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

La Bestia Screening & Discussion: October 27, 2021

The Immigrant Solidarity Team will be showing the Movie La Bestia (2010) about the freight trains from southern Mexico to the US that refugees use to come north, at great peril to themselves.  The film will be followed by a discussion with panelists Oscar Chacon and Charlotte Jones-Carroll to give an update to the migrant situation currently unfolding in 2021.

For over three decades, thousands of Central Americans have lost their dreams and lives trying to cross illegally the Mexican territory hanging from the cargo trains. They travel thousands of kilometers to get to the Mexico-USA border. ‘The Beast’ as this mode of transportation has become known, is the most viable alternative when crossing a country filled with immigration checkpoints, thieves, Mexican mafia members and authorities who often rob, rape and kill them. In order to film this documentary, Pedro Ultreras risked his own life by riding this cargo trains across Mexico with hundreds of Central American migrants for more than two weeks.

The Beast, is a heart breaking film that shows some of the most profound suffering a migrant can ever live.

When: October 27 at 7:00 PM
Where: Room 3 at UCE and on Zoom – Click here to join.
Panelists: 

Oscar Chacon, Executive Director at Alianza Americas. Alianza Americas is a network of migrant-led organizations working in the United States and transnationally to create an inclusive, equitable and sustainable way of life for communities across North, Central and South America. 

And Charlotte Jones-Carroll, chair of Unitarian Universalists for Social Justice (UUSJ) which lobbies the Hill on social justice issues. She is a retired international development economist having worked for USAID and the World Bank. She is a member of the River Road UU congregation in Bethesda, MD. 

Please RSVP to Lee Bannor at bannor@sbcglobal.net or Michelle Novak  at michellenovak23@gmail.com   

People who wish to attend in person must let us know in advance due to the need to keep social distance. A free offering will be taken to cover expenses.

La Bestia Screening & Discussion: October 27, 20212021-10-21T05:08:11+00:00

BLUU Havens Chicago Oct Gathering: October 16, 2021

BLUU HAVENS CHICAGO OCTOBER GATHERING SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16TH 1:00-2:30 on Zoom 

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

We welcome you to join us for our October BlacLives of Unitarian Universalism Havens Chicago Gathering. 

Our guests will be Clarence Smith, Founder of One Family Farms and Windy City Harvest Apprenticeship Alum (class of’20) alongside Kate Gannon, Windy City Harvest Youth Farm Manager, will be presenting a question and answer session. 

Windy City Harvest Apprenticeship, a Chicagoland-based program, enrolls students in a nine-month classroom and hands-on certification course in sustainable urban agriculture that is accredited by the Illinois Community College Board for 31 continuing education credits.  

At our last gathering we met Jim Embry, a Sacred Earth Activist, who spoke about the theory and practice of sustainable living while cultivating collaborative efforts at the local level with a focus on food systems. 

Next we will hear how a local non-profit, Windy City Harvest, collaborates with individuals, wholesalers, institutions, and churches to: help feed people in the city of Chicago,  produce fresh produce, help green the city, create social ties and  jobs, and enhance the value of empty spaces particularly in black and brown neighborhoods.  

As you will hear from the triumphant story of Clarence Smith, developing a sustainable urban food system movement is not without its challenges. His work and story is about redemption from his past and economic and racial liberation from systemic oppression, all on the road toward creating a beloved community. 

If you’d like to learn more about Windy City Harvest Apprenticeship (WCHA), see below: 

https://www.chicagobotanic.org/urbanagriculture/apprenticeship 

We look forward to seeing  you there, Alice, Curtis, Betty, Shannon, and Lecretia. 

This will be a Black Only Sacred Space.  

To request a zoom link please email: BLUUHavenChicago@gmail.com  

BLUU Havens Chicago Oct Gathering: October 16, 20212021-10-15T14:11:12+00:00

Join the Serendipity Auction Fun: October 15, 2021

Volunteer! Volunteer! Volunteer!

Looking for a way to stay connected to UCE? Volunteer to help with the Serendipity Auction, one of our largest fundraisers. Last year we netted over $26,000.

This year, our auction will kick-off on Sunday, November 14, 2021 at 12:30 pm and online bidding begins through UCE auction website and ends with a chance to see the auction items on Celebration Day, Saturday November 20, 2021 from 10:00 am-1:00 pm and with a virtual Celebration Party on Saturday, November 20, 2021 from 7:00-8:00 pm.

We still need volunteers leading up to the auction bidding week and the closing party. The time commitment can be short and without heavy lifting! It’s a great way for new people to volunteer.

Would you consider volunteering to…?

  • Coordinate a multi-generational group to pre-record a joyful song for the celebration party

  • Reach out to local businesses for donations

  • Bake some delicious desserts for our dessert boxes

  • Help set up the auction items in the sanctuary

  • Serve as an “auction docent” to help members register or learn about bidding

  • Greet people or pass out dessert boxes on the Celebration Day

  • Help create a joyful and entertaining virtual Closing Celebration Part

You may have ideas we have not even thought about to make this hybrid auction even more fun!!

