Imigration Project Luncheon November 10

People from all walks of life will gather to celebrate The Immigration Project’s 20th anniversary at the "Flourish Where You’re Planted" Luncheon and fundraiser , from noon to 1 p.m. November 10 at Bloomington's Second Presbyterian Church.

2015 marks The Immigration Project’s 20th year of providing affordable, quality legal services to immigrants in all of central and southern Illinois. This year, the project is awarding Cristina Deutsch, a lifelong advocate of immigrant rights who has been with The Immigration Project since its inception, with our first annual Immigration Hero Award.

In addition, Appellate Judge James A. Knecht will speak on current immigration issues. Tickets are available at http://www.immigrationproject.org/immigration-project-calendar/upcoming-events/?action=evregister&event_id=1 for $25 through November 4, 2015.

Police Force Focus of Nov. 4 Program; Body Cams in Bloomington's Future

Body cameras were discussed at the Bloomington City Council’ mid-October meeting.  But questions remain before they hit the streets, and Illinois State University criminal justice Prof. Jason Ingram is raising a few.

Ingram says the cameras can increase police and public safety, if they're used the right way.

"It's a camera, so it has to be turned on and it only captures what it's pointed at. So if an officer has discretion on when he or she can turn it on, there's potential for non-compliance,” Ingram said. 

Jason Ingram

Jason Ingram

His biggest issue is privacy and determining who can see the video: "Officers do have a reduced expectation of privacy, because they're a public servant, but I don't know how that plays out with citizens on camera.”

Ingram will offer his thoughts on police practices and protections at Police Use of Force: Myths and Policy Considerations, a free, public program by the Central Illinois Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union at 7 p.m. Nov. 4 in the Normal Public Library Community Room.

Police departments all over the country are using body cameras. Bloomington Police Chief Brendan Heffner, who has researched the issue for the city council, says they are inevitable, and will improve safety for police and the community.

"Privacy issues are a big concern, obviously cost is a big concern,” Heffner nonetheless concedes.

His department will begin a grant-funded trial run in January. After that, it's up to the council to determine if the cameras are worth the cost.

"At the end of the day, if it turns out it's going to be somewhere around $100,000 for us to do this every year and to keep this going, than the council has to figure out is that a top priority," said Mayor Tari Renner.

Even though the cameras do face challenges, Heffner says they're excited to move forward in the process. "I think we will get better feedback from the officers once we get some cameras here to actually test,” he said.

The Bloomington police department says they'll test several types of cameras before making a decision, and Renner suggests they might go with several options, to give officers their pick.

For further thoughts on body cams, watch the WMBD-TV video at http://www.centralillinoisproud.com/news/local-news/body-cameras-could-help-policing


#Black Lives Matter Co-Founder visits IWU

Illinois Wesleyan University’s Student Senate welcomed Opal Tometi, a co-founder of the #Black Lives Matter movement, to the campus community Thursday at Hansen Student Center. 

Tometi is executive director of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI), a national organization advocating for immigrant rights and racial justice with African-American, Afro-Latino, African and Caribbean immigrant communities. A racial justice communications consultant, she has spoken about the work of the Black Lives Matter movement at several colleges and universities across the nation.

The event was part of the Office of Diversity and Inclusion’s ongoing “3D” series of events on Diversity, Dialogue and Dignity, and also was a Nation(s) Divided? presentation.

Tometi holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in History and a Masters of Arts degree in Communication and Advocacy.  The daughter of Nigerian immigrants, she grew up in Phoenix, Arizona where she is a board member of the Puente Movement. She currently resides in Brooklyn, New York where she loves riding her single speed bike and collecting African art.

In a press interview this week, Tometi said “I have yet to see a substantive cross-cutting racial justice platform from any of the (presidential) candidates."

“Simply declaring, ‘Black Lives Matter,’ can never be substitute for tangible, transformative policy agendas that offer true solutions from issues from jobs to housing, immigration, education to LGBTQ, health care, mass incarceration and more," Tometi said. "I won’t be satisfied until I see the candidates with a clearly articulated platform; one that demonstrates they understand how race and racism works at a structural level."

Monday YWCA Program to Focus on LGBT Rights

The Bloomington-Normal LGBT Partnership and YWCA McLean County are hosting a free presentation entitled Know Your Rights: Sexual Orientation Discrimination Rights and Remedies on Monday, October 26 at 7 p.m.

Illinois State University Professor Tom McClure, an attorney with expertise in civil rights and constitutional law, will explain how victims can challenge sexual orientation discrimination in employment, housing, and public accommodations.

Chicago attorney Betty Tsamis will discuss her recent victory in the Illinois Human Rights Commission in an anti-discrimination case involving a same-sex couple who was turned away from a Paxton bed and breakfast because of their sexual orientation. She also will present the Illinois law prohibiting sexual orientation discrimination in employment and public accommodations.

For more information on this event, please contact Norene Ball, Director of Mission Impact at YWCA McLean County, at (309) 662-0461(309) 662-0461, ext. 265, or nball@ywcamclean.org. 

Illinois State University Professor Tom McClure, an attorney with expertise in civil rights and constitutional law, will explain how victims can challenge sexual orientation discrimination in employment, housing, and public accommodations.

Chicago attorney Betty Tsamis will discuss her recent victory in the Illinois Human Rights Commission in an anti-discrimination case involving a same-sex couple who was turned away from a Paxton bed and breakfast because of their sexual orientation. She also will present the Illinois law prohibiting sexual orientation discrimination in employment and public accommodations.

For more information on this event, please contact Norene Ball, Director of Mission Impact at YWCA McLean County, at (309) 662-0461(309) 662-0461, ext. 265, or nball@ywcamclean.org. 

