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close-up of the corner of a jail cell

February 22, 2024, Adrian, Michigan – A recent presentation offered by the Adrian Dominican Sisters Office of Racial Equity and Cultural Inclusion explored the lives of a population often cast aside or derided by the mainstream culture: prison inmates.

The February 7, 2024, presentation, Light from the Cage, also touched upon racism. “Culturally, we know that Black males are overrepresented in prison,” said Kevin Hofmann, Director of the Office of Racial Equity and Cultural Inclusion, in his introduction to the presentation. He challenged the audience to consider how their culture views prisons and prison inmates.

Judy Wenzel, author of the 2017 book Light from the Cage: 25 Years in a Prison Classroom, spoke of her experience as an adult educator who, seeking a substitute teaching job with Milan [Michigan] Area Schools, was called upon instead to fill an immediate opening as a teacher in the Milan Federal Correctional Institution. “That short walk across the hall totally changed my life,” she said.

Judy noted the diversity of inmates in federal prisons and her challenge as a white woman teaching them. “So a federal prison has people from all over the world, and when I [first] got there, my students were mostly white – and then the mass incarceration really kicked in,” she said. “So then what I had in the early ’90s were young Black men from Detroit, Flint, Chicago, Cleveland – young, in their ’20s. They just got swept up.” 

She ultimately learned how to reach her diverse group of students when a student told her they were uninterested in Van Gogh or Shakespeare. She reached them with Black spirituals, Black literature, and poetry.

But Judy soon came to realize the creativity of her students. One student in her a history class suggested that they create and perform a play. She invited others to attend the “Breakfast Theater,” which the audience loved. “Then we were off and running, so we did all kinds of plays the whole time I was there,” Judy recalled. “It was so much fun.” 

Through the years, Judy learned from her students: from one who took all of her classes and included a paragraph of wisdom in each assignment, from a group of students who held a mock election in 2008, and from the way many of them lived through long prison sentences for drug violations. “How do you come in and face 33 years?” she asked. “There are saints who live there.”

Judy also experienced the kindness of the men – to each other, as they faced years together in prison, and to herself when her father died, and later when she broke her ankle. When she finally returned to teach at the prison, she said, the men provided her with a table so she could teach while sitting down. “They flanked me down the hall so I wouldn’t fall,” Judy recalled. “They were nursing me back to health.”

Judy also spoke of the damage that prison does to inmates and society. “We have a terrible idea of who’s in prison,” she said. “Prisons do two things really well: they keep people in, and they keep the rest of us out, so we can’t get near them.” The system also devastates the inmates, taking away their agency and their ability to figure out how to lead a good life, and family members who suffer from the lack of their loved one’s presence in their daily lives. 

Watch the video of Light from the Cage.


January 12, 2024, Adrian, MichiganLight from the Cage, a presentation to be offered on January 11, 2024 by Judy Wenzel on her 25 years of experiences of teaching inmates at the Federal Correctional Institution in Milan, Michigan, has been rescheduled. Her presentation is from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, February 6, 2024, at Weber Retreat and Conference Center and live streamed at https://adriandominicans.org/Live-Stream.

The free program is sponsored by the Adrian Dominican Sisters Office of Racial Equity and Cultural Inclusion as part of the office’s series of presentations to expose Sisters, Associates, and the broader community to the experiences of people of different races, faith traditions, cultures, and sexual orientations. 

Kevin Hofmann, Director of the Office of Racial Equity and Cultural Inclusion, said Judy will address the issue of racism in the U.S. criminal justice system. “She has first-hand knowledge of the disproportionate number of Blacks in prison,” he said. “Blacks are over-represented.” 

Judy will also speak of her experience with the general population of prison inmates, who often face a stigma. “She will show the humanity of those who have ended up in prison,” Kevin said. “It’s a story you don’t often get to hear – and hopefully, she’ll change our viewpoint of those in the system.”  

The presentation is free and open to the public. Registration is not required. To watch via live stream, visit https://adriandominicans.org/Live-Stream.

Weber Center is on the campus of the Adrian Dominican Sisters Motherhouse, Adrian, Michigan. Traveling east on Siena Heights Drive, pass the Adrian Rea Literacy Center 
and turn left just before the solar panel-covered parking lot. Follow the signs to Weber Center. For information, call the Weber Center at 517-266-4000.


 

 

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