Having grown up in
Education:
Master of Arts, History, Ball State University, Muncie, Ind., 1997
Bachelor of Arts, History, Taylor University, Upland, Ind., 1995
Certificate in Biblical Studies, Capernwray Bible School, Carnforth, Lancashire, England, 1991
How long were you in
Born in
One of the ways my upbringing prepared me for working at the CCCU was that I grew up with missionary kids and Ecuadorian kids from all walks of life, Christian and non-Christian. I was friends with the very affluent as well as those who were struggling to make ends meet. They were from
Are there things about the
American consumerism. I could not get over the amount of choices people had and how much money was spent on unnecessary things. My little sister used to get physically sick when we walked into a
The
The most serious issues for me I didn’t really discover until I was in graduate school. It was during that time when I was studying Latin American history that I began to really process my experience in
As the off-campus study coordinator at
Watching their perspectives on the world change. Watching their hearts change. I think fondly of one student who was uptight and demanding before he left for studies in Africa and I thought he might not make it through his upcoming semester. However, when he came back there was something incredibly different about him. There was a calm about him. He’d seen something, experienced something that made the petty “stuff” of this world inconsequential. It was that “something” that made me want to send more students abroad. It’s different in every country, the experience is not the same. But if they open up and allow the experience to shape them they come back changed for good.
What did you learn about study abroad experiences as the CCCU student programs director?
I knew this somewhat at
What motivated you to leave all things familiar and move to
I loved working for the CCCU, but I was longing to work directly with students again. I love living in and experiencing a new country, but my primary motivation was so that I could work with students. My work in D.C. was mostly administrative and the few times I did get to interact with students, it was only over the telephone. I can truly say that it was the right move. Working with students on a study abroad program is truly my dream job.
What have you learned about yourself and about the human experience so far from your time in
The most significant thing that I’ve learned about the human experience is our tendency to self-deception. From 1900 to the 1970’s, Aboriginal children were taken from their families and taken from their home land (country) and placed in the care of the Australian government and on Christian missions hundreds of miles from their homes. (These children are called the Stolen Generation). The kidnappers convinced themselves that they were working in the best interest of the children, when in fact they were actually seeking to remove these children from their culture and raise them as “white” house servants. This attempt to “breed the black” out of the Aboriginal race was defended as a way to help the Aboriginal people “in spite of themselves.” I’m sure that on one level the government workers and missionaries involved were doing what they thought was best, and yet they had to know that they were ultimately working in their own self interest.
These stories of normal people participating in an evil system have me wondering how much I personally deceive myself. I wonder what areas I tell myself that I’m doing something to “help” another person when really I’m trying to achieve my own agenda which will ultimately benefit me. It’s been making me think quite a bit.
Are there any stories from your time at ASC you’d like to share- either about students or guest lecturers, or any experiential learning moments?
One of the most exciting things that we focus on at ASC is the connection between land and culture both in White Australian culture and in Aboriginal culture. Aboriginal people have a very strong connection to their land (country) and this is essential to who they are.
During our bush trip for the Indigenous Cultures, History and Identity class, our professor, Oomera Edwards, discusses everything from practical aspects of traditional Aboriginal culture (bush foods, medicine, animal tracks, ochres, tools and implements) to totems and their relationship within the family kinship systems to spiritual connection to land and creation (country). Each day she also takes the students on hikes where she spends time teaching them how to travel and to know the feel and use of different areas in country. She teaches using both Aboriginal and western maps as guides. It’s amazing to sit with her in quietness and sense the different vibrations (as Oomera would call them) from the country. For example, an Aboriginal ceremonial site has a vastly different feel to a beach where waves roar upon the shore and an incredibly different feel to sitting in a cave on the ridge tops of the
This experience provides an excellent background for our trip to New Zealand where our Maori teacher (Kiri Hata) helps students learn about Maori culture through their unique and very different connection to their own country (with its five volcanoes) on the north island.
Oomera is one of the Stolen Generation and she was taken from her mother and her birthplace at five months old. Sadly, this story is the norm rather than the exception; Aboriginal children were taken from their families “for their own protection” up until the 1970’s. It’s not until our ASC students begin to grasp the intense spiritual connection Aboriginal people have to their own country that students even realize that this was more than a misunderstanding; this practice was a terrible human rights violation. After researching her own history and reuniting with her mother, Oomera founded a nationwide organization called Link-Up Stolen Generations which helps Aboriginal adults find and reunite with their families while providing counsel and emotional support. I don’t think the students realize how lucky they are to have her as a professor.
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