Drama Walking With My Ancestors Illuminates Slave Trade

Walking With My Ancestors, an original play about enslaved Africans in West African slave-holding dungeons, will be presented at 8 p.m. Saturday, October 24, and at 4 p.m. Sunday, October 25, in Illinois State University’s Kemp Recital Hall. Admission to the performances is free.

Ama Oforiwaa Aduonum

Ama Oforiwaa Aduonum

Performances will combine drumming, dance, song, and words to depict the experiences of Africans held in slave-holding dungeons before being sent to plantations in the Americas. Following each performance, there will be a Q-and-A session with the performers and audience participation activities involving call-and-response singing, storytelling, and polyrhythmic hand-clapping.

The show’s playwright, Illinois State University Professor Ama Oforiwaa Aduonum, will also discuss the inspiration for Walking With My Ancestors. The show is based on her personal experiences as an ethnomusicologist while visiting the former slave-holding dungeons in her native Ghana. She describes the dungeons as “the tombs and wombs in which Africans were buried and reborn as slaves.”

“By disrupting our understanding of the status quo and giving voice to previously unheard narratives, a most important but neglected past that still defines who we are and how we interact with each other, Walking With My Ancestors offers important perspectives on slavery in its connection to today’s racial problems with truths of this past,” said Aduonum. “In the aftermath of Charleston, Ferguson, Staten Island, and Baltimore, Walking With My Ancestors compels us to deepen dialogue and engagement needed to address racial violence, and begs us to rethink how much has changed, or not, in race relations and policies, helping us to move towards healing.”

Walking With My Ancestors is choreographed by Ama Oforiwaa Aduonum and directed by School of Theatre and Dance Professor Kim Pereira. The performances are presented by Illinois State’s College of Fine Arts and School of Music, with funding from the School of Music and MECCPAC, a Dean of Students Diversity Initiative.

Kelley: Chronic Homelessness and Tiny Homes

Kelley Becker

NIOTBN Faith and Outreach Committee

On Wednesday, October 7, 2015, I had the privilege of talking with a group of Eureka College freshmen about the challenges that people who are chronically homeless face and some possible solutions. I was invited to speak by their instructor, Holly Rocke, who is a member of the church I serve, First Christian Church in Bloomington.

I shared with the students that I have built relationships with people in our community who live outside in tents year round. They endure harsh winter weather, heavy rains in the spring and excessive heat and mosquitoes in the summer. My work with people who are chronically homeless began because I learned where they were living and I and some friends began to share meals with them.

Over the years, we have continued to share meals and our lives. There are a group of people from the Bloomington-Normal community and beyond who take turn sharing meals and helping these friends in other ways. You see, there is not just one reason people become chronically homeless, so there isn’t just one way to help people who chronically homeless. Because I have gotten to know some of their stories personally, I have been able to work in the community for permanent solutions that I believe can work.

I have learned that our emergency shelters, Home Sweet Home and Safe Harbor, will never be able to help some people who are chronically homeless. There are some people that, due to their past, are unwelcome in our shelters. There are some people who, because of addiction, mental health or personality are unable to follow the rules the shelters must impose. It is these people that I have been working to help.

The Tiny Home Project was started in an effort to provide shelter, dignity, safety and a new start for people who are unable or unwilling to go to an emergency shelter. It is partnership between First Christian Church in Bloomington, The Matthew Project from Heyworth, the Lutheran Board of Church Extension and Illinois Wesleyan University School of Theatre Arts. We hope that through tiny homes we are able to provide housing FIRST so that people who are chronically homeless can change their lives forever.

Our first tiny home is almost finished. Our goals with this build were to 1) draw attention to chronic homelessness 2) give people who are chronically homeless an opportunity to see a tiny home and 3) to encourage community leadership to look at this solution.

At the Eureka College presentation, I showed the students pictures of the tiny house build and gave them the opportunity to ask questions. Many of the questions centered on how we would decide who is allowed to live in the homes or whom we would choose first. We hope to be able to build enough homes to put an end to living outside in our community. Of course, we would fill the homes in the beginning based on critical need. In other words, there are people whose health is seriously at risk by continuing to live outside. We should house them first.

It was hard for some of the students to wrap their minds around the idea of providing housing without strings attached. We teach our young people to grow up, get an education and make their way in the world. I talked with them about how difficult that is for some people and that many people in our country are teetering on the edge of homelessness all the time. We have to help each other. There is enough for everyone. Everyone should have a place to belong and a place to call home.

I believe we need to be a community that does not judge whether we believe a person deserves help, but instead commits to helping everyone have a safe place to live. Tiny homes may not be the solution for everyone, but it is a solution for some. We are in the process of working with City of Bloomington leadership, business leaders and social service organizations to find a place to put the tiny homes.

This project is an amazing example of how the faith community, business community, academic community and social service community can come together for solutions. We do not all agree and working together is sometimes difficult. However, together we are better. By working together we have the opportunity to build something that benefits the entire community.

Women's Wellness Seminar Examines Indian Practices

Dr. Ashlesha Raut will share and discuss women's everyday health and well being through practice of our ancient medicine Ayurveda during the Women's Health and Wellness Seminar, from 3 to 5 p.m. Saturday at the Hindu Temple Of Bloomington And Normal, 1815 Tullamore Ave, Bloomington.

The event is open to all, please bring your friends to learn how we can integrate yoga, meditation, good diet to maintain a healthy lifestyle through Ayurveda, a 5,000-year-old system of natural healing that has its origins in the Vedic culture of India, Ayurveda has been enjoying a major resurgence in both its native land and throughout the world.

In the United States, the practice of Ayurveda is not licensed or regulated by any state. Practitioners of Ayurveda can be licensed in other healthcare fields such as massage therapy or midwifery, and a few states have approved schools teaching Ayurveda.

The seminar is co-sponsored by the McLean County India Association.

UN to Eye ISU Graphic Novel on Trafficking

Illinois State University will have a part in a presentation to the United Nations later this month.

