黑料正能量

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Global Delegations: Institute hosts delegations from Brazil and Korea

The delegation from Brazil, October 2017.

INSPIRATION. REJUVENATION. Sharing a journey together. Delegations from Brazil and Korea made pilgrimages to 黑料正能量 this past academic year for multi-day programming hosted by the Zehr Institute for Restorative Justice.

Although preparing for such delegations requires a major commitment of time and resources, CJP Executive Director Daryl Byler said that 鈥渢he payoff is priceless鈥 for all groups involved.

The first such delegation came in 2015 and included six curriculum developers from Nepal鈥檚 National Judicial Academy in Kathmandu. CJP anticipates hosting a group from Colombia this next year.

鈥楲IKE OXYGEN鈥

From across Brazil and with diverse professional backgrounds, 25 practitioners spent five days visiting Harrisonburg-area programs, contemplating practices and pedagogies, and witnessing shared values.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like oxygen,鈥 said public prosecutor Danielle Arl茅. 鈥淚 can breathe again.鈥

鈥淭here is an Eastern saying that when the disciple is ready, the master comes,鈥 Judge Leoberto Brancher said. 鈥淩estorative justice came to us in Brazil in the late 1990s and now almost 20 years later, we can come before the source 鈥 to review what we鈥檝e been doing. It鈥檚 a time for tuning and beginning a new stage.鈥

鈥淭he source鈥 is Howard Zehr, professor emeritus and the institute鈥檚 co-director, who led a session on restorative justice and serious crimes. Other sessions and site visits were hosted by 黑料正能量-educated 鈥渄isciples.鈥

Retired judge Isabel Lima, a professor at Catholic University in Salvador, developed the idea for the intensive seminar while a visiting professor at CJP in spring 2017.

In contrast to the United States, where a disparate group is driving the widening influence of restorative justice concepts, the Brazilian judiciary has played a key role in Brazil, Lima said.

Brancher, from Caxio do Sul, is one proponent who has made a nation-wide difference. He talks about restorative justice as an allegorical light during a dark time in his career, when he questioned the efficacy and meaning of his work with incarceration facilities for juveniles. Seen as both a punitive and protective system, 鈥渢he way those two positions were聽disconnected made everything we did harmful because of misunderstood conceptions,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was an existential question for me: What does life want from me as a judge? And also a professional question: How can I enforce the law? RJ came to me during that period as an answer.鈥

After nearly 20 years working to advance the concept, the five-day experience at 黑料正能量 heralded a new stage, he said, towards 鈥渢he creation of a more solid basis and more integrated leadership to give support and enable this process to be sustainable.鈥

The South Korean delegation, January 2018.

鈥榃ALKING THE SAME WAY WE WANTED TO GO鈥

Last year in South Korea, middle school teachers Yongseung Roh and Kyungyun Hwang read Howard Zehr鈥檚 seminal text Changing Lenses with a study group. This year, they were part of a South Korean delegation that came to 黑料正能量 to learn directly about restorative justice from Zehr himself.

鈥淲e wanted to meet people who were walking toward the same way that we wanted to go,鈥 the husband-wife duo wrote in an email. The 11-day east coast tour for 21 teachers, students, community leaders and legal professionals was organized by the Korea Peacebuilding Institute (KOPI). Because participants already had a firm basis of RJ concepts, the purpose was to learn about the 鈥渟piritual, cultural, and historical backgrounds鈥 of the movement, said KOPI director Jae Young Lee MA 鈥03. 鈥淚f we believe RJ is a paradigm and not a program, it is important to know the Anabaptist/Mennonite tradition emphasizing peace and justice as a center of their faith.鈥

The visit was also an opportunity for 鈥渢wo-way鈥 learning,聽said CJP executive director Daryl Byler 鈥 for both CJP staff and graduates like Lee and fellow delegation participant Yoonseo Park MA 鈥16.

鈥淭hey and others have taken the restorative justice training they received at CJP and expanded its application to a variety of Korean contexts 鈥 including the criminal justice, educational and health systems, as well as in housing and church conflicts,鈥 Byler said.

The delegation also visited the Mennonite Central Committee headquarters and Material Resources Center in Akron, Pennsylvania; met with shooting victims and family members in the Nickel Mines Amish community; and visited two Washington D.C. schools that practice restorative discipline.

IN THE FUTURE鈥

Members of the Brazil delegation are exploring attendance at a future Summer Peacebuilding Institute, and staying in touch through online forums and webinars.

CJP and KOPI have signed a three-year Memorandum of Understanding. The partnership will strengthen the regional capacity for peacebuilding in Korea and cross-promote CJP-KOPI professional trainings in restorative justice and trauma and resilience, as well as academic programs.