Category Archives: Hand-guns

2011 Congress Attendees Continue to Advocate for Peace

When the cameras were turned towards Rev. Philip Blackwell at Governor Quinn’s press conference with the Illinois Anti-Violence Commission, the question on his mind was, “how did I get here?”

Phil Blackwell of Chicago Temple at Gov. Quinn's anti-violence

In May, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn convened a press conference to hear statements from the Commission regarding Illinois H.B. 148.  The bill, dubiously named “the Family and Personal Protection Act”, would have allowed individuals with permits to carry concealed, loaded firearms in public places like restaurants, restrooms, playgrounds, hospitals, malls, banks, and on public transportation.

After the public action at the 2011 Congress, on issues regarding gun violence and the availability of handguns, SCUPE was pleased to hear that the Commission unanimously opposed the current conceal and carry legislation.  The Governor also came out strong against handgun proliferation saying he would stand with the majority of Illinois residents who oppose concealed carry and veto this bill should it find its way to his desk.

Rev. Blackwell gave one of many moving testimonies at the press conference.  He expertly made the case that H.B. 148 would make Illinois Residents not safer, but more vulnerable.  He cited research from Harvard University which concludes that “in homes, cities, and states where there are more guns, both men and women are at higher risk for homicide”.

Blackwell, who had earlier spoken with the Deputy Governor Cristal Thomas as a part of the delegation of the 2011 Congress on Urban Ministry, credited the Congress as the reason he was up in front of the cameras.  Referencing the critical influence of faith communities he stated, “We who lead religious communities see the impact of this violence since we are in the neighborhoods seven days a week – on the streets, in the shops, involved in people’s lives, often people in desperate situations. So, now we are alarmed that there are people in the Illinois Legislature who want to increase the presence of guns in our society by allowing people to carry them hidden and loaded wherever they go.  They say that it will make us safer the facts say otherwise.”

2011 Congress Anti-violence Vigil at Thompson Center

SCUPE and the delegates at its 2011 Congress on Urban Ministry thank Governor Quinn for responding to our public action and to majority view of citizens by opposing public policy that is contrary to the common good.  Due to the Governor’s stance, H.B. 148 is currently dead in the water, leaving Illinois and Wisconsin as the two states without conceal carry.


Position Open

Calling on any idealistic, socially aware, conscientious individuals:

Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence

I’ve just learned that there are a couple of opportunities for folks to get involved with the Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence and the Illinois Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.

Illinois Campaign to Prevent Gun ViolenceThe first position available is for a Communications Intern to help upgrade their social networking operations and media outreach.  This is an unpaid position and would be great for a college or graduate student looking for real world experience in communications.

Additionally, as the summer season approaches, we are working on developing an Action Team to work on policy and advocacy issues. This includes attending community events and peace marches on behalf of ICHV and distributing information.

If you or anyone you know would be interested, please contact Mark Walsh at the Illinois Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence (312.341.0939).


HB 148 Dies (for now)

Photograph by Thomas Chadwick for the Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence.

I just received this wonderful news from Mark Walsh over at ICPGV:

Hello Everyone:

Just wanted to let you know that the Illinois House adjourned today without calling HB 148 (concealed Carry).  As you may recall the bill failed to receive the necessary votes on May 5th and the sponsor put the bill on postponed consideration with the deadline extended to today. Since the bill wasn’t called and the deadline has not been further extended-the bill dies!!!!!

Again great work.  I hope everyone reached out to those no votes from the 5th to thank them for their efforts. I reattached the list of those folks voting no-if you haven’t please take a minute to call them and thank them for standing with us!!

The fight is not over and our work isn’t done-we’ll be working on our grassroots efforts in the coming weeks as session winds down and lawmakers are back in their districts. We’ll be sending updates on those efforts shortly.  Thanks again for all the work you do on this important issue. Have a wonderful weekend!!!!

Mark J. Walsh
Campaign Director
Illinois Campaign to
Prevent Gun Violence


More Vulnerable, Not Safer

Phil Blackwell of Chicago Temple at Gov. Quinn's anti-violence

I wrote last week about Governor Pat Quinn’s press conference with the Illinois Anti-Violence Commission.  As it turns out this may have been the critical moment in the stand against H.B. 148 due to the Commission’s unanimous decision to oppose the legislation combined with the Governor’s public declaration that he would veto the vote should it come to his desk.  As of last Thursday, the bill had been officially put on “postpone consideration” (a parliamentary procedure similar to legislative life-support).  This means that H.B. 148 is down but not out.  Continued vigilance against this bill and other ill-conceived gun legislation will be an essential component of making our cities safer.

