Sunday Service: In-person and Online Sunday at 10:30am

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Board Snap Lines: September 17, 2021

The curious power of sticky dots. Who knew? The board used them during our retreat in August. Each member had some on hand in several cheerful colors. During open, creative, and intense discussions about UCE’s goals for the coming year, the dots were used to mark key themes and actions on long lists —indicating priorities and levels of support.

Dots colored green, red, blue, and yellow to show our shared commitment to social justice, dismantling white privilege, community building, finance. Details of which will come your way soon.

And there they were again at our first Sunday back in the building. For our name tags: Green dot for hugs. Yellow dot for elbow bumps. Red dot for distance.

The little stickers defined our readiness for contact. Whatever the choice, joy connected each dot . As direct and simple as Rev. Eileen’s opening greeting after 18 uncertain months:

“Hi.”

No mistaking the loud and prolonged cheer that erupted from those assembled, and our beloved Zoom family.

As mentioned earlier, the board, ministers, and staff will soon be sharing with you the work of recent meetings, and aspirations for real action in the coming months.

Mobs of green dots for each of you.

In love and service,

Ally Hunter

* SNAP LINE, carpentry: a tool to draw a line between two points (ok, sticky dots), a guide.

Board Snap Lines: September 17, 20212021-09-17T12:26:40+00:00

September 19, 2021

We will host an in-person and virtual worship service on Sunday, September 19th at 10:15 am.

Mistakes, I’ve Made a Few
We know that we all make mistakes because no one is perfect. But making them, owning them, and repairing the harm is difficult for all of us. It may bethe shame that gets in the way. What does accountability look like in a covenantal community? How do we embrace a culture of loving ourselves and each other through the inevitable mistakes we make and how do we learn from them well? This sermon was purchased by Ellie Feddersen at last year’s Serendipity Auction. Rev. Eileen Wiviott preaching.

A few important notes about participating in-person:

  1. Everyone over 2 in and around the UCE building will need to be masked.
  2. We will maintain physical distance, which means, chairs will be spaced apart and seating is limited in the sanctuary to 120. We will have overflow seating in room 3 (25) and room 6 (20), to participate in the service through the livestream. Beyond this, there will be seating outside the sanctuary on the south lawn.
  3. Please review our UCE Guidelines for Building Use before Sunday.

Please submit your Joys and Sorrows through this online form. If you submit a message by 11 am, we will try to read it that Sunday. Thank you for your patience as we are adapting to best serve you all! Note there will only be one service time so that we can gather together as a whole community of faith. You can still give to the shared offering through “text to give,” mail a check to the office with “shared offering” in the memo line, or go to our website and hit “give” on the upper right or click here. This Sunday’s shared offering recipient is Deborah’s Place.

September 19, 20212021-09-14T17:24:25+00:00

VirtUUal Faith Formation: September 10, 2021

What’s Happening in Faith Formation?

Ingathering/Water Communion this Sunday! We will be creating a rainstorm during the worship service. If you’d like to make a rain stick at home, here are some short videos to help you make a simple rain stick:

After worship, we will encircle the building with our collected waters and water the gardens and grounds. And for a little extra fun, we will have a water balloon toss! Feel free to come for any or all these activities as you feel comfortable.

Faith Formation Help this Fall – If you’d like to join in making this new format fun and engaging, look here for some of the ways you can do so! If you haven’t seen the video about our worship and faith formation format for this fall yet, check it out here. And if you missed Kathy’s recent article about this you can find it here.

Playscape Steppingstone Event – September 25 and October 2 – Families are invited to help make steppingstones. For more details and to register, click here.

Registration for Faith Formation begins! This year more than ever, it is important that parents register their young people, so that we can plan according to current guidelines. Please complete the form here for all young people, 0-18 years old.

College-bound youth and young adults! A network to connect with UUs wherever you are! Join Rev. Byron Tyler Coles & Rev. Stevie K Carmody Eama for an information session about the recently launched Bridging Youth Hospitality Network!