A graphic novel produced by the University’s Publications Unit will be key to a presentation by the director of Children of the Forest, a not-for-profit agency that assists children who have been trafficked along the Thailand-Myanmar border. Though it was Publications Director Steve Halle who made the connection to create the piece, it was Illinois State students who took the lead in production.

Halle’s friend Andrew Zeal is a local artist who volunteers with Children of the Forest, a halfway house that provides education and shelter for stateless children. “Andrew traveled to the border to do an art project with the children, and came up with the idea of making a comic book with the children living in the house,” said Halle. The project grew into an informative graphic novel to tell the organization’s story. “He called me to get advice on how to self-publish a book. The project intrigued me, so I offered to donate time to help produce the graphic novel,” Halle said, “because I felt it would be a great opportunity for students.”

Upon hearing about the project, several students clamored to help, including Tess Culton, a senior publishing studies major from Carbondale. “We only had eight weeks to pull together the book from the first arrival of the text to completion,” said Culton, who worked closely with fellow student Erica Young to help create the graphic novel. “I love the fact that part of the director’s speech to the UN will be in the book.”

While editing and arranging text for Forget Me Not: Stories of Child Trafficking from the Thai-Burma Border, Culton said she was moved by the work of the organization. “I find now that I talk about Children of the Forest to my friends, my family,” she said. “It goes beyond helping to promote the book. You can feel in every page that this group believes every child deserves good schools, health care, and the knowledge to survive. By even having the chance to work on this book, I feel like I’ve been part of something important, something that has the potential to change lives.”

Children of the Forest Director Daniel Hopson will make the presentation to the UN in late October.

Cedar Ridge Students Celebrate Hispanic Heritage

Julie Evelsizer

The Pantagraph

Brandy Aguirre Cruz went to school Friday wearing a top hat, neck tie and green face paint.

“I have the part of the tadpole in our play,” said 8-year-old Cruz, a third grader at Cedar Ridge Elementary School in Bloomington.

Cruz and her classmates performed a play in Spanish based on the popular Colombian fairy tale, "Rin Rin the Tadpole," to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month in October.

Students in the bilingual program at Cedar Ridge studied Spanish-speaking countries and then presented songs, plays and art to fellow students and visiting parents.

Cruz and her classmates studied the country of Colombia.

“I learned about the animals, money and authors,” said Cruz, whose family is Guatemalan.

“This is the home school for most of our kids, but some students are brought here from other local schools for the bilingual program,” said Leslie Romagnoli, English Second Language program coordinator for Unit 5 schools.

Unit 5's ESL program helps bilingual students in pre-kindergarten through 12th grade whose first language is not English. Cedar Ridge has the highest number of Spanish-speaking students.

Over the summer, Romagnoli met with Cedar Ridge teachers to map out curriculum on cultural pieces for Spanish-speaking countries. Teachers will continue to focus on the countries throughout the semester.

“The students are excited to share their presentations with their parents and classmates,” said Romagnoli.

Seven-year-old Gael Sanchez Navarro learned about El Salvador in his second grade class. He and his classmates presented facts in Spanish to the crowd and played sacabuche instruments made from cups, leather and pencils.

“I talked about volcanoes in El Salvador,” Navarro said in clear English after the presentation. He started to explain more, but got stuck on a few tough English words. Romagnoli hopped in to help.

“There are things in El Salvador similar to ski lifts that take people up the sides of the volcanoes,” she translated. Navarro nodded.

In another room, a bilingual first grade class lined up to sing a about Guatemala. After the song, they each gave a fact about the country in English. As they were finished, they filed out of the room, but not before 6-year-old Antony Ramierez could dart into the crowd of visiting parents to give his dad a hug.

“I’m glad they have this activity at his school,” said his dad, Adrian Ramirez of Bloomington. “Our family is from Mexico and I don’t want him to forget his country and where we came from.”

Activist/Theologian Invites Next Gen To Join 'New' Movement

Jonathan Upshaw

VidetteOnline

With an estimated crowd of 500 students and faculty packed inside the Illinois State University’s Capen Auditorium, Reverend Osagyefo Uhuru Sekou gave a powerful message to the audience Thursday night.

“You are the generation we have been waiting for,” Sekou told college students in attendance.

Sekou, an activist, author and theologian, touched on several relevant topics for the young audience. His talk was titled “A New Civil Rights Movement? Ferguson, Black Lives MAtter, and the Future of Nonviolence.”

“We have high expectations for you because we have seen what you can do,” Sekou said.

Sekou was one of many activists who traveled to Ferguson, Mo., to participate in the protests in support of African American Michael Brown after he was allegedly killed by Ferguson Police last summer.

Sekou provided a message about what could be called a new civil rights movement. He touched on many points including methods and possibilities to change the way the government works.

“If you are more concerned about the use of profanity by young people than the profane conditions they live in, then there is something wrong with you,” Sekou said.

Sekou delved into his experience in Ferguson and how it changed him as a person.

“It was a very powerful and knowledgeable speech,” Marques Thornton, ISU junior political science major, said. “Sekou showed so much love for young students he characterized as the generation we have been waiting for.”

Throughout the evening the reverend continued to stress the future need for non-violence protest.

“I don’t want to shoot children down. I don’t want to release tear gas on innocents. I don’t want to violate the first amendment right of citizens to gather to share their voices,” Sekou said.

“I have seen the very face of God and God is angry. God is queer. God is a black woman. God is a single mother,” Sekou said.

You need “that kind of love” to help make a change in the world Sekou said.

His strong belief in changes for the civil rights in our nation was backed by applause from the audience.

“We can’t build a society using the master’s tools, which is physical violence,” Sekou said. “All life matters, this is true, but we are going to focus on black ones now because we are the ones being killed.”

