The World Acting Globally
A Call to Love Our Neighbors
Speaker Presents a Global Vision for Compassionate Justice
By Jeffrey Overstreet (jeffreyo@spu.edu) | Photo by Daniel Sheehan
Guest speaker Lisa Slavovsky, aftercare
specialist for International Justice
Mission, discussed ways to seek, do, and
see justice as plenary speaker for the
2015 Day of Common Learning.
âWhat did you learn this morning and afternoon?â
Thatâs what Margaret Diddams, °”ÍűTVâs assistant provost and professor of industrial and organizational psychology, asked the Seattle Pacific community in a late-afternoon email on October 21. The occasion? °”ÍűTVâs 14th annual Day of Common Learning.
Diddams encouraged readers to post their responses and include the hashtag #°”ÍűTVDCL. And yet, even before her prompt, so many students, staff, faculty, and campus visitors had spread the word online about what they were learning that, she pointed out, #°”ÍűTVDCL became a âtrending topicâ for Seattle on Twitter.
This Day of Common Learning — an annual, campuswide event in which the °”ÍűTV community and the public learn about thematic topics — centered on justice, with the title: âSeek Justice, Do Justice, and Sustain Justice: Building Community in a Broken World.â
Lisa Slavovsky, aftercare specialist for , delivered the keynote address, titled âWho Is My Neighbor?â IJM is an organization that protects the world’s poor from slavery and other forms of violence.
Slavovsky worked for six years supporting and leading a team of Cambodian social workers to provide aftercare services for over 350 women and children removed from commercial sexual exploitation. She currently assists IJMâs global teams in designing and implementing effective models of service for child trafficking survivors, helping survivors safely return to their communities, and equipping local social service experts to work for sustainable rehabilitation.
Everyone should cultivate compassion for enslaved and impoverished people around the world, Slavovsky told the °”ÍűTV community, gathered in a packed Royal Brougham Pavilion. She discussed the story of the Good Samaritan, highlighting ways that story parallels the challenges of fighting global injustice today in a world where it is easy to ignore or sidestep.
âThe role of justice is not relegated solely to the police and courts and those with the official power to enforce the law,â she said. âRather, we all have a role in seeing justice brought to bear in the world, in seeing the poor and the marginalized protected.â
Slavovskyâs opening was the prelude to an afternoon of public lectures and presentations by students, faculty, staff, and guests. Subjects included poverty alleviation in the United Nationsâ 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development; preparing women to enter fields in which women have been underrepresented; the role of libraries in promoting justice through free information; and how a sacramental view of food can enhance the environment and human well-being.
Some presenters focused on the pursuit of justice through the creative exercise of technology, design, and the arts. °”ÍűTV faculty explored theological and scientific perspectives on Godâs call to treat the environment justly. In one session, chaplains with the King County Juvenile Detention Center spoke about imagining alternatives to mass incarceration. Other sessions explored issues of justice and reconciliation in the Holy Land, and pursuing justice in and for Asian American communities.
°”ÍűTV President Dan Martin challenged listeners in the Brougham assembly to take what they experienced not only into their hearts, but into their hands — to serve the poor and the enslaved. Justice, he said, is about âexercising the right use of power to embrace the oppressed, the excluded, and the marginalized — not as the âother,â but as us. In doing so, we work to restore Godâs good purposes in our world.â
Read Response’s Q&A with Lisa Slavovsky of International Justice Mission.