Not So Concealed CarryMany Commission members offered testimony at the press conference last Tuesday.  One of the most inspiring and pointed was the short but well-edged words shared by Rev. Phil Blackwell of First United Methodist (Chicago Temple).  Rev. Blackwell is a long-time SCUPE collaborator, member of the National Planning Committee for the 2011 Congress on Urban Ministry, and pastor to at least one of us SCUPE staffers.  The witness of Rev. Blackwell and others may not have gotten a ton of play in the local and state news but their perspectives certainly deserve our ears (there are scant audio snippets here).  With Rev. Blackwell’s permission I am pleased to post the entirety of his comments in front of the big cameras:

House Bill 148, the “Family and Personal Protection Act,” is illegitimately named.  Permitting every citizen of the state of Illinois 21 or older to carry a concealed, loaded gun, with a few modest exceptions, would make us more vulnerable, not safer.

It does not take researchers at Harvard University to tell us, but, in fact, they have, that in homes, cities, and states where there are more guns, both men and women are at higher risk for homicide, particularly firearm homicide.  It simply is common sense, though the truth is that most gun deaths are not homicides but about 65% are suicides.  And for children in homes with guns, the rate of death by gunshot, especially suicide or by accident, is enormous when compared to children in gun-free households.  On the streets of this city the danger is obvious, with 21 shootings just last Friday and Saturday.

We who lead religious communities see the impact of this violence since we are in the neighborhoods seven days a week – on the streets, in the shops, involved in peoples’ lives, often people in desperate situations.  So, now we are alarmed that there are people in the Illinois legislature who want to increase the presence of guns in our society by allowing people to carry them hidden and loaded wherever they go.  They say it will make us safer; the facts say otherwise.  The National Academy of Science says that there is no evidence that right-to-carry laws have an impact positively or negatively on the rate of violent crime.  A 2009 study (Branas, et. al.) concludes that actually carrying a loaded gun makes us much more vulnerable to violence.  “Individuals in possession of a gun at the time of an assault are 4.46 times more likely to be shot in the assault than persons not in possession.”

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled, as House Bill 148 states, that the Constitution guarantees “the individual right to possess and carry weapons in case of confrontation.”  Personally, I think that is a fanciful reading of the Constitution, each citizen being his or her own militia.  But even if it were the individual’s right, it would be the wrong thing to do.  It increases the chance of being shot; it does not reduce it.

America has a fixation on guns unmatched anywhere else in the world.  We have this fantasy of the rugged gun-toting individual making things safer for all.  It is an enchanting image, but it is a lie.  The truth is that more people kill family members with guns and themselves with guns than protect themselves against an armed adversary.

I suspect at the heart of House Bill 148 is money.  There is big money in the manufacture, sale, and re-sale of guns.  There is big political money in the campaign contributions from the gun lobby, most lucratively from the NRA.  There is big money in fear; fear always sells.  But I call on members of the House of Representatives not to be afraid of big money, even if it is gun-slinging money.  Carrying guns on the streets, on our highways, into our schools, into the corner bar, into the diner, to our kids’ ball games, to the theater, to work, to the day care center, to the gym, and to the church.  The only exception in the current draft of the bill is the library; you could not carry a gun into a library, not even with a silencer.  Carrying concealed weapons will make this a more dangerous place to live, not a safer one.  It will not protect either us or our families, both the facts and common sense say so.

Philip L. Blackwell
Senior Minister
First United Methodist Church
at the Chicago Temple

5/3/2011


Work to End Gun Violence

Youth Art from the Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence

C. Dionte, 4th-grade

Are you an Illinois resident looking for a quick and easy way to work for peace?  Stand with Governor Quinn by opposing the proliferation of guns.

H.B. 148, which allows individuals to carry concealed, loaded guns in most public places, is moving through the Illinois General Assembly.  This bill may be voted on any day now.

If you have 60 seconds you can contact your legislator through this convenient form: http://capwiz.com/icpgv/issues/alert/?alertid=41016511&PROCESS=Take+Action

Illinois Campaign to Prevent Gun ViolenceThe Illinois Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence is also a great place to learn about gun issues and how to advocate for better public policy.  At their site you can:

  • get up-to-date facts and statistics
  • see recent polling data
  • learn tactics, tips, and tools for advocacy
  • connect with resources for youth
  • receive guidelines for contacting your elected officials
  • see sample e-mails, phone scripts, and letters to the editor

Imagine if every state had an organization like ICPGV! Two other wonderful regional anti-violence organizations are WAVE in Wisconsin and Citizens for a Safer Minnesota in, you guessed it, Minnesota.