Multi-Faith Activism: Unplugging the Peace Process

Jewish, Muslim, and Christian peacemakers from Jerusalem, Nazareth, and Galilee will gather at Illinois State University to talk about what happens when the peace process stalls.

Eliyahu McLean, Ghassan Manasra, and Jiries Mansur will give a talk titled Multi-Faith Activism When the Political Peace Process Stalls: An Evening With International Peacemakers at 7 p.m. October 20, in the Prairie Room of the Bone Student Center. The event is free and open to the public.

The three are members of Abrahamic Reunion, a multi-faith group of peacemakers from Israel who seek to use religion as a force for peace. McLean is an Orthodox Jew from Jerusalem, co-founder of the Abrahamic Reunion, and director of the peace organization Jerusalem Peacemakers. Manasra is an ordained sheikh in the Qadiri Sufi Order of Islam, and director of the Peace Center in Nazareth. Mansur is a Christian Arab and deacon in the Greek Orthodox Church, and principal of a middle school in the Arab village of Kfar Rame in the Galilee.

“The Abrahamic Reunion represents something that is rarely seen when people think about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict–the cooperation and willingness to work for peace across faiths that occurs in Israel and Palestine,” said Associate Professor Michael Gizzi, who worked with McLean when he visited Jerusalem last winter to lay the foundation of a possible study abroad class. “Bringing the peacemakers to Illinois State University provides our students and the community with a great opportunity to learn about peacemaking in the Middle East.”

The talk is sponsored by Illinois State University Diversity Advocacy, Peace Studies and Conflict Resolution, Hillel Student Union, the Presbytery of Great Rivers, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Moses Montefiore Temple, Illinois Wesleyan University’s Evelyn Chapel, the Harold K. Sage Fund, and the Illinois State University Foundation.

For additional information, contact the Dean of Students Office at (309) 438-2008(309) 438-2008. To set up an interview with Michael Gizzi, contact Media Relations at (309) 438-5744(309) 438-5744, or MediaRelations@IllinoisState.edu.

Sit For Peace Invites Meditation on a Better Community

The Sit For Peace meditation flash mob is scheduled 5-6 p.m. Sunday, October 25, at the Bloomington Center for the Performing Arts, 600 N. East Street Bloomington.

The event is sponsored by The OM Tribe, a non-profit organization that promotes yoga and meditation.

The goal is to assemble 2,000 people of all ages, backgrounds, and beliefs to sit for one 20-30 minute meditation focused on peace. Children are invited, and a coloring meditation will be available for them.

The mediation will be held by candlelight on the BCPA lawn, and participants are invited to bring a battery-operated tea light candle (and possibly additional candles to share).

 “'We are a group of citizens who are taking time to show our commitment to peace by sitting in group meditation,” the group states. “We truly believe that peace in the world, peace in our community, begins with peace within ourselves. Working toward peace is a unifying concept that can bring us together, and meditation has long shown us that the positive benefits are far-reaching beyond personal benefits.

“Help us spread the word by sharing this with your friends, family, co-workers, clergy, book clubs, schools, etc. Let us all take time to send a wave of peace across our planet!”

 

National Bullying Prevention Month: Hugs and Communication

As the students of Unit 5 and District 87 continue to acclimate to new experiences and relationships, they also face the challenge of coping with bullying or the temptation to bully. October is National Bullying Prevention Month, and an ideal time for parents to talk with teachers, communicate with their kids, and, hopefully, help eliminate bullying.

The Pantagraph's Derek Beigh recently examined one local effort to inoculate students against the damage of bullying.

For Antoinese Watson of Normal, reaching out to bullied teens isn't nice, it's necessary.

"My cousin is (a local suicide victim's) sister," she said. "No child should feel they're all alone, and something like that is necessary."

Watson, a senior at Normal Community West High School, joined about two dozen other local residents spreading that message during Wednesday's (Oct. 1) Operation Hug a Child event.

“I started it because of the young lady who committed suicide,” said the Rev. Rochelle Patterson, pastor of God's Decision Outreach Ministry in downtown Bloomington. "Any child from 2 to 92 needs a hug sometimes."

Patterson, members of the church and supporters organized events, including face painting, speakers and games Wednesday at Carl's Ice Cream in Normal.

"I was bullied in fifth grade," said 13-year-old Sharissa Jackson of Normal after getting her face painted. "It helps to make new friends or find an activity to do after school to get your mind off it."

Watson said "a ton of people get bullied," but she tells other students to "stay strong" and "find someone to talk to so you're not all alone."

Patterson said Jackson and 11-year-old Ashanti Hunter of Normal, both church members, were big parts of getting Operation Hug a Child rolling. The effort has visited local restaurants, grocery stores and downtown spaces offering hugs to passers-by, and the church maintains a board with photos of those hugs.

Hunter said she'd like to see more school-based organizations working to stop bullying. Watson is part of an anti-bullying group at Normal West that will hand out informational fliers at the school's homecoming parade next week.

"We're planning to go to the schools," Patterson said. "Too many kids don't realize people actually care about them."

Wednesday's main event was a hugging contest. Deborah Love of Normal and Tabu Triplett of Bloomington raced to see how many people in and around the restaurant they could hug.

After Triplett won, Patterson even offered hugs to people in the drive-thru lane at Carl's, including Bonnie Stephens of Pekin. Attendees also formed a massive heart to demonstrate their togetherness.

Patterson said she'll be out soon at more locations offering hugs to anyone who needs one. She refers to people who offers hugs as "Heroes Under God."

"Look out. There's a H.U.G. coming for you," she said with a laugh.

Normal Unit 5's anti-bullying/anti-bigotry resolution, passed last spring.

Normal Unit 5's anti-bullying/anti-bigotry resolution, passed last spring.


