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A UMNS Feature
By Barbara Dunlap-Berg*
4:00 P.M. EST Sept. 23, 2010
Joy Block-Wright, director of Redemption Kids, stands with young
participants in the United Methodist ministry, which works with the
children of the incarcerated. UMNS photos courtesy of Redemption Kids.
View in Photo Gallery
Joy Block-Wright spent 18 months in federal prison for forgery.
Today she serves as director of Redemption Kids, a ministry for
children and youth, ages 6 to 18, whose parents are incarcerated.
“I’ve always had Christ in my life,” Block-Wright said, “but I backslid very badly.”
During Block-Wright’s incarceration, her children lived with their grandparents, and it was tough.
“When you’re incarcerated,” she recalled, “the whole time you’re there, every day, all your thoughts are about your children.”
Her time behind bars, she said, was her “wake-up call.”
Sounding that call was Penn Avenue Redemption Church in Oklahoma
City, a United Methodist congregation that for 15 years has supported
inmates and their families by offering a diverse choice of classes and
12-step programs.
Each week a van picks up more than 150 inmates for three worship
services. Perhaps most importantly, the Redemption Kids program, along
with the summer New Day camp, reaches out to prisoners’ children.
‘I won’t go to prison’
Twelve-year-old Anthony Boyd — Block-Wright’s son — has thrived in Redemption Kids.
“It’s helped me stay out of trouble,” he said. “I hear a lot of
stories from these inmates. I don’t want to talk to somebody that
doesn’t know what I’m going through.”
The adults offer sage advice.
“Some kids,” Anthony explained, “want to be cool. But doing stuff
like drugs or stealing or anything like that, that’s not cool.”
Block-Wright exercises with Redemption Kids participants. “I want them… to follow God first,” she says.
View in Photo Gallery
Along with fun things like dancing,
Anthony’s sister Antonia, 10, said Redemption Kids teaches life lessons.
“I like the church,” she said. She listens carefully to the sermons.
“I want to follow in (the leaders’) footsteps, and I won’t go to prison.”
When Block-Wright was released from prison, she and her children
went to live at Exodus House, a re-entry program sponsored by the
church.
“I heard about Redemption having a program,” she said. She had
attended a United Methodist church in Tulsa, so she thought church
involvement would be a good opportunity “to start building my life back
again.”
Having Anthony and Antonia with her in an apartment “was exactly what I wanted and needed to keep me grounded,” she added.
After several months in the program, the little family was on its own. But that’s not the end of the story.
Giving back
Block-Wright felt God’s nudge to help others in similar situations.
“I wanted to give back in some way, and God put it on my heart to
start visiting in the youth department.” Eventually the youth director
left, and Block-Wright was invited to take the position.
“I was more than happy to do so,” she said.
“I’ve always had a heart for children. I worked with the youth
program at Wesley United Methodist Church in Tulsa. That’s my gift — to
be able to work with children. But I can’t even explain the emotions
when you’re away from them.”
Oklahoma statistics indicate that half of the children of incarcerated parents will end up in prison.
The Rev. Steve Byrd, Redemption Church pastor, is working to change
that. He serves as associate director of criminal justice and mercy
ministries for the Oklahoma Annual (regional) Conference.
Along with providing transportation to worship services, Redemption
Church offers re-entry classes, Bible studies and faith-based recovery
programs.
“We have several different classes that rotate,” he said. Courses
focus on anger management, life skills, relationships and other topics.
“We know that if they relapse, then probably they’re going back to
prison,” Byrd said. “So it is always our front line to provide recovery
from alcohol and other drug addictions. We do that through recovery
programs at Exodus House. Because I’m a licensed counselor, we’re able
to make referrals when needed.”
Assistance with finding employment, obtaining a driver’s license and
meeting medical and mental-health needs are at the top of the list.
From participants to leaders
Teenager Equandre Wofford spent several years as a Redemption Kids participant. Today he is a leader.
Both of his parents were incarcerated. He often wished they had
considered the consequences of their behavior, especially how it might
affect him.
He tries to keep his brother from following their parents’ example.
Equandre warns him: “That’s going to get you killed, locked up, dead
somewhere. Somebody (is) going to throw you away. Then they’re going to
find you in the back seat of a car.”
Then, Equandre said, people will remember. “We told him not to do this stuff.”
Byrd echoes the importance of early intervention.
“Systemic incarceration is a real problem,” he said. “That means two and three generations are in prison.
“We’re always optimistic that if we can show (children and youth)
some alternative lifestyle, some alternative decision-making skills,
then perhaps they don’t have to be one of those statistics.”
Block-Wright feels she has been called into ministry.
“I know everybody has a different way of ministering,” she said.
Her dream is to purchase a building in the neighborhood to convert into
a youth center—“a safe haven” where Redemption Kids can continue to
flourish.
“I want them... to follow God first. That’s number one because that’s going to be their strength, always, in life.”
*Dunlap-Berg is internal content editor for United Methodist Communications.
News media contact: Barbara Dunlap-Berg, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5489 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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