PRISON FELLOWSHIP BLOG: Reentry

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Out of Office

Ever question what kind of impact a long-past drug conviction can have on a person’s future? Ask Corey Sanders and Jason Sarasnick.

On the surface, the two men appear to have little in common. Sanders, who is African-American, runs a barbershop in McKeesport, Pennsylvania.

By Steve Rempe
April 6, 2016
Corey Sanders | Jason Sarasnick | MeKeesport | Pennsylvania | Second Prison Project
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A Report from the Field

In the coming months, Prison Fellowship will be sharing stories from some of our staff and volunteers around the country, talking about the exciting ways God is working in the lives of prisoners, their families, and the criminal justice system.

The first installment of our new video blog features Denise Harris, Prison Fellowship’s field director for southeastern Michigan.

By Steve Rempe
April 6, 2016
denise harris | Michigan | Out 4 Life | volunteer
Germany feature 3
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This Is Prison?

The images of prison are familiar to all of us—cold, pale concrete walls, with limited light filtering through narrow, bar-protected windows; prisoners in solid jumpsuits shuffling through the corridors under the watchful eye of ever-present guards; small, unadorned cells where men and women live out long prison terms in solitude and despair.

By Steve Rempe
April 4, 2016
Craig DeRoche | Dietrich Bonhoeffer | Germany | Heidering Prison | Tegel Prison
  • Advocacy & Reentry
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Providing an Education for Ex-Prisoners

Daniel Geiter spent much of his young adult years in and out of correctional facilities in and around Chicago. Between his adolescent years and the age of 25, Geiter estimates that he was incarcerated in excess of 20 times.

It was during one of these prison stays that Geiter concluded that things needed to change.

By Steve Rempe
March 31, 2016
Chicago | Daniel Geiter | education | Illinois | Second Prison Project | Ward College
Chef Jeff feature
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Food for the Soul

By the time he was 19, Jeff Henderson had established himself as one of the premier drug dealers in southern California.  He was making $35,000 a week by age 21—driving fancy cars and living the life of a street celebrity.

But all that came to an end at 24, when he was sentenced to 19.5 years in prison.

By Steve Rempe
March 23, 2016
California | Cooking | Jeff Henderson | Juvenile Justice | Nevada
  • Advocacy & Reentry
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Running For Second Chances: The Second Prison Project 5k

The following post originally appeared on the Minneapolis Running website, and is reprinted here with permission.

Running is a communal activity. While we compete on an individual level, everyone I know agrees that running is far more enjoyable when done with others.

By Nathan Freeburg
March 14, 2016
Minneapolis | Minnesota | Second Chances 5k | Second Prison Project
  • Advocacy & Reentry
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When Do We Heal?

Last fall, Prison Fellowship teamed up with singer-songwriter Idalee to create something unique—a music video, shot entirely inside a corrections facility, with a band composed of men from the prison.

"I had the amazing opportunity ... to bring this song, 'Heal,' into prison and perform it with prisoners," Idalee says.

By Steve Rempe
February 24, 2016
Heal | houston | Idalee | music | Reentry | Texas | Video
Music stand cell feature
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Singing a New Song

There are certain sounds that most of us associate with prisons: the metal clank of a cell door closing, the thud of heavy-booted corrections officers walking the corridors, the voices of angry prisoners echoing against the bare cement walls.

What you might not expect, however, are four-part vocal harmonies.

By Steve Rempe
February 18, 2016
Choir | Coralville | Iowa | Kansas | Mary Cohen | Oakdale Prison | Restorative Justice
  • Reentry
Returning to Serve

Having retired following 18 years as a corrections officer at several facilities in Michigan, Billy Stewart is once again returning to prison—this time as a volunteer with Prison Fellowship.  Denise Harris, Prison Fellowship’s field director for the Detroit area, asks Billy to share his thoughts about his perspective of prisoners as an officer, and what is taking him back behind bars.

By Prison Fellowship
February 8, 2016
Corrections Officer | In Prison | Michigan | Reentry | volunteer
Easter story - John Jennings feature image
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God May See a King

John Jennings stood in the courtroom, looking into the eyes of the man who had murdered his son. This man had been his son’s friend, but one night, this “friend” took John’s son into the woods, demanded his money, and shot him.

By Beth Reid
February 5, 2016
John Jennings | North Carolina | Reentry | Robbery | South Carolina
Hiring feature
  • Advocacy & Reentry
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Would You Hire a Former Prisoner?

The Albuquerque Business First journal recently asked its readers a probing question—would you hire someone who had just been released from prison?

Responses were predictably varied, with many respondents answering affirmatively.  Those that did say they would hire a former prisoner typically cited the importance of second chances and a need to break the cycle of recidivism.

By Steve Rempe
February 3, 2016
New Mexico | recidivism | Reentry | Second Prison | Second Prison Project
Task force feature
  • Advocacy & Reentry
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A Proposal for Change

In January 2014, the Charles Colson Task Force on Federal Corrections was established to examine the challenges facing the federal corrections system and to propose practical solutions to those challenges.  Named after the Prison Fellowship founder, the task force sought answers for some of the biggest problems facing federal prisons, including growing prison populations, high rates of recidivism, and the increasing costs of incarceration.

By Steve Rempe
January 26, 2016
Charles Colson Task Force | Proposals
Idle hands feature
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The Work of Their Hands

For Fred, a prisoner serving a 10-year sentence at the Maine State Prison in Warren, incarceration is an opportunity to improve himself.

"I knew right off the bat that when I was going away for a long time that I had to do something with myself while I was here," Fred says.

By Steve Rempe
January 21, 2016
Maine | Reentry | Wood Harvesting | Wood Products Industry | Woodworking
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
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Road Twenty-Two to Redemption

A San Francisco apparel company is seeking to provide women who have spent time behind bars an opportunity to begin new careers in the fashion industry.

Named after the road leading out of the Central California Women's Correctional Facility in Chowchilla, Road Twenty-Two designs and manufactures high-end shirts for men and women.  

By Steve Rempe
January 13, 2016
California | employment | Fashion | Fif Ghobadian | Reentry | Road Twenty-Two | san francisco
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Warden Exchange: Wardens Communicating for Change

What is the image that comes to mind when you think of a prison warden?  

By Steve Rempe
January 7, 2016
Prison Culture
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