Leaders of Distinction Nominees Include NIOT:B/N Leader

The Leaders of Distinction Awards for community service will be announced Wednesday at an event sponsored by the McLean County Chamber of Commerce and The Pantagraph.

The reception includes announcement of the Athena Leadership Award and this year's Twenty Under Forty.

Tickets are $50 and available by calling 309-829-1183309-829-1183. The reception begins at 5 p.m. in the Brown Ballroom of the ISU Bone Student Center. Awards will be announced beginning at 6:30.

Tickets include a complimentary wine, beer or soft drink, hors d'oeuvres buffet and dessert buffet.

The Athena Award recognizes professional excellence, community service and active assistance toward women seeking professional excellence and leadership skills.

Twenty Under Forty recognizes young professionals who excel in their career, are passionate about the community and are making a mark in Central Illinois.

Kari Sandhaas

Kari Sandhaas

Athena nominees are Susan Baller-Shepard, Heartland Community College; Julie Hile, Hile Group Inc.; Carole Ringer, retired/community volunteer; and Not In Our Town: Bloomington/Normal's Kari Sandhaas, Country Financial; Doan Winkel, Illinois State University.

Twenty Under 40 honorees are Stephanie Adomaitis, Marcfirst; Josh Barnett, Advocate Charitable Foundation; Rachel Bedeker, Eastland Suites Hotels; Scott Black, AFNI; Justin Boyd, Country Financial; Chris Downing, Heartland Community College Foundation; Holly Hedges, CM Promotions; Tejas Jani, State Farm; Kristen Kubsch, Growmark; Melissa Lockwood, Heartland Foot and Ankle Associates, P.C.; Matt Lyons, Illinois State University Athletics; Natalie McKee, Bloomington Normal Audiology; Gina Mandros, Central Illinois Easter Seals; Van Miller, Illinois Wesleyan University; NIOT:B/N volunteer Jesse Paul Padilla, Illinois Agricultural Association (Country Financial); Matt Potts, Country Financial representative; Justin Stuva, Corn Belt Energy Corp.; Emily Vigneri, Illinois State University; Erin Williams, McDonald's Restaurants; and Michelle Wojcik, The Pantagraph.

Cemetery Walk Features Pioneering Woman in War Effort

After several years working as a live-in maid to the mother of Adlai Stevenson II, Matilda Calcote headed to the West Coast in 1944 to work as a ship welder building destroyers for the U.S. military. A regular "Rosie the Riveter," she remained there for several years, also working as a spot painter and tank cleaner. But Matilda soon returned to Bloomington when the gruesome sight of dead sailors in the bulkhead of ships coming to port became too much to bear. She lived another 40 years and was an active member of the African-American community.

Calcote is one of eight diverse past McLean County personalities featured in dramatic recreations at this year's Evergreen Cemetery Walk in Bloomington, which continues next weekend.

Every year, the Evergreen Cemetery Walk brings the voices of McLean County's history to life. Costumed actors portray individuals representing all walks of life from the county's past on the beautiful grounds of Evergreen Memorial Cemetery. This event serves over 3,500 people (mostly students) every year. To date, the walk has featured 157 different individuals from all walks of life, whose stories illustrate the impact the people of McLean County have had on history -- locally, regionally, nationally, and internationally.

Please visit http://www.mchistory.org/learn/programs/cemwalk.php to purchase tickets; for more information on purchasing tickets, please call 309-827-0428309-827-0428. Tickets also are for sale at Casey's Garden Shop, The Garlic Press, and Evergreen Memorial Cemetery.

Matilda Bell Heaston entered the world on November 30, 1910. Born to Jake and Doshie (Robinson) Heaston in Randolph, Tennessee, Matilda was one of 15 children though it is unclear exactly how many brothers and sisters she had. While living in Tennessee, Matilda's parents were sharecroppers. In 1920, at the age of 10, Matilda and her family moved to Luxora, Arkansas, just across the Mississippi River. There, Matilda’s parents were able to farm independently.

Many African-Americans and low-income whites experienced the oppressive sharecropping system of the South. In fact, Mississippi County, Arkansas, where the Heastons farmed, had a very high percentage of tenant farms which was 90.3 percent in 1930. This was the second highest rate among the Arkansas delta counties at that time. Matilda recalled “that real hard way of living, we never had that because we always raised our food....”

The family later moved into a house that they had purchased. Matilda grew up there and would eventually occupy the residence with her first husband and daughter. Her mother took in laundry and did not have a job outside of the home. Her father worked as a blacksmith and shoed horses. Matilda attended an all-African American school in Arkansas. In fact, she never attended an integrated school throughout her education.

In 1926 Matilda married Lucious Walton. On December 2 of that year, she gave birth to a daughter, Ruthie Mae Walton. Two years later, Matilda and Ruthie moved to Bloomington, Illinois where they joined Lillian Augusta (Heaston) and Robert Lee Boykin, Matilda’s older sister and brother-in-law. Matilda’s marriage had hit a rocky patch and she and Lucious had separated. Eighteen-year-old Matilda and her toddler briefly moved in with the Boykins before beginning work for Helen Stevenson. For at least two years, Matilda served as Helen’s personal maid and even lived at the Stevenson home at 1316 East Washington Street. Matilda later worked as a maid for other local families.

Domestic service was typical among African American women in Bloomington-Normal. In fact, 90 percent of African American workers in the nation in 1930 performed agricultural or domestic service jobs. Half of these domestic servants worked in private homes. The other half served as laundresses, waitresses, untrained nurses, and elevator operators among other roles. According to Matilda, jobs and housing were easy for her to find even during the economic challenges of the Great Depression.

Matilda left Illinois several times in the 1930s and 1940s. In 1930, she and her daughter moved to Holland, Missouri with to be with her parents and younger siblings. In the 1930 United States federal census, she was listed as “Matilda Young” though there is no record of another marriage at that time and the name does not appear again in any other sources.