Anybody know of other top notch anti-violence or public policy advocacy organizations?


Gov. Quinn Opposes Conceal and Carry for IL

2011 Congress rally at Thompson CenterTwo months ago, almost to the day, the SCUPE Congress stood outside in the still-cold Chicago air and publicly opposed conceal and carry legislation.

Proposed H.B. 148 would make it legal for a citizen to carry a concealed, loaded gun into almost every public space.  The impact of this bill become apparent once you start to think about places where loaded guns would be allowed: parks, malls, hospitals, gyms, banks, restaurants, public restrooms, subway trains and buses… Loaded guns could quickly become as ubiquitous as app-laden smart phones (and make the i-gun app even more ridiculously redundant).

Or, maybe we can all just start carrying these around?Nokia Gun-phone

This morning SCUPE president Shanta Premawardhana and I were invited to attend Governor Quinn’s press conference.  Standing with him at the podium were to twenty-some members of the Illinois Anti-Violence Commission… each of whom has experienced loss in their lives due to gun violence.

Governor Quinn opposing conceal and carry ILWe were pleased to hear that the Commission had unanimously decided to oppose the current conceal and carry legislation.  Though the context was political, the tragic human cost of violence was lifted up through moving testimonies by several members of the Commission including: Rev. Phil Blackwell from Chicago Temple, the new Illinois State Police Director Hiram Grau, and Jennifer Loudon (widow of slain Chicago Police Office Thor Soderber).

Citing the public opinion of a large majority of IL residents (65% by the most recent poll) Governor Quinn then stated his opposition to the bill and, most importantly, his willingness to veto the bill should it make its way to his desk.

Kudos to Governor Quinn for taking a stand!

This bill may be voted on any day now.  Join us in standing against this dangerous legislation:


Letter from the Deputy Governor of Illinois

2011 Congress Anti-violence Vigil at Thompson Center

Minutes after the Congress concluded yesterday, we received a letter from the Deputy Governor of Illinois Ms. Cristal Thomas. It does not commit the Governor to oppose specific legislation such as “concealed carry” that is currently before the Illinois house, but at least acknowledges our visit. She re-states what she said to the delegation who visited her that the “Governor is fully committed to reducing violence in our state.” During the visit I said to her that those who propose “concealed carry” are also for reducing violence. The question is, whether he will reduce violence by reducing guns on our streets.

Still it is good to get an acknowledgment. But it is only the first step. Our work has just begun!

- Rev. Dr. Shanta Premawardhana


The Call towards Peace

Called towards Peace in a Culture of Violence

[originally published in the 2/11 issue of the Concord, the literary journal of Luther Seminary - St. Paul, MN]
[painting by Alex Roulette]

Driving past that spot became a sort of ritual for me – a litany my body would recite.  An act of devotion to a child who had been gunned down on a sidewalk I couldn’t, for the life of me, distinguish from the others around it.  A sidewalk I couldn’t distinguish from those I had grown up on two states away.

Weeks earlier the evening news had described details more concretely: South Side of Chicago, 15-year-old African American boy, sophomore in high school, robbed at gun point, fatally shot in the chest.  Within hours of the initial report he had a name: Marquell Blake.

In any sensible world these details alone would have been enough to unhinge an average day.  Chicago though, like many American cities, has been awash in tragic details all too similar to these in recent years.  By April, Marquell Blake was the 32nd Chicago Public School student shot and killed in the 2008-2009 school year.  Several journalists had already remarked that the death rate of students from Chicago was 24 times higher than that of soldiers from Chicago serving in combat zones in Iraq.

Even so, it wasn’t until I heard the final detail that something shook loose within me: 7700 block of South Carpenter Avenue.  This shooting had occurred a mere four blocks from the church where I had been doing my internship for a Masters in Urban Ministry through SCUPE and Luther Seminary.  Something about the proximity to a place that had become dear and personal to me through daily work and connections meant that I couldn’t just excuse this as just another tragedy in another part of town.

In Auburn Gresham I had heard the stories of the diligent work of tireless community members to better their neighborhood, had heard the sermons and the press conferences calling city and church leaders to no longer simply provide the vigils and eulogies after acts of violence but to actively work to prevent violence.  This was a community like all of the others I had lived in: people cared for each other and came together to address mutual concerns.

Suddenly, I came to see that I had been sold a false bill of goods.  Since childhood, I had been taught that some neighborhoods were safe and some weren’t.  It was implied that, as long as I stayed within the respectable racial, cultural, and socio-economic borders I would float through life excused from the impact of violence.  This de facto division of the world into safe and not safe, into good neighborhoods and sketchy neighborhoods, was as a veil drawn over my eyes.

