San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Pandemic lockdown leaves inmates spirituall­y bereft

Isolation, lack of contact with clergy taking its toll

- By Lyra Walsh Fuchs

The men incarcerat­ed in a New Jersey state prison have a favorite prayer to chant along with the volunteer rabbi who, before coronaviru­s lockdowns, visited every Friday evening for shabbat: Shalom alechiem.

“It resounds throughout the room when they sing it out, the idea that angels are with them,” the rabbi, who did not want to use her name or the name of the prison in case it led to her visiting privileges being revoked.

“The men bring this lens of their lived experience to the text. So many of the stories are written in the context of pain and isolation and historical oppression. … To me it reveals the meaning behind them,” she said.

Since the lockdown began in March, the rabbi hasn’t been able to see the 15 or so men — some who practiced Judaism before, some who found it inside — who usually come to worship every week.

And in New Jersey, as in New York, Illinois, Texas and many other states, volunteer chaplains — volunteers of any sort, in fact — are not allowed to remotely contact the incarcerat­ed people they have relationsh­ips with: no phone calls, no Zooms, no letters, no emails.

That rule hasn’t changed despite the fact that coronaviru­s lockdowns have kept chaplains from visiting in person — as well as friends and family — and paused all regular educationa­l and religious programmin­g.

“It’s scary. I don’t know what they are going through. I can’t imagine what it’s like right now to be utterly cut off from community and from family,” the rabbi said. “The men have said the services help them transcend the walls of the prison. … We can create a sacred moment in a chaotic and hectic environmen­t.”

In their place, in prisons across the nation, new battles have arisen: for dignity, for hand soap, for adequate cleaning materials and for hand sanitizer and masks, both of which were banned (for their alcohol content and facecoveri­ng effect, respective­ly) prior to the pandemic.

Experts have pointed out that social distancing is impossible in prisons, and the ACLU estimated the coronaviru­s could claim 100,000 more lives than most models predict, due to the country’s refusal to release at-risk incarcerat­ed people.

Jeffery Parker, executive director of Restoratio­n Outreach of Dallas, a Christian-based nonprofit that works in five prisons in Northern Texas and serves around 1,200 incarcerat­ed and recently released men every year, described the lockdown as “very lonely” and “really horrific” for the people on the inside.

“Faith plays a huge part for the prison population and prison community. Without it, there’s just a huge void. With no church and no contact from family, depression increases,”

Parker said.

The sense of isolation is enormous. “I’m indigent and have no family or outside support,” wrote C.V., who is incarcerat­ed in Texas, in a letter from late August shared with RNS. “I’m only with the Islam community in here and we can’t attend Jumu’ah (Friday prayers) or gather with each other.”

“A lot of these brothers in here are struggling,” he added in the letter.

Religious practices of all sorts are fixtures of community for those inside — and all have been stymied by the pandemic lockdowns.

Chase Wilhelm, the chief chaplain of the Illinois Department of Correction­s, noted that “while (due to social distancing restrictio­ns) communal worship has looked different, we’ve successful­ly passed through Easter, Ramadan, Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah.”

One of his main priorities, he said, was “making sure the facilities find comparable material for the minority-faith religions.”

In Bedford Hills Correction­al Facility in New York, where almost 650 women are incarcerat­ed, for example, the practice of restarting the clock on a 14-day lockdown for 22-23 hours a day whenever a new coronaviru­s case was identified made the isolation on many units feel unending.

According to a June report from Unlock the Box, since the beginning of the pandemic at least 300,000 people have been placed in solitary confinemen­t — an increase of 500 percent — a practice known to produce dire psychologi­cal and physical harm.

At Bedford Hills, as well as Mansfield Correction­al Institutio­n in Ohio, people who tested positive were moved to solitary on old death rows; in Connecticu­t, people who tested positive were moved to the notorious maximum-security prison Northern Correction­al Institutio­n.

Other states besides Illinois, too, have relied on distributi­ng readings they have approved as substitute­s for services — with the same limitation­s.

The head of communicat­ions for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice said it had distribute­d “over 10,000 DVDs of various faiths to all units” to be played on day-room TVs.

The director of communicat­ions for the New Jersey Department of Correction­s wrote in an email that “inmates were provided various faith-based materials from the (Quran) to daily readings and other inspiratio­nal material as requested.”

Some chaplains employed by the state, such as Wilhelm, have been able to go into facilities and visit people in their units. But because states are so dependent on volunteers the fact of the matter is that without them, and without the community that comes from gathering with other worshipper­s in person, the tenor of life inside has deteriorat­ed.

Writing letters, calling home and getting necessitie­s at commissary costs money, and as widespread unemployme­nt looms for their families on the outside, many have been writing to Malik Johnson, the director of prison outreach at Masjid al-Rabia to ask for funding through the mosque’s mutual aid fund.

Others have requested books and rugs for prayer, which Johnson sends through the mail. “If I were to get 30 letters in a week,” Johnson said, “15 are talking about ‘can you help get this service back.’ Ten are asking for aid because there isn’t a lot of food coming in. The other five are just because they’re lonely and want to talk to someone. They’re more isolated than they ever have been before.”

In a representa­tive letter Johnson shared with RNS, sent to him from Louisiana in late September, a correspond­ent wrote, “Thank you for being considerat­e enough to respond to my call for spiritual support. … Over 100 inmates in my dormitory tested positive for the coronaviru­s (myself included). And we are now on quarantine. Allah Ta’ala has sustained me throughout this ordeal.”

 ?? Courtesy photo ?? With Kolbe Prison Ministries, St. Anthony’s of Padua Catholic Church in The Woodlands had “adopted” a unit at the Ferguson Unit state prison in Midland. Such activities have ceased during the pandemic.
Courtesy photo With Kolbe Prison Ministries, St. Anthony’s of Padua Catholic Church in The Woodlands had “adopted” a unit at the Ferguson Unit state prison in Midland. Such activities have ceased during the pandemic.
 ?? Staff file photo ?? An inmate reads from a ministry pamphlet at the Bexar County Adult Detention Center in 2015. Experts say faith plays an important role among the imprisoned.
Staff file photo An inmate reads from a ministry pamphlet at the Bexar County Adult Detention Center in 2015. Experts say faith plays an important role among the imprisoned.
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