Throw it in a Circle!
Why Communal Healing?
“I’m not sure what healing looks like, but I know it happens in a circle.”
– Ana Maria De La Rosa
Ana is a dear friend and colleague from our time as a community organizers, political strategists and non-profit managers in Florida. So, when I arrived at Princeton Theological Seminary, I was more comfortable sharing with her the things that God had been whispering to my heart than I was announcing them in a classroom or to other students. Opening up to Ana, a student in her final year of a health advocacy master’s program at Sarah Lawrence college allowed us to discuss the shared desire to create something more than political avenues to access health insurance. We both realized we shared a vision to create healing communities that address the generational pain inflicted on people’s minds and souls when they suffer under unfair systems of oppression. In essence, we had both seen what happens when political entities thrust broken and hurt individuals into fights for justice without tending to the wholeness and wellness of the families that are impacted.
Even the mainstream strategies for healing that Americans employ are centered on individual clinical care. The stigma and cost associated with identifying as someone who needs healing and seeking it both serve as barriers to recovery, wellness and beloved community. Ana Maria and I both committed to work together to build a community of Faith, Healing and Justice, such that circles of support would exist where people could share in shouldering each other’s pain and creating paths to wellness such that broken people and communities would be better able to act as agents of change and have greater impact as they seek to improve society. Since that Fall semester in 2015, I have used my time at PTS to read and write about communal healing models that bring people together. Both my studies and my experiences have shown me that God calls us to community and that we are stronger, healthier and whole by being together. It is this theology that sits as the foundation of the organization and ministry that will become the Faith, Healing and Justice Center.
We've traveled all the way to Ghana, not just to study and research healing models, but to build a foundation for our own circle. We came to go about the business of getting free and being well, ourselves. We have chosen to be a circle of support for each other and for ourselves. We have chosen to extend the circle to those close to us in mind, spirit, experience, proximity and need. We have chosen to become a circle of possibility so that we can live differently. Better. Peacefully and Joyfully.