  • Wednesday, August 18th, 5pm ET
  • Thursday, September 2nd, 5pm ET
  • Thursday, October 7th, 7pm ET

Check the links below for Zoom registration and more information. Spread the survey to recently bridged youth and the communities that want to welcome them!

UCE Book Groups

UCE Fiction Book Group is reading My Favorite Thing is Monsters, Book 1, a graphic novel by Emil Ferris. Discussion meeting September 17, 7-8:30 pm via Zoom. 

Set against the tumultuous political backdrop of late ’60s Chicago, My Favorite Thing Is Monsters is the fictional graphic diary of 10-year-old Karen Reyes, filled with B-movie horror and pulp monster magazine iconography. Karen Reyes tries to solve the murder of her enigmatic upstairs neighbor, Anka Silverberg, a holocaust survivor, while the interconnected stories of those around her unfold. When Karen’s investigation takes us back to Anka’s life in Nazi Germany, the reader discovers how the personal, the political, the past, and the present converge.

The Nonfiction Book Group will meet via Zoom at 2 pm on Sunday, September 26th to discuss How the South Won the Civil War: Oligarchy, Democracy, and the Continuing Fight for the Soul of America.

The author, Heather Cox Richardson, writes about how the South was the ideological victor of the Civil War as expansion of the Western frontier allowed the hierarchies of the South to proliferate. The book has been called “a thought-provoking study of the centuries-spanning battle between oligarchy and equality in America.”

Forum Resumes Sunday, September 19 during Faith Formation Hour

The first Forum session for the 2021-22 church year is titled “What is meant by Defund the Police?” Our speakers will be Daniel Biss, mayor of Evanston, and a representative from Defund CPD. Each speaker will present their ideas on the subject, then we will open up the floor for questions. Members can attend in person or virtually. This will be an exchange of ideas, not a debate. Among the topics we will explore are the role of police and whose safety is protected.

VirtUUal Faith Formation: September 10, 20212021-09-10T16:53:55+00:00

Lovely Upgrades to the Wing and Lobby

The Lobby and Wing Team of the Capital Campaign Implementation Team have been working steadily over the pandemic closure period to make improvements in the building.

When you visit UCE in person you will notice all new lighting and tiles in the Room 2 and the lobby area. Room 2 has undergone significant change with new, modern furniture, new carpet and shades. The solar shades were designed to offer light when raised (much like our old curtains that could be opened), but when in the down position they offer protection from the sun and cold. They are attractive and will work well to provide varying degrees of light. New ceiling lights and tiles were added to the room. Our goal was to provide a space where the lighting is more ambient for covenant meetings, small memorial services and wedding services, and other meetings where “high” lighting is less appropriate.

Room 3, the office and hallway have new floor tiles that flow beautifully into the lobby flooring to the north of the hall. Room 3 has the same shades and new ceiling tiles, as well as the flooring that matches the hallway.

Room 3 has a new technology set up which includes better sound and the ability to do live streaming and zoom for meetings and overflow from the sanctuary.

Coming soon . . . two new large monitors will provide up to the minute information on what is happening in the building and will promote activities and events we are involved in at UCE.

With every improvement we have taken into consideration the needs of users, you the congregants, and guests who will use our facility.

Lobby and Wing Improvement Team

Sandy Danforth, Gillian Lawrence, Johna VanDyke and Sandra Robinson

Lovely Upgrades to the Wing and Lobby2021-09-10T16:27:21+00:00

2021-2022 Shared Offering Recipients

September – Deborah’s Place

October – NAACP Evanston North Shore Branch

The Evanston/North Shore Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was founded in Evanston in 1918, just nine years after the organization began at Niagara Falls. The branch is dedicated in representing residents in the Evanston/North Shore area who believe their civil rights have been violated. The branch works with standing committees that includes; Legal Redress, Education, Health and Wellness, Housing, Youth, Political and Civil Engagement. In addition, the branch works with other organizations, nonprofits and houses of worship to increase awareness of social justice issues, local, national and throughout the world.

Our website offers a full description of the array of services provided and how our members and community volunteers can work in our various programs. We especially encourage interested residents to join one of our standing committees, listed above. People are always invited to join our membership. But they can also attend rallies that we sponsor, support press conferences, and support specific concerns through letter-writing, phone calls and if necessary, protests and demonstrations.