In 1934, she returned home to Arkansas, where she stayed for one year. She distributed agricultural “commodities” in Blytheville as part of a government relief program. In October 1933, just prior to her arrival in Arkansas, President Roosevelt ordered the formation of the Federal Surplus Relief Corporation (FSRC), an operation overseen jointly by the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) and the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA). The FSRC worked to reduce agricultural surplus by purchasing excess crops and animal products and distributing them to state relief agencies. Those state agencies—and employees like Matilda—would then provide this food to people in need. Interestingly, Matilda recalled that one of the women in charge “had more in her basement than the people had on the street.”

When asked whether the Great Depression affected her much, Matilda answered, “No, I always had work to do…. I never had anything in my life given to me free.” Over the course of her career, Matilda also served as a “commercial worker” and spent time working in restaurants, which she did not like very much.

By 1940, Matilda was married to William C. Miller. They lived in Bloomington’s Ward 5 (northwestern Bloomington) where they rented a home for $10 per month which is the equivalent of $169.86 in 2015 dollars. William worked as a garage janitor and earned $624 for 52 weeks of labor. Matilda was a housemaid for a private home, collecting $320 for 40 work weeks. Together they brought in $944 which is the equivalent of $16,150.21 in 2015 dollars. To put these amounts in perspective, the median annual income for a man in 1940 was $956; for a woman, it was $592. Assuming Matilda worked at least 40-hour weeks, this meant that she earned 20 cents per hour—much less than the minimum wage at the time which was 30 cents per hour.

Overall, this census data provides a valuable perspective on the African American economic situation. Federal measures to relieve the economic strain caused by the Great Depression failed to reach female African American workers. In particular, the Social Security Act and the Fair Labor Standards Act, which introduced the minimum wage, excluded the two sectors in which many African Americans worked; agriculture and domestic service.

Not all federal programs passed over African Americans workers. On June 25, 1941, President Franklin Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802, which attempted to curb the “discrimination of workers in defense industries or government because of race, creed, color, or national origin….” Although the United States had not yet declared war, American industry was ramping up production to help its ally Great Britain fight the Axis powers. Despite this need, many factories refused to hire African Americans. These discriminatory practices angered Chicagoan Asa Philip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Backed by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the National Urban League, Randolph pushed for fair hiring practices. He called for 100,000 African Americans to march on Washington to protest discrimination in defense industries. Embarrassed, President Roosevelt issued his Order which also created a Committee on Fair Employment Practice. The committee was charged with investigating employment discrimination cases.

In mid-1943, nearly 65 percent of shipyard workers on the West Coast were women.

In mid-1943, nearly 65 percent of shipyard workers on the West Coast were women.

In her oral history interview, Matilda recalled the growth of black employment in Bloomington-Normal during the early 1940s when African Americans began to be employed at places like American Steel and Williams Oil-O-Matic. In fact, her brother, probably her younger brother William Harrison Heaston, started working at the latter business in 1942. Although it’s unclear what job William specifically performed at the factory, the Williams Oil-O-Matic company fulfilled a variety of military contracts requiring precision machine work. The company manufactured hydraulic control devices (or what were called “oil gears”) for aiming antiaircraft guns, as well as smoke screen generators for the U.S. Navy and parts for the Boeing B-29 Super Fortress bomber.

Matilda soon sought employment in the defense industry herself when she left Bloomington in 1944 and worked in Seattle, Washington, for eight years. She built destroyers for the war effort. Matilda recalled that there was a strong need for these types of ships because 50 or more of them protected larger ships at sea. They were in such high demand that she helped produce a ship every 60 days. She worked several jobs at the shipyard including spot painter, welder, and tank cleaner. In her oral history, she recalled the “depressing” nature of tank cleaning: “So many times when them [sic] ships would limp in from abroad, from the sea, there would be a bunch of sailors when they’d open that bulk head, you know. They’d be in there. It was terrible.” Women at the shipyards received jobs based on their existing skill set. According to Matilda, the employers “didn’t teach you to do it. You had to take a sweeping job if you didn’t already have a skill. But if you already knew how to do those things, they’d give you a trial and see if you could do it. And then they’d let you have it.” Fortunately, Matilda had welding skills and got the job.

The start of World War II dramatically changed the relationship between women in general and the American workforce. It also provided inroads for African American and other minorities into the workforce. Due to a labor shortage caused primarily by white men leaving the workforce for military service, these new workers took over various roles that had historically been unavailable to them. These roles included skilled and semiskilled factory operations such as work in munitions, food, and textiles factories. In total, the number of African Americans who worked in civilian jobs increased by approximately one million between 1940 and 1944. Sixty percent of those workers were women. Throughout the United States, African American women saw a 40 percent rise in employment during this time period. For example, in 1942 the Brooklyn Navy Yard hired women mechanics for the first time in 141 years and nearly ten percent of the first 125 women hired there were African American. At the same time in Detroit, Michigan, fewer than 30 black women were employed in war plants; by November 1943, over 14,000 worked in that occupation.

It is unclear when Matilda and William Miller divorced but on November 8, 1947 she married L.C. Riley in Seattle. By 1952, the new couple had moved to Bloomington and were living with Matilda’s mother at 1322 N. Ewing Street (her father had passed away in 1951). Between 1953 and 1957, L.C. worked at the whites-only Louis E. Davis American Legion Post No. 56 as a bus boy and later a custodian. Two years later, he earned a living as a laborer for Behrenz Asphalt in Bloomington. By 1957, Matilda and L.C. were residing at 1204 W. Street. They divorced sometime before 1959 when he had married Mary Burnett.

