(Vatican Radio) Los
Angeles County has one of the highest youth incarceration rates in the country.
Up to 90% of the county’s juvenile justice youth are Latino or African American,
and up to 70% of incarcerated youth nationally are said to have some kind of
disability.
After witnessing the tragic lives of so many young people
facing life without parole in a juvenile justice system where little
rehabilitation takes place and with frighteningly high recidivism rates that
continue into adulthood, Jesuit Father Mike Kennedy decided to set up the Jesuit
Restorative Justice Initiative (JRJI) to provide support and hope to juveniles
with life sentences.
Through the Spiritual Exercise of St. Ignatius of
Loyola, a series of meditative prayers helping people find God in their everyday
experiences, the Jesuit Restorative Justice Initiative provides tools that allow
prisoners to find healing and forgiveness and to recognize their lives have
meaning and purpose.
When the young boys at the juvenile detention
facility in LA heard of Pope Francis’ wish to celebrate the Holy Thursday Mass
of the Lord’s Supper at Rome’s Casal del Marmo prison with the young inmates
there, many of them expressed their desire to participate from afar and in close
solidarity to what the Pope was going to do in another juvenile hall.
To
do this they have written letters to Pope Francis, thanking him for his gesture
of love and service, praying for him – as he has asked all of us to do,
describing the sadness of their lives in detention, and asking for prayers to
help them endure the darkness and hopelessness of their situations… As father
Kennedy points out, some of these youngsters will spend the rest of their lives
in prison.
We welcome their voices and publish the letters that will be
read at a service Thursday evening with the Director of Novices and 11 Jesuit
novices, each one washing the feet of an inmate at the juvenile hall where kids
are sentenced as adults.
Dear Pope Francis,
Thank you for washing
the feet of youth like us in Italy.
We also are young and made
mistakes.
Society has given up on us, thank you
that you have not given up
on us.
Dear Pope Francis,
I think you are a humble man.
When
you read this letter you will have washed the feet of other kids like.
I am
writing this letter because you give me hope.
I know one day with people like
you us kids
won't be given sentences that will keep us in prison
for the
rest of our lives.
I pray for you. Dont forget us.
Dear Pope
Francis,
I don't know if you have ever been to where I live.
I have grown
up in a jungle of gangs and drugs and violence.
I have seen people killed. I
have been hurt.
We have been victims of violence.
It is hard to be young
and surrounded by darkness.
Pray for me that one day I will be free
and be
able to help other youth like you do.
Dear Pope Francis,
Tonight
we pray for all victims of violence.
The families of people we have hurt need
healing.
Our families need healing.
We are all in pain.
Let us feel
Jesus' healing tonight.
Dear Pope Francis,
I know the same youth
feet that you wash
are like me.
Drugs have been part of me life for so
long.
We all struggle to be sober.
But you inspire me and I promise to be
sober
and help others with the cruel addiction of crystal
meth.
Dear Pope Francis,
My many friends are in two different
maximum security
prisons in one of our states 33 state prisons.Calif. I am
writing to tell you that I feel bad
that more youth of color are in prison in
our state
than any other place in the world. I am inviting you to
come
here next year to wash our feet, many of who have been sentences to die
in prison.
God bless you.
Dear Pope Francis,
I read that the
harshest sentence that a youth
can receive in Italy is 20 years. I wish this
was true here.
I hope I hear back from you. I have been catholic and glad I
am catholic
because I have a pope like you.
I will pray for you every day
because we need examples of God like you are
in this violent world.
Dear Pope Francis,
I am glad you picked the name Francis. When I
was little I read about St.Francis. He is a cool saint. He was a man of peace
and simplicity. I am praying to you that you pray that we have peace in our gang
filled neighborhoods.
Dear Pope Francis,
When Jesus washed the
feet of his friends he gave an example of humility. I have been raised to
believe that it is only with respect in hurting your enemy that you are a man.
Tonight you and Jesus show me something in this washing of the feet something
very different. I hope we kids learn from this.
Dear Pope
Francis,
I have never been to Rome. I do not know if it is near Los
Angeles
because all my youth I have only known my neighborhood. I hope
one
day I will be given a second chance and receive a blessing from
you
and maybe even have my feet washed on Holy Thursday.
Dear Pope
Francis,
I know you have a good family. I am writing this letter to you
because I know
that my family is suffering because of me. I know have done
some bad things but I am not a bad kid and when last year in our big state we
not a new law called SB9 this made me family happy because this is a beautiful
message that we kids deserve a second chance.
Dear Pope
Francis,
From reading I know that us kids are capable of making decisions
like older people do. I have seen pictures of brains of kids and adults. I am
asking you as Pope to help us and
help other people understand we can change
and want to change.
Monday, April 1, 2013
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