November – Renaissance Social Services

Renaissance Social Services is changing the lives of individuals and families in Chicago, giving them hope and vision for a new life. By supporting communities and the people who live within them with quality affordable housing, behavioral healthcare, outreach, homeless prevention, compassionate support services, and a purposeful focus on racial equity, we provide opportunities for long-term stability and wellness.

As for volunteer opportunities, unfortunately, due to COVID, we really do not have many volunteer opportunities except for the Board of Directors and Associate Board. Those are virtual right now.  For more information, please contact Sandra Robinson at 773-645-8900 x107 or srobinson@rssichicago.org. We are always seeking drives for household items, personal hygiene items. This does cost money so it is completely understandable if this cannot be done.

December – UUSC, Unitarian Universalist Service Committee

January – Community Renewal Society

The Community Renewal Society is an organization of over 70 member churches in the Chicago area who have been working together for social justice for over 130 years. For the past 14 years UCE has been a member congregation of CRS and has built a strong relationship with CRS staff, our state legislators, and social justice leaders in other churches. Each year CRS member churches meet and select specific policy goals for the coming year. These goals promote overall CRS policy aims to reduce and eliminate race and class barriers, and to provide better education, housing, jobs and justice for minorities and the poor.

Individual members of the UCE congregation participate in various CRS activities throughout the year. These include attending CRS membership assemblies where we work with members of other CRS churches to develop CRS policy goals. Also attending workshops on policy issues or lobbying, participating in public demonstrations, and joining the MLK Day celebration that CRS hosts each January.

This year CRS is fighting for independent oversight of Chicago policing activities. It is supporting passage of the Restorative Sentencing Act, under which prisoners who complete education and training courses get time off from their sentences and are better able to get and keep jobs when they are released. And CRS is arguing for an end in 2022 to the cash money bail system which keeps people in jail solely because they do not have enough money to pay for a bail bond. If you support these issues, please contact the UCE Legislative Action Team, or one of its leaders, Margaret Shaklee, Jane Bannor or Dennis Wilson. 

February – Assata’s Daughters

Assata’s Daughters (AD) is a Black gender non-confirming and Black women-led, young people-focused abolitionist organization rooted in the Black Radical Tradition. They use a Black Queer Feminist lens and relationship-based tactics to organize young Black people in Chicago for the purposes of (1) disrupting the status quo and (2) deepening, Escalating, and Sustaining the Black Liberation Movement. AD provides young people, primarily on Chicago’s south side, with a political home to engage in political education, organizing training, leadership development, and the co-creation of community space to develop and practice sustainable skills such as conflict resolution, collective decision-making, and organizational development. AD assists young people and community with survival needs through mutual aid and have increased these efforts throughout the pandemic.

Please contact Aisha at ourduty2@assatasdaughters.org if you can help with any of the following:

  • Help in repairing our garden’s shed, fixing loose and fallen wooden planks and possibly adding a new lock or securing the present one.  This is needed in the spring, but please contact them well ahead of time to schedule. Assata’s Daughters is located in the Washington Park neighborhood on the south side of Chicago. Please contact Aisha at ourduty2@assatasdaughters.org for the exact location for the repair projects.

  • Donate heavy plastic containers and storage/tote boxes in various sizes. Assata’s Daughters needs them for storage of donated items, and they recycle plastic boxes. Please contact Aisha at ourduty2@assatasdaughters.org to coordinate delivery of in-kind donations.

  • Connect Assata’s Daughters with organizations and businesses that redistribute resources through in-kind donations for 20-250 young people and families such as: laptops, technology, toys, baby diapers and products, quality foods, household and hygiene products, tickets to museums or events for youth field trips, CTA transit cards, and catering.

  • Connect them with people, organizations, or businesses interested in offering free space and time at vacation homes, office/venue space, or leisure activities for space to create joy, healing, restoration space, and for strategic planning.