Matilda returned to the West Coast. On May 13, 1960 she married William Calcote in Seattle, Washington where they were both living. William was 23 years her junior. By the next year, they were back in Bloomington living at 1322 N. Ewing with Matilda’s mother, though the city directories show Matilda at 1204 W. Mulberry Street. From 1964 to 1971 the Calcotes lived at the N. Ewing address. During that time—five days a week from 1961 to 1976—Matilda (or “Tillie” as she was known to some) worked as a maid at the Bloomington home of Betty Zimmer. In 1972, Matilda and William resided at 703 W. Monroe Street where they remained for the rest of their married lives.

Through the years William had found better and more secure employment. He worked as a custodian at the Eureka Williams plant from 1963 until 1967, when he took over as a maintenance worker at the Holiday Inn. In 1971 he returned Eureka and worked there for two more years. In 1974 William began custodial and maintenance duties at Bloomington Junior High School until 1979. After that he served as a maintenance man for the local Board of Education. William was a custodian at Raymond School at the time of his death in 1980. Matilda was retired at that time and did not return to work.

The Calcotes were members of Union Baptist Church located at 514 W. Jackson Street. In fact, after arriving in Bloomington in 1928, Matilda joined this church and worshipped there whenever she lived in town. She also actively participated in the church’s Willing Workers Club and Progressive Women’s Club. These social clubs performed projects to better the members and the community as a whole. In 1953, she led the women of the church in directing three services for “Women’s Day.” Sixteen years later, she was co-chair of that same event where local African American community leader Caribel Washington spoke. Around 1975, Matilda joined the Three C Club which brought women together to discuss issues that regularly affected African Americans. The next year she took over as chaplain of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Redd-Williams Post No. 163 of the American Legion, an all-African American post. Her brother was a World War II veteran which is how she qualified for membership.

William Calcote was only 47 years old when he passed away on September 28, 1980. He and Matilda had been happily married for 20 years. Matilda thought that her previous marriages were inconsequential by comparison. She said they were the result of being “young and not knowing what was going on and just married.” Family members laid William to rest at Evergreen Memorial Cemetery on October 2, 1980.

Matilda’s pride in her grandchildren could not be hidden. She spoke highly of her granddaughter who worked as a nurse, and her great-grandsons, who were medical students in neurosurgery and psychiatry. She credits the lack of role models as to why her great-grandsons left Bloomington. In her own words, “There was nobody doing anything. Nobody to look up to... There wasn’t no men doing nothing, but, you know, ‘shacking up’ and stuff.” By all accounts Matilda was a strong, hard-working, and adaptable human being. Through multiple jobs and marriages, she maintained her independence.

Matilda passed away at the age of 80 on December 27, 1990, having been ill for several months. Her funeral service was held at Union Baptist Church on New Year’s Eve. She was laid to rest next to William at Evergreen Memorial Cemetery.

ISU Pride To Celebrate Coming Out Day

October 11 is National Coming Out Day, a special day for people who are part of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and/or queer communities. Coming out is not easy for the LGBTQ community and is often times a topic that individuals have to deal with on a daily basis. National Coming Out Day brings an opportunity to celebrate those who have come out against, sometimes, great odds.

Danny Mathews, a specialist in Diversity Advocacy says, “Recognition and discussion of National Coming Out Day is important because it lets those who may be struggling with aspects of their identity know there is a community of support here on campus.”

In addition to recognizing National Coming Out Day, Illinois State University also has a Pride group. Pride is a student group which strives to provide a safe social and educational atmosphere for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and/or queer individuals on campus.

Sophomore Lucas Stiegman states, “Having a support system on campus, whether it be a Pride group, counseling services, friends, family, LGBT classes, or even Safe Zones, give those who may struggle with their gender identity or sexuality a feeling of validation and security.”

Visit Pride’s Facebook page on October 11 to learn more about National Coming Out Day and to hear other Illinois State students share their coming out stories. Meanwhile, Pride's 5th Annual Bonfire is tonight.

IWU Grad's Passion Leads to 'Genius Grant'

Lenore Sobota

The Pantagraph

Even as a young man attending Illinois Wesleyan University, Juan Salgado impressed those around him as someone who was passionate about helping others.

That passion led the 1991 IWU graduate to found Instituto del Progresso Latino in Chicago in 2001 and to him being named one of 24 MacArthur Fellows for 2015. Each fellow receives $625,000 — popularly known as the “genius” grant.

Instituto operates a number of programs, including schools and employment training, for Latino immigrants and their families.

Salgado sees his selection as a “tremendous opportunity” to make more people aware of what Instituto does. He said Tuesday his “big hope” is that Instituto's ideas “will be followed by others. What can happen in Chicago in a vibrant immigrant community can happen elsewhere.”

Although the MacArthur grant is an individual award, Salgado referred to the “amazing team” at Instituto, calling them “educational scientists” who work “to get results that haven't been gotten before” — such as taking people with low literacy and preparing them for college.

His references to his “team” reflect the attitude of a person several people who knew Salgado at IWU, describing him as humble, modest and caring.

Mike Seeborg, Robert S. Eckley Distinguished Professor of Economics at IWU, said, “Even as an economics student, he wanted to get back and help his community. … He's got this heart of gold.”

Seeborg has taken students to Chicago to see how Salgado's programs work.

“Juan has been able to create things in the community that really make a difference,” Seeborg said.

Salgado credited his parents, Carmen Maldonado and Daniel Salgado, with inspiring him to help others.

“My mom instilled in us amazing values,” he said. “She believed in listening to what was shared on Sunday in church and working all week long to live it.”

His father, a steelworker, “was very involved in the community” and raised money for scholarships.

“You're motivated by what you see and what you don't see,” Salgado said.

Working as a caterer, one of many jobs he held in his youth, Salgado said he saw many upscale homes and places far different from those of many immigrant families and those he saw on visits with his family to Mexico.

He wrestled with those differences and the “need to have hope and opportunity, the need to have upward mobility.”

