about individuals being made whole."

                    - 30 -

DISCNEWS - inbox for Disciples News Service, Office of Communication,
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), PO Box 1986 Indianapolis, IN 46206,
tele. (317) 635-3100, (DISCNEWS.part@ecunet.org) Wilma Shuffitt, News and
Information Assistant; (CLIFF WILLIS.part@ecunet.org) Cliff Willis, Director
of News and Information; (CURT MILLER.part@ecunet.org) Executive Director


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