March – UU Advocacy Network of Illinois (UUANI)

UUANI strives first and foremost to link UUs with opportunities to affect legislation in Springfield and nationally and to offer training to be influential advocates. UUANI devises programs to build power among UU congregations in Illinois in order to achieve meaningful, concrete, far-reaching results which put UU values and principles into action.  Part of building that power is honing skills to be effective “woke” partners with organizations representing a wide diversity of cultures, as we work together for systemic change toward a more just and equitable society. 

One of the most important ways UUANI serves the UU congregations of Illinois is in supporting folks who yearn for social justice with training in advocacy and discernment – learning how to ally effectively with partner organizations to widen the reach of our voices.  Directors Rev Scott Aaseng and Rev Karen Mooney and their teams will work with you and/or your social justice team to hone your skills to advocate powerfully for those social justice issues dear to you, to develop skills to organize support among your fellow UUs, and to discern how unconscious bias might interfere with your work with organizations led by people of other cultures, allowing you to bravely cross cultural barriers toward a more just society. 

Contact UUANI to get involved.

April – Faith in Place

May – UU Prison Ministry of Illinois (UUPMI)

June – Restore Justice Foundation

July – Moran Center for Youth Advocacy

Founded as the Evanston Defender Project in 1971, fully incorporating as the Evanston Community Defender Office in 1981, and renamed the James B. Moran Center for Youth Advocacy in 2010, the Center serves as a zealous advocate for thousands of Evanston’s marginalized youth and their families in need of integrated legal and social work services. Championing justice and restoring hope, the Moran Center’s mission is to provide free, integrated legal, social, and restorative services to disinvested youth and their families to improve their quality of life at home, at school, and within the community. Central to the mission is the belief that all youth deserve justice in the courtroom, access to the classroom, and restoration in the community to thrive. The Moran Center’s six attorneys provide legal representation and advocacy in juvenile delinquency, adult criminal, civil, and educational proceedings. Criminal record remediation is provided through our Expungement & Sealing Help Desk and Certificate of Rehabilitation Initiative. In 2018, the Moran Center launched our innovative School-Based Civil Legal Clinic to help stabilize families and keep children on track in school. With a total of 15 staff and more than 50 volunteers, the Moran Center strives to create a more equitable, just, and restorative community.

Pro bono attorney opportunities: Contact Megan McClung (mmcclung@moran-center.org) to volunteer with the School-Based Civil Legal Clinic (providing civil legal advice, counsel, and/or representation to Evanston residents) OR Tom Verdun (tverdun@moran-center.org) to volunteer at the Expungement & Sealing Help Desk (looking up pro se petitioners’ criminal records and then assisting with filling out court forms).

To become involved in the Moran Center’s restorative justice work, please contact Pam Cytrynbaum (pjc@moran-center.org). For other volunteer opportunities, please contact Moran Center’s Director of Operations, Shirley Sierra (ssierra@moran-center.org).

August – Interfaith Action of Evanston

5th Sundays – Mother and Child Alliance, formerly PACPI

Did you know that people of color are disproportionately impacted by /HIV? Did you know that 25% of all persons diagnosed with HIV identify as women? Also, the majority of testing on women is done during pregnancy where it is recommended during prenatal care and required at delivery on the newborn if mom’s status has not been established during pregnancy or at delivery.  I bet you DO know that very few services are equipped to help those who are pregnant and parenting persons living with HIV.

Mother and Child Alliance (MACA) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization strengthening disparate systems of care for pregnant and parenting persons living with HIV. With MACA’s 20 years of experience and your contribution, we can continue to specialize in wrapping moms and their babies in support. From linking moms to medical assistance, essential services or providing family education, MACA is doing the work – in the field, in the home and meeting people where they are at without judgment or bias. Sadly, the research still shows that people of color living with HIV have poorer outcomes, get less support and have shorter life expectancy than white people living with HIV.  An HIV diagnosis is also quite stigmatizing and many women find it hard to cope with their diagnosis as there yet very few figures on the national stage that have come out as living with HIV as a woman of color. We challenge you to name even one nationally-recognized woman.

