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Thursday, March 24, 2016

Corporal Works of Mercy

Thursday evening in the Crypt, on the knees this Holy Thursday before Easter. On the knees washing the feet of my bar staff. It was my Supplier's suggestion and example some time ago. Now you know why I mop the floors! 
This isn't me.
He had quite a few suggestions about 'Corporal Works'.  "Love one another", He said, and Love is a verb. A 'doing something' word.  We often miss opportunities to 'do something' and indeed some opportunities are rare.  Like the 'visiting prisoners' one. How many of us have rolled up to the gates of our local prison and said, "G'day, I've come to visit some prisoners. Anyone about?" 


Somehow I don't think we would be let in without some pointed questions. Telling the guards that we wanted to do a 'Corporal Work of Mercy' probably won't cut it.

I have an aquaintance, Deborah Kendrick,  who has made a point of advocating for prisoners for quite a long time now. She is a splendid lady and there is much to admire about her. She is not stupid about it and is not one of those 'Serial Killer Groupies'. She is a woman with a good heart. She brings friendship and effort and I hope she does not mind me saying so.

She has a very active Facebook page and a group "Words within the Walls", and TOVA - The Other Victims Advocacy. Look them up. 

Debbi Does Corporal Works. 
Debs

Let's face reality here. There are many in prison for sound reason. They have committed crimes. Some really nasty ones. And some perhaps are innocent. Some are very dangerous and the very situation of prison is fraught with danger.

I have to admit that I have not made a point of going across the river to the place where our home-grown mass murderer is incarcerated in order to have a natter with him. I didn't when 'Chopper' Reid was there either. 

Burying the dead is another one. Lots of people die with no next of kin. They don't get crowds at their funerals. Some get no-one at all. Feeding the hungry has become a popular but these days it can be on an industrial scale. 

But I did hear today of someone else, somewhere else, who did get an invitation to a prison and found the 'Work' unusual and enlightening.

A composer, no less. Eric Genuis. I cannot claim to have seen him around the bars here but he just might get another invitation soon. There are many ways to be 'pro-life'.


Pro-life composer has a mission to bring beauty to the ugly prisons of America
World-class composer and performer Eric Genuis will never forget the first time he was invited to perform his music in a U.S. state prison. As he lugged his heavy keyboard and sound equipment through the security gates into a world of concrete, steel, and razor wires, he could not help but notice how profoundly ugly everything was. 
He noticed the stark lack of anything that could be described as beautiful or inspirational. 

“It was very unnerving. You're there in this ugly facility. The lighting is harsh. There are broken tables and garbage lies strewn about. I’m in the midst of the ugliest place I have ever been.”
“The lives of these imprisoned men and women are plagued and immersed in ugliness. They are swimming in the ocean of the profoundly ugly,” he added. 
Genuis remembers how the prison authorities treated him and his violinist and cellist in a hardly civil and almost severe way. 
“It's not like the prison authorities were saying, ‘Oh, thank you for coming.’ They didn’t seem to care that we were there to help”. 
I am reminded of the late and great Johnny Cash who was a frequent prison visitor. He had  a deep understanding and affection for the prisoners who very often saw him as 'one of them'.  The prison guards were sometimes less than welcoming of him too.  
Prisoners 'identified' with Cash. He was a rough and ready character in appearance and style but just as God-Orientated as Eric who has an entirely different approach and style.  
About 80 male prisoners shuffled into the room where the performance was about to take place. The prisoners had likely come for a change of scene. For many of them, it would provide an occasion for selling cigarettes, making drug deals, and engaging in other illegal activities. 

Genuis remembers the bewilderment he experienced in having no idea what to expect. He could see the men slouching and yawning, getting ready to be bored for the next 90 minutes. Genuis cranked up his speakers in anticipation of likely having to compete with heckling, jeering, and other disturbances. 
He took a breath, and began playing his music. 

Moments into his first song, one male prisoner suddenly stood up and exclaimed at the top of his voice, “I forgot what hope felt like.”
Grown men who were serving time for murder, rape, drug trafficking, and numerous other crimes had tears running down their faces. 
The response to the music was immediate and powerful. 

“After my first performance in a prison I realized that there was something very powerful happening there. I realized that my music could touch the souls of these broken men and give them hope, something to live for,” Genuis said. 
The warden could not believe the transformation that he saw happening to the prisoners.
In a letter to Genuis in 2010, the warden wrote:

Your performance was a huge success. The behavior of the inmates during and after the concert indicated that your performance had a powerful impact on those present. Staff from throughout the institution volunteered observations about the excitement and positive attitude the inmates showed on their way back to their housing assignments after the concert and throughout the rest of the day. You really made a difference in the lives of most of the audience.
Inspiring people with hope
Genuis does not view his concerts to prisoners as simply a “nice thing to do,” as something that entertains or distracts people for a while. 
He plays his music with the specific intention of nourishing people with the “mystical beauty” of music which is created by melody, harmony, and tones. 

“Music is a language. It is a language that reaches in and touches the heart, mind, and soul in ways that words cannot touch,” he said. 
“Beautiful music has the power to inspire people with hope. It has this mystical ability to reach into the very depths of a soul, in a way that words and even the best of logical arguments never can reach, and move the listener to embrace goodness,” he added. 