To get connected to your ideal volunteer position, please contact us at auction@ucevanston.org. Not sure how you might help, contact us and we can figure it out together.

Join the Serendipity Auction Fun: October 15, 20212021-10-15T14:03:05+00:00

Building a More Vibrant UCE Community: October 15, 2021

Last Call:  Building a More Vibrant UCE Community!

How can we engage in more meaningfully and richly with each other and with our mission? How do we build an even stronger and more vibrant community to “nurture the human spirit for a world made whole”?

https://ucevanston.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/download.png

To explore and design solutions, the Membership Engagement Task Force is launching three teams focused on:

  • Communication  – Enable members to easily find the information they need and want through consistent, accessible, and up-to-date messages about pathways and opportunities for engagement

  • Facilitating Engagement  – Shape new and strengthen existing practices for making connections

  • Leadership Development – Create systems of support and training for current leaders, members, and friends to strengthen their leadership skills. Encourage new leadership to emerge at UCE

Join us to find better ways to help members open the door to more meaningful engagement in the life of the congregation! Share your valuable perspective through this short term, focused work!

For more information contact Maggie Wilson at maggiemwilson@gmail.com

The Membership Engagement Task Force
Maggie Wilson
Carolyn Laughlin
Melanie Kitchner
Susan Carlton
Rev. Susan Frances

Building a More Vibrant UCE Community: October 15, 20212021-10-15T13:51:49+00:00

From Rev. Susan Frances: October 15, 2021

  

Dear Friends, 

It is cliché to say that change is the only constant in life, and yet it feels more true right now than it has for over a decade in my life. While most of us have experienced numerous changes over our lifetimes, this past year has been full of constant changes to the pattern of our daily lives. From the disinfecting of groceries to the lockdown to wearing masks to getting vaccinated, it has been non-stop change that has affected our every day. In addition to those changes to our daily patterns, some of us have had larger life changes. Some of us are now permanently working from home or lost our jobs and have new jobs or moved or experienced long-term changes to our health or became parents or lost a loved one. In the wake of so much change, what grounds us? What buoys us up to ride the waves of change? 

For me, there is something about being by the water that grounds me and nourishes my spirit. I have lived in Chicago for 16 years now. For the first 15 years, I worked in a building that was less than a 15-minute walk from Lake Michigan. I used to walk to the lake for an hour lunch break about 3 times a week.  

Then, in 2020, during the statewide pandemic lockdown, I left that job and started working full time as a chaplain resident at Northwestern Memorial Hospital and part time with UCE. I missed my pattern of spending time by the lake and it took me a while to figure out when I could walk to the lake when I was downtown at the hospital. The photo of me in a mask is by the Chicago Avenue underpass to the lakefront in November 2020.  

This fall, I am adjusting again to navigating being in-person as well as virtual at UCE, and I have not yet figured out my pattern for regularly visiting the water. I have started driving into Evanston early in my day so I have time to stop at various lakefront parks. The photo of the waves meeting the rocks is from Clark Square earlier this week. 

While there is change that happens to us, there is also change that we purposely create and cultivate. Our ability to nourish our spirit and ground ourselves – which some call a spiritual practice – is important whether we are responding to change or initiating it. A spiritual practice is one way to prepare ourselves to listen deeply to others, to be open to unexpected ideas or experiences, and to respond to challenges to our current way of thinking or acting. Having a spiritual practice, that nourishes and grounds us, will be helpful as our congregation moves deeper into the work of becoming an explicitly anti-racist organization. It will build our resilience as we continue to return to our building and practice radical hospitality to the stranger and the long-time member. It will sustain us as we become a more environmentally conscious and responsible community. These lenses of anti-racism, environmental responsibility, and radical welcome will continue to be shaped by our upcoming review of our ENDS Statements, which express who we want to be in the world. 

This work of reviewing our ENDS Statements may lead to some friction, which is a normal part of change. That rubbing of new patterns against old patterns. The rubbing of new ways of thinking and being against implicit bias. The rubbing of unexpected experiences against preconceived expectations. All of this causes friction. I was reminded this week by Dr. Gilo Kwesi Logan, one of our consultants from the YWCA’s Equity Institute, that friction in itself is not a bad thing. Friction is the tool that sharpens a knife. “It’s what we do with the friction that matters.”  

As our community cultivates change, cultivates being anti-racist, environmentally responsible, and radically welcoming, how will we use the friction to help us flourish? Can we recognize the friction for what it is and then put it to good use as a tool? A tool that helps us learn, change, and grow. A tool that helps us talk through the hard conversations with openness instead of defensiveness, with appreciation instead of dread, and with love instead of fear.  

Having a spiritual practice, finding that which nourishes and grounds us, will help us remain in relationship during upcoming times of change, times of friction. So, I return to the water again and again. I tell it my worries and my joys and then I listen. Listen to the water meeting the land. Listen to the wind moving the water. Listen, until I feel full of love and grounded in the vast expanse that is the interconnected web of life. And then I return to UCE in all its in-person and virtual spaces and work to engage with the friction while remaining in relationship as we cultivate change. I will see you there. 