A gift of $50 can pay an emergency utility bill or $25 can get a can of formula and diapers and $20 can provide a gas card to help mom get to her appointments.  We want our moms to focus on delivering a healthy infant, so your support can help ease her mind. If you don’t have the money, but have the gift of time we are also in need of volunteers to help with our community events, where we continue to raise awareness! Please visit MACA Website – Mother and Child Alliance to make a donation or for more information. Thank you for being here for us – we are so very grateful for your support!

2021-2022 Shared Offering Recipients2022-12-14T22:27:04+00:00

Carceral Systems and Siding with Love Workshop: September 10, 2021

UU Prison Ministry of Illinois, REAL, and the UCE Prison Ministry team invite you to join us for the last two sessions of Carceral Systems and Siding with Love. 
 
How do we actively side with Love in the face of harmful carceral systems that especially target black and brown people?  We will welcome nationally known advocate Joyce MacMillan on Family Separation and Surveillance on October 21On November 4 we will discuss the Basics of Restorative Justice. Registration is required, and a short reading or video will be emailed to you one week before each session. The last of these 90-minute Zoom workshops is on November 4.

Thursday, November 4, 7:00-8:30 p.m.: Basics of Restorative Justice  

What is the framework for restorative or transformative justice and how is it different from the criminal legal system? How do restorative justice community courts work? What other models to address harm are being developed?

We hope you will join us! Please register here for any or all of these workshops.

 

Past Sessions:

Thursday, September 23, 7:00-8:30 p.m.: Policing  

Why do activists make the call to “Defund Police”, and what do they mean by this? What is the impact of spending a large percentage of local budgets on police while disinvesting in low-income neighborhoods? What other approaches are being tried? 

Thursday, October 7, 7:00-8:30 p.m.: Prisons  

What are the dynamics and history that brought this country to mass incarceration? What is the impact of prisons on individuals and communities? Does prison make us safe? 

Thursday, October 21, 7:00-8:30 p.m.: Family Separation and Surveillance 

How does the foster care-to-prison pipeline affect poor communities of color? What is the history of child removal? What assistance is available for families when poverty creates less than ideal conditions? What remedies are anti-racist activists suggesting? 

 

Carceral Systems and Siding with Love Workshop: September 10, 20212021-10-29T17:27:08+00:00

Reparations in Evanston Workshop Update: September 10, 2021

Coming soon! A three-part workshop on Faith, Justice and Reparations in Evanston. On-line sessions will be held on Sunday afternoons September 19, 26, and October 3 from 4 to 5:30 pm. Register today to attend. 

Over the summer, several members of the Racial Equity (REAL) and Peace and Justice teams have been working to develop a faith-based workshop series on Reparations.   We will explore what “reparation” means, how Evanston’s history of exclusion and discrimination calls for repair, what is happening with the city’s current Reparations programs — and consider how we, as people of faith, are called to act at this significant moment in history.  

While news releases and public meetings have introduced the Evanston reparations program to local residents, they have not emphasized reconciliation and repair.  In our sessions we plan to look at different faith traditions’ grounding in social justice; and encourage each of us to consider how we’re effected by current inequities, what we can do to end injustice, and how we can begin to repair our community. 

All workshop sessions will be held on-line. Our guest speakers will include former Alderman Robin Rue Simmons, who initiated the Evanston program; Morris (Dino) Robinson, local historian and co-founder of Shorefront Legacy Center; and Woullard Lett, a representative of the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (NCOBRA). 

Each session will offer participants a chance to exchange ideas, ask questions, and get involved.  We’ll also give you current updates on the Evanston Reparations project and on various related funding efforts.  Before each session, you can enhance your learning by reading and reflecting on selected articles and videos. 

To find out more and to access links to articles and videos on Reparations, Evanston history and faith statements on slavery and racial justice, visit the workshop website here . 

This program is a joint effort by UCE, Lake Street Church, Northminster Presbyterian Church, Saint Luke Episcopal Church, and Sherman United Methodist Church.  It is endorsed by Interfaith Action Evanston and funded by the UCE Endowment Fund.   

