Sankofa

June 18, 2024

This Wednesday is Juneteenth, a day that commemorates the end of slavery in the United States. I am blessed to attend a church that is growing and full of energy under the leadership of Pastor Kevin Vandiver. The church I attend, The Reformation Lutheran Church, is one block from the U.S. Capitol. With more than 150 years of church history, Kevin Vandiver is Reformation’s first Black Senior Pastor. His sermons serve as a call to action and last Sunday was no exception.

On Sunday, Pastor Kevin shared a West African spiritual proverb, Sankofa, a teaching rooted in the expression, “Go back and fetch it.” The proverb is based on a mythical bird with its feet firmly planted forward and its head turned backwards. The image of the bird is that the past serves as a guide for planning the future. As Pastor Kevin said, it is the wisdom in learning from the past which ensures a strong future:

“Taking hold of our past and our history in such a way that it becomes nourishment and guidance for journeying into the future.”

Pan African colors Adinkra symbol Sankofa Bird isolated. Adinkra Folk art imitation vector illustration.

June 19, 1865 was the day Union soldiers arrived in Texas to enforce the Emancipation Proclamation. A closer read of history reveals that slavery was not fully abolished until December 6,1865 when the 13th Amendment outlawed the practice in every state, including the slave states that remained in the Union — Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky and New Jersey.

As a white leader, it is urgent and important for me to be an intentional ally, including by elevating the voices of lived experience and challenging each of us to strengthen our commitment to end systemic racism. At Lutheran Services in America, we have several forums where we lead and work together to address the alarming disparities in our communities, including through the Results Innovation Lab, our Mission Leaders Group, the Race Equity cohort, among others. And we will continue to be bolder as we work to spark greater understanding and action through transformational relationships. These relationships help to challenge our assumptions, encourage aligned action and support leaders in an authentic way — leaders like Renada Johnson, Senior Director of Children, Youth and Family Initiatives at Lutheran Services in America, who recently shared with me:

“I fight for people who look like me every day — in and out of work — and I am consistently reminded of the impact in advancing this work as a minority in a dominant culture has on me and others.”

Today I am giving thanks for Pastor Kevin, Renada Johnson and the many other Black and brown leaders in our communities as we work together to move our country forward.

Alesia Frerichs is the President & CEO of Lutheran Services in America.

The Courage to Come Together

August 30, 2023

Lutheran Services in America is currently seeking grassroots, faith-based organizations and initiatives affiliated with an ELCA church or community to join our 2023–2024 Results Network cohort, which starts September 28. Participation is free. The Results Network is a transformative opportunity for teams to advance racial equity for children and families in a high-support and high-accountability hybrid cohort experience. Participants work in fields as varied as child welfare, housing and economic empowerment, but are united by the goals of preventing or stabilizing families in crisis, strengthening communities and addressing racial disparities. Learn more about this opportunity and how to join.

Five years ago, I hit a wall professionally. I was exhausted by a four-year effort to transform an early childhood organization in Indiana and questioning my ability to lead teams. I did something that felt scary. With a second child on the way, I took a professional role with a lot less pay, but the flexibility to join a virtual cohort of changemakers I had long eyed as an opportunity to reinvigorate and refresh my purpose and my skills in advocacy and organizing.

The cohort, which was university-organized and crossed global boundaries, was a transformative experience that gave me the space to learn and safely practice new skills. One of my closest cohort relationships was with a young person working to create a new political party in Eastern Europe. We explored common challenges and solutions, despite our disparate focus areas. We provided each other candid, but empathetic coaching. I found my skill set growing exponentially, almost day-to-day. When the cohort ended, I used my new skills—and new energy—to grow a campaign to end smoking related death and illness in Indiana to 10,000 advocates.

Professional cohorts are amazing vehicles for change, in part because the act of joining one is motivated by courage. Courage to put yourself into a new and unfamiliar community. Courage to admit you need to grow professionally. Courage to explore what it means to move from the transactional (most of our day-to-day work, often by necessity) to the transformational.

I’m honored that Lutheran Services in America is host to the Results Network—a powerful annual cohort of child and family-serving organizations working toward transformative outcomes rooted in a focus on race equity.

In the past year, 41 Lutheran social ministry leaders across 10 U.S. communities took the courageous act of joining the Results Network and working through professional challenges. The results at the end of the year? Transformative change for over 8,300 children and families!

In coming together, participants in the Results Network—who work in teams of three—make the courageous commitment to:

  • Be results-based and data-driven
  • Bring attention to and act on disparities
  • Use oneself as an instrument of change to move a result
  • Master the skills of adaptive leadership
  • Collaborate with others

When these commitments are made and supported by the cohort’s facilitation and coaching, transformation happens. Here are just a few of the remarkable results from last year’s cohort:

  • Lutheran Social Services of New York witnessed a 13% decrease in the length of stay for Black youth in foster care, demonstrating their commitment to addressing disparities.
  • Gemma Services’ (Pennsylvania) initiative to establish adolescent and father peer-support groups provided vital support to youth and families, empowering them to access resources, navigate systems and feel less isolated.
  • Lutheran Child and Family Services of Illinois achieved a remarkable milestone with 72% of their foster youth successfully reunified with their families, a 50% improvement in the past year through a renewed dedication to strengthening families and emphasizing reunification rather than adoption or guardianship.
  • Lutheran Social Services of Southern California implemented changes to electronic records and diligent search efforts to engage Black fathers and paternal resources which yielded positive outcomes.

One of the amazing elements of the Results Network cohort is the integration of peer leadership. In the most recent cohort, six diverse peer leaders were engaged to formally share their expertise, coaching and guidance.

The coming year of Results Network—which begins September 28—holds such high promise. Through a partnership with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), we are thrilled to welcome grassroots, faith-based organizations and initiatives affiliated with an ELCA church or community to join, contribute and transform. Their courageous work and presence will deepen and expand the experiences, expertise and diversity of the Results Network, yielding unexplored results. I cannot wait to see what results emerge from this coming together of the Lutheran Services in America and ELCA communities!

If you are a grassroots, faith-based organization or initiative affiliated with an ELCA church or community that is interested in joining this year’s Results Network, please take a moment to learn more about participation and reach out to Renada Johnson, Senior Director of Child, Youth and Family Initiatives (rjohnson@lutheranservices.org).

Onward, together, with courage!

Kent Mitchell is the Vice President of Strategy and Innovation at Lutheran Services in America.