He thanked his professors at IWU, saying, “They prodded me to wrestle with it more. They cared enough to prod me.”

In 2013, Salgado spoke at IWU's commencement and was presented with an honorary doctor of humane letters degree.

President Dick Wilson recalled that Salgado told students to “do what stirs your spirit and soul” and “don't choose a path, make your own. And he has certainly done that.”

Lonnie Smith, a public affairs manager for State Farm, worked closely with Salgado on the Council for Latin American Student Enrichment when both were IWU students.

Describing Salgado as a mentor, Smith said, “He was collaborative by nature. Always looking for win-win solutions.”

Smith recalled a well-known quote from Minor Myers Jr., who was IWU president when he and Salgado were students there: "Go into the world and do well. But more importantly, go into the world and do good."

“Juan embodies that,” Smith said.

Arlene: A Crisis of Conscience

Arlene Hosea

WJBC Forum

I knew that in my retirement, one thing that I wanted to do was to get more involved in my community.   I had a desire to get more involved in social justice advocacy so I decided to try to do more since I had the time. I believed that I could help my community be a better place for all.   I attended various community meetings, helped with events around social change and awareness, joined committees; I was investing in my community and giving back.

Then something occurred in our community that nudged my social awareness, I felt I had been silent too long.   I asked myself, what should a person who says that they want to advocate for social justice say or do? I decided to talk to my husband to get his take on what was stirring in my head and heart. He listened; he understood my issue and concurred. That gave me strength and courage to take the next step to speak to someone outside my protective walls of home and family.   It was time to take that first step… I had to say something! I knew that I could not advocate for that which I believe is right if I remain silent.  

But, I also knew that if I choose to speak up, I will make myself vulnerable to the dreaded “what will people think of me?” “What if they do not see my point or worse, maybe my view is truly the wrong view?” I decided to take the road of vulnerability and just put my thoughts out there because the worst that could happen is that someone would disagree with me. I would just need to get over that part and move on… I was experiencing my first crisis of conscience!

As I sit here today and think about what it means for me to say that I am an advocate for something or someone, it is even clearer that in this world we do not get to choose what our society, its institutions, nor its people hand advocates of social change. We do not get a menu to select items that are what we desire, are served the way we like nor do we see the costs upfront to determine if they are reasonable. In the world of social justice advocacy, you get what people give you and it may not always be palatable. I know that we can change the world in so many ways and you do not always have to be on the battle front, marching for change, there are more subtle ways to bring about change.  

However, my belief is that silence is not the way, so I am grateful for my crisis of conscience and proud that regardless of all of my fears, I did take a risk because I believed it was the right thing to do. I also believe that we all should be advocates of social justice, although it has its risks, it is what will make our society better.

Arlene Hosea was born and raised in Bloomington.  She retired from Illinois State University and is on the Board of Directors for Special Olympics Illinois.  She has also served on the Town of Normal Human Relations Commission, The Baby Fold and the YWCA Board of Directors, and is a leader in Not In Our Town: Bloomington/Normal.  Arlene resides in Normal.

Greening Of The Prairie Illustrates Ugliness of Anti-Immigrant Prejudice

It was a contentious time and a contentious issue. A nation of immigrants wary of a new group of foreign refugees, workers, and families flowing into their communities. Doors barred to these newcomers, ugly propaganda painting these new arrivals as criminals, ne'er-do-wells, and even as subhumans. People indentured into a virtual servitude, and occasional acts of violence and terror committed in the name of fear and hatred.

The King of A-Shantee, a cartoon from an 1885 edition of the then-popular magazine Puck's,  illustrates the bigotry of the time toward the Irish. The cartoon is one of several pieces of anti-Irish propaganda and prejudice on display at the McLe…

The King of A-Shantee, a cartoon from an 1885 edition of the then-popular magazine Puck's,  illustrates the bigotry of the time toward the Irish. The cartoon is one of several pieces of anti-Irish propaganda and prejudice on display at the McLean County Museum of History.

Rough times for the Irish families that settled in Central Illinois in the 19th Century -- they experienced bigotry, discrimination, and suspicion that resonates in today's contentious immigration debate. The McLean County Museum of History's Greening of the Prairie exhibit, on display in downtown Bloomington through January 16, explores how one group, now prominent in Twin Cities business, politics, and community life, faced and eventually overcame deep-seated public prejudice.

The exhibit features historic objects, photographs, and maps about Irish-Catholic famine immigrants who came to this area in the early 1850s to escape the Irish famine brought on by widescale potato blight . They worked to build the railroad and opened early black-dirt prairie farms, following on the heels of Protestant Scots-Irish pioneers.

This exhibit examines why they left Ireland, the challenges they faced once they arrived, their successes and failures, and the impact their presence has had on our community. The Irish-Catholic immigrants faced major local hostility -- the anti-Catholic American Protective Association and the Ku Klux Klan were active in the region; KKK members reportedly included a number of local professionals and leaders.

Museum Curator Susan Hartzold muses grimly about the sweeping bigotry of the time -- an anti-immigrant sentiment "that's still going on" as Americans debate over Mexican labor and Syrian refugees.

"There are things we're not proud about in our history, but we don't want to sweep them under the rug," Hartzold acknowledges. "We had lots of anti-Irish, anti-Catholic sentiment in this town. It's important that people become aware of those things so they don't let them happen again."

However, the Irish overcame bigotry and were embraced by a growing number of residents. Irish farms became common in the Merna and south Downs area.

The exhibit highlights many notable McLean County Irish families, including: the Costigans who were grocers, lawyers and a judge; the Irvins, who started the Bloomington Pepsi bottling company; and the Quinns, who launched a gas station that still exists today. The Boylans became renowned for their candies and soft drinks. And by 1913, local clothing store Costello and O'Malley's sponsored a baseball team in the popular Catholic Forester's League.