With many different faith traditions involved in our sessions, we’ll have the chance to exchange ideas and learn about the experiences of residents throughout the community.  Working with church archivists and religious leaders from throughout Evanston, we plan to focus on how local faith communities have responded to racial discrimination in the past and what we can do to ‘level the playing field’ moving forward. 

  

 

 

Reparations in Evanston Workshop Update: September 10, 20212021-09-09T19:48:30+00:00

September 2021 BLUU Havens Gathering: September 18, 2021

Join at 12:30 for Socializing or Just Hanging Out & Listening to Music! 

We welcome you to join us for our September Black Lives of Unitarian Universalism BLUU Havens Chicago Gathering. 

In honor of Fall and the harvest season, please join BLUU Havens Chicago on September 18th, 2021 at 1-2 pm via Zoom for the first of a two part discussion on land, food justice, and the black freedom movement.  

Food history in the US often describes Black people’s relationship to the land as one filled with danger, oppression, ignorance and subjection. There is another story however, filled with healing, resistance, and economic self-determination of our communities. How can we reclaim our connection to the land as a means of liberation in our lives? 

Join us and our guest JIM EMBRY, Sacred Earth Activist, after which there will be a question and answer session. 

Jim Embry considers himself an evolutionary being, his purpose is to contribute to a paradigm shift toward Sacred Earth consciousness and refers to himself as a Sacred Earth Activist. As founder and director of Sustainable Communities Network, Jim contributes to the theory and practice of sustainable living while cultivating collaborative efforts at the local, national, and international levels with a focus on food systems.  

As a scuba diver and photographer, Jim has traveled widely to capture the beauty of the land and oceans. His photos and written works have appeared in many publications including We Are Each Other’s Harvest, Sustainable World Source Book, Encyclopedia of Northern Kentucky,  Kentucky African American Encyclopedia and many more! 

If you’d like to learn more about Jim Embry, visit his website or read his “We Are Each Other’s Harvest” Essay

September 2021 BLUU Havens Gathering: September 18, 20212021-09-09T18:21:38+00:00

From Endowment Committee: Sept 10, 2021

This Sunday, we may return to our UCE building to begin our church programming year. This is will be an especially busy and challenging year for me as Chair of the Endowment Fund Committee and a member of the Endowment Fund Task Force. 

The Endowment Fund Task Force has been meeting for a few months and some of the questions and comments that frequently come up concern communication with the congregation. Members have stated that they do not know much about the Endowment Fund, including basics of how to donate, how the funds are invested, how applications are written, submitted, and approved and What does the Endowment Committee do, anyway? 

Although it may seem like the Endowment Committee is a behind the scenes operation, it’s actually front and center as stipulated by the Endowment Agreement. As designated by the Agreement, there are three Endowment Fund Trustees, one elected every year at the annual meeting in May. Candidates are proposed by the Nominating and Recruiting Committee. Trustees serve for three years and as chair in their third year.  

The three Trustees are the voting members of the committee who recommend whether a grant proposal should be forwarded to the Board of Trustees for its approval.  The Board of Trustees makes the final decision on the funding of every grant application.  

The 2021-22 Trustees are Tom Hempfling, Bill Hartgering and me, Margaret Schatz. Other members of the committee are former trustees, Jane Kenamore, Barb Butz, Jim Clark and Will Van Dyke. Our Board Liaisons are Tom Ticknor and Joe Romeo 

The Committee meets monthly and spends the bulk of its time analyzing grant applications and the application process. It reviews the financial status of the Fund with the essential aid of monthly reports, detailing income and expenses, compiled by a professional accounting firm.  All members serve as liaisons to specific grant recipients. They also actively seek donations and follow up on those that involve estate planning.  

There’s much more to learn and the FAQs  on the Endowment web page is particularly helpful.   

The Fall deadline for grant applications is October 31. Questions or comments? Contact Margaret Schatz, mesharbor@gmail.com, Tom Hempfling, thempfling45@gmail.com, or Bill Hartgering, BHartgering@gmail.com 

From Endowment Committee: Sept 10, 20212021-09-10T14:25:13+00:00
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