In faith,  

Rev. Susan 

From Rev. Susan Frances: October 15, 20212021-10-15T02:27:29+00:00

October 17, 2021

We will host an in-person and virtual worship service on Sunday, October 17th at 10:15 am.

The Power of Covenant
What holds our inclusive community together in the midst of diversity perspectives and theology? Covenant. As with any tool, it requires intentional practice to use it well. We explore the power of our covenant of engagement. Rev. Eileen Wiviott is our worship leader. Joe Romeo is our Worship Associate.

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 9 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 NAACP Evanston North Shore Branch.

October 17, 20212021-10-12T00:43:07+00:00

Fair Trade Halloween Treats: October 8, 2021

The goal is to avoid products of companies like Hershey, Nestle, Mars, Cadbury and Lindt. Why? These companies source cocoa for their chocolate from plantations in Ghana and the Ivory Coast. Although they have made promises to insure that children and forced labor are not used to produce this cocoa, they have not met their goals for many years and there is no effective enforcement.

Fair Trade certified chocolate is made from cocoa grown on farms without child or forced labor. In addition, working conditions are better, communities use profits to make improvements that they choose (like schools or clean water), and they use techniques that are more respectful of the environment. There is accountability.

So, alternatives to the usual Snickers and M&Ms include Fair Trade certified chocolate, non-chocolate foods, and treats that are not food at all. Let your imagination run wild – you will know what treats are best suited to your children and situation.

FAIR TRADE CHOCOLATE

Check out:

NON-CHOCOLATE CANDY

Check out:

NON-FOOD TREATS

Check out:

  • www.orientaltrading.com 
    • Stamps                           
    • Stickers
    • Glowsticks
    • Slap bracelets
    • Laser finger lights
    • Temporary tattoos 
    • Spider rings 
Fair Trade Halloween Treats: October 8, 20212021-10-08T15:11:41+00:00

UCE Endowment Fund Distributions and Deadlines: October 8, 2021

We get to give away money; awesome. This is going to be fun! remarked a new Endowment Fund Trustee. An oversimplified statement, he knew, but essentially true. 

But, UCE members may ask, where does the money come from that is given away? 

Firstit should be made clear that the money is not given away. Instead, it is used to fund grant applications which are submitted to the Endowment Committee for review and then recommended to the Board of Trustees for final approval. These proposals may support UCE directly or the larger community. The five purposes for use of the distribution money are stated in the UCE Endowment Fund Bylaws. 

The amount of distribution or disbursement money is 

capped at 5% of the value of the Endowment Fund principal as determined on December 31 of the preceding year. Again, this is specified in the UCE Endowment Agreement Bylaws.  

For fiscal year 2021-22, the amount available for distribution or to give away was $87,729. 

That’s a lot of money! Thanks to generous donors and the stock market, the Endowment Fund has grown substantially. Deadline dates for application submissions were implemented a few years ago as a way of making the application process as fair as possible. 

Thinking ahead? The deadline dates for fiscal 2022-23 will be May 31, 2022 (accepting applications for the next fiscal year), Oct 31,2022 and January 31,2023 (if funds remain available). 

This fiscal year, 2021-22, the disbursement funds will be completely allocated or given away after the October 31 deadline.  

The possibilities of this amazing resource, the UCE Endowment Fund, have been discovered! 

If you have questions about the Endowment Fund, please contact Margaret Schatz, mesharbor@gmail.com, Tom Hempfling, thempfling45@gmail.com, or Bill Hartgering, BHartgering@gmail.com 

UCE Endowment Fund Distributions and Deadlines: October 8, 20212021-10-08T14:52:35+00:00

Serendipity Auction Update: October 8, 2021

Donations, Donations, Donations!
2021 Serendipity Hybrid Auction  
November 14-20, 2021 

The Serendipity Auction needs you (yes, you)!!   

Can you make something: knit a scarf, bake a cake, bead a necklace, woodwork? Do you have a piece of art (painting or ceramics) you want to share with others? These donations have always been treasured as auction offerings.     

Last year’s virtual events and activities were a hit to get us through a long winter and fostered connection. This year, the popular in-person group events from past auctions can be offered. In our covenantal relationship, we ask for the offerings to align with current UCE COVID-19 guidelines. New this year, you can make your donation directly in the UCE auction website. Deadline for donations is November 7, 2021 

If you have a favorite business (hair salon, restaurant or bookstore), consider seeking their support of UCE and our larger community by asking for a donation. Click here for a sample business letter and business donation form for you to use. One way to live our principles is to consider purchasing a gift certificate from a minority owned business to donate to the auction.     

Looking for some ideas? Click here for 10 inspiring ideas. 

The goal of the Serendipity Auction is to strengthen or create connections between UCE members and friends while raising funds for UCE activities. The Auction Committee is available to help you decide what and how to donate.   

Still have questions or want to discuss more ideas?   

Contact us at the UCE Serendipity Auction email: auction@ucevanston.org 

Catherine Deamant, Chair
Susan Comstock and Jennifer Walsh, Chair Emeriti
Carla Williams, Planning Committee Member 

Serendipity Auction Update: October 8, 20212021-10-07T04:55:51+00:00
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