Genuis holds that genuine art, whether it be found in painting, sculpture, music, and other mediums, has the purpose of revealing what is beautiful. 
“If it is true art, it is beautiful. And the purpose and the importance of beauty, whether it be in the medium of music or visual art, is to transcend the imperfect and point to the perfect,” he said. 
In this way, beautiful paintings, sculptures, or pieces of music is not the final goal itself, but they all point to something beyond themselves. 
“Beauty is the language of God. And when the human heart encounters beauty, in whatever way, shape, or form, it really becomes an encounter with the almighty God,” he said. 
“It is an encounter beyond the conscious. In that encounter, God speaks to the soul. The encounter uplifts the soul. It makes one feel inspired. It gives one hope. It helps one to set goals and to achieve them. God works through the beautiful to accomplish all of this."

On top of performing his music at national and international venues in front of thousands of people, including performances in private homes of people like actor Jim Caviezel [another extraordinarily Good Man who has been featured in the Tavern before] or a former U.S. president, the 49-year-old composer views it as a special mission to perform his music for what he calls the “forgotten ones” on the fringes of society. 

On top of those who are in prison, these include people in drug rehab centers, in veterans’ homes, kids in inner city schools, as well as the elderly in nursing homes. 
In 2010, Genuis set up a new foundation called “concerts for hope” to facilitate bringing his music to the “least in society” so that through his music they could have a powerful encounter with beauty and goodness. So far, he has given hundreds of such concerts. 

“I go into the prisons to inspire these guys because I have been given this gift that is meant to be used for that purpose. I want to bring them hope and I want to bring them beauty because I think they deserve it as much as anyone else.”
“I will play anywhere for anyone who wants to listen. I feel like I’ve been given a gift, and I will share that gift with the world on a big scale or on a small-scale. I'll play for one person, and I'll play for 50,000 people. I'll play on big beautiful stages worldwide, and I'll play in the ghetto. I'll play anywhere,” he said.
“I feel very honored to be a musician and a composer. I'm very humbled to be able to share these gifts with people. I take what I do very seriously and it gives me more joy than you could imagine,” he added. 
For Genuis, sharing his gift of music is an effective way of affirming the value and dignity of each and every person. He said such affirmation is what it truly means to be “pro-life.”
“If people think that being pro-life means only caring for the unborn child, then they are wrong. Being pro-life means affirming the value and worth and dignity of each and every person, no matter what their circumstances are, what they have done, and what they haven't done. We must learn to look at the dignity of all.” 
Those in prison, where there usually exists an atmosphere of violence, hatred, bigotry, and dominance, are in special need of such affirmation. 

“People ask me, ‘Why do you perform for these guys in prison? They've made their choices. Let them rot.’ I say to them that if your piano is broken, you can throw it out, or if your swing-set is broken, you toss it away. But with people, you can never throw them out. There is a dignity and value to every person just by the fact that they are human, no matter what they’ve done or who they are.”
The Catholic father of 11 — 4 living and 7 in heaven — said that it is specifically his Catholic faith that has taught him about the value and dignity of each and every person. “Everyone is made in the image of God, and God continually calls everyone to a closer relationship with him,” he said. “As Catholics, we believe that we are literally ministering to God himself when we help anybody in need.” 
“Jesus tells us, 
‘When I was in prison, you visited me. What you do to the least of my brothers, you do to me.’ 
Each of us is created in the image of God and this gives each of us dignity. Every person, unborn or born, young or old, sick or healthy, imprisoned or free, deserves to have this incredible dignity recognized and honored. It is because of this dignity that each person deserves a life of inspiration and beauty.” 

“I go into the prisons to inspire these guys because I have been given this gift that is meant to be used for that purpose. I want to bring them hope and I want to bring them beauty because I think they deserve it as much as anyone else,” he said. 
“I can play for people and I can stir them with joy. I can stir them to true joy, to true beauty, to true inspiration, and true meaning, and a true encounter with beauty. And I'm going to use that gift until I have no more air in my lungs,” he added.
Genuis said that everyone has been given gifts from God which they can use to serve others. 
“We have to recognize that everyone has a gift that they can turn around and give to people to make them feel that they are the best thing in the world. It’s as easy as going to a nursing home and having a cup of coffee with a resident. You will be a hero, I promise.”
“People need to ask themselves where are their gifts and where are their talents. And they need to be willing to work beyond their comfort zones. Once we recognize the importance and the value of each person as an individual, and once we treat each person with the dignity that is due to them, then we will begin to restore our culture and society.”
“And that’s what it means to be pro-life. Being pro-life has many faces,” he said. 
One often comes across Good Men, even in an era when men are almost universally condemned. (Perhaps in spite of that era). 

The Tavern is a place for Saints and Heroes and those who are on their way to being Saints. Some who stop by have a long way to go, but I think Eric has a head start on them. He is taking Prisoners ....with him. 

Pax.






4 comments:

  1. Nice news to hear that. I once was in prison for a half-day talking to inmates, including one max security guy. He seemed so nice. Killed someone a week later I believe. Hope v brutality.

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    1. Yes, being a good chap is one thing, but don't take a prisoner home hidden in your shirt.

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  2. Two inspirational people.

    There is much work to be done in prisons. The prison system and lack of care in and when leaving prison often leads to the prisoner into a life of crime rather than rehabilitation into society.

    Within prison, I think more spiritual works are needed (to guide) and when kicked out of prison more corporal works are needed (to sustain).

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    Replies
    1. Yes, and care needs to be taken not to get burned.

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Ne meias in stragulo aut pueros circummittam.

Our Bouncer is a gentleman of muscle and guile. His patience has limits. He will check you at the door.

The Tavern gets rowdy visitors from time to time. Some are brain dead and some soul dead. They attack customers and the bar staff and piss on the carpets. Those people will not be allowed in anymore. So... Be Nice..