In a flood, I recalled the teenager who was shot dead on his bike just up the hill from my childhood home in suburban Minneapolis.  I saw the face of the middle school student in pristine Rochester, MN who had taken his own life with his father’s rifle.  I felt a pang go up my side like I used to get on long runs with a friend who abruptly ended his own life after returning from active duty to civilian life with his family.

Now I am convinced: there is no safe and no unsafe America.  We all breathe the common cultural air of our environment and that air is currently polluted with the toxins of violence.  On streets, in families, in schools, at our borders and across the oceans, America has come to rely on the intoxicating atmosphere of violence often as a pathway to power (individual, institutional, international, etc.) but sometimes merely senselessly.  As a result, we have lost the creativity and hope to imagine a world that doesn’t opt for violence as a first resort.

Prior to the recent shootings in Tucson, Arizona, faith leaders had been wrestling with concerns over an ever increasing tolerance for violent rhetoric, random shootings, domestic violence, and war zones as they prepared for a conference on violence in March of 2011.  The unrest and concerns of these religious leaders have been highlighted by the tragic events in Tucson and the continuing gun and community violence in Chicago and other metropolitan areas.

It is in critical times such as these that faith and community leaders from across the nation will gather at the SCUPE Congress on Urban Ministry to commit ourselves towards Peacemaking in a Culture of Violence.  The faith community is finally finding its collective voice on this issue – teachers, social workers, psychologists, and law enforcement have all weighed in – but the church has not.  Now is the time for faith institutions to join in action and in voice on actively resisting violence in our streets, in our cities, and throughout our nation.

Theologians and faith leaders like Walter Brueggemann, Shane Claiborne, Renita Weems, James Forbes and Michael Pfleger have answered our call to be prophetic voices of peace at the conference.  What is needed now are individuals committed to adding their voice to the growing call for peace by participating in the gathering.

As future and current church leaders will you join leaders from communities all across the nation in taking a stand against violence and discerning a path forward in which our churches can play a vital role in creating a more peaceful future for all people?

We hope to hear your voice at the 2011 Congress on Urban Ministry.

For more information please visit: www.congressonurbanministry.org

Peacemaking in a Culture of Violence


I Care for Peace 5k Walk

What are you walking for on October 2nd?

Why not join the I Care Movement and walk for Peace?

I Care for Peace 5k Walk

The “Do You Care?” campaign was started by 5 interns who worked for the Safety Net Works of Auburn Gresham Youth Council.

The purpose of the “I Care For Peace 5k Walk” is to bring people from all across the city of Chicago together in an effort to raise money to help reduce the high levels of violence in our city.   All of the proceeds from this walk will go towards violence prevention programming for youth.  Specifically, a portion of the proceeds from this walk will go towards creating a Southside Youth Resource Center that is open 24 hours a day for at risk youth.  This resource center will serve youth throughout the city of Chicago, providing them with immediate counseling, gang prevention and intervention services, and other necessary resources.

Did You Know?

  • From January to November 2009, 344 people were murdered in Chicago with guns, which accounted for 82% of the total homicides for the city.
  • From January to November 2009, 213 children and young people ages 0-25 were murdered in Chicago, the majority by guns.
  • Over 210 CPS students, were shot during the 2009 to 2010 academic school year.

Register for the 5k walk.

Join the I Care Movement.

Become a Peacemaker.


Unfortunately, Violence is not just a Chicago Problem

Chicago And Minneapolis skylines

I have really come to love Chicago, that endlessly bustling city next to an endlessly stretching lake, but I do have to admit more than the occasional pang of longing for the city I grew up in.  Minneapolis and St. Paul are like toddler cousins compared to Chicago but they do share some great commonalities with their diverse and expansive fields of art, cuisine, music, and a distinctly Midwestern urban beauty.  Unfortunately, these cities also share a struggle with violence that is becoming increasingly common in American cities of all sizes and localities.

Just this past weekend my parents passed on a letter to the editor from the laudable Minneapolis rag the Star Tribune.  I can’t help but feel that the experience of this European sums up a perspective that we Americans may be too close to see.  Something about our history and culture has tied us too closely with guns to really have an accurate perspective on their influence in our lives.  Perhaps it is time to lay aside some of our American self-confidence and give a patient ear to the perspective of countries that have very little problems with hand-gun homicides.  Are we really that afraid of what we’ll hear that we refuse to listen?

Here is a clipping of the letter to the editor from July 30th, Star Tribune:


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