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Wednesday

Join Our Community Service Week Mar. 12-16 come help for as little or as much as you can; come and party; come and find out community info and projects underway; Support Turley and Far Northside Tulsa



Join In Our Week of Serving Turley & Area

Mon. Mar 12 – Fri. Mar. 16

A Third Place Foundation: local grassroots group

Growing healthy lives and neighborhoods

Monday:

10 am to 2 pm: Tour of Area and Discussion of Issues and Projects. Free Lunch included. Meet at the Welcome Table Community Center, 5920 N. Owasso Ave.

2-5 PM Service Projects at the Center and new Community  KitchenGardenPark and Orchard, 6005 N. Johnstown Ave., and in the community

5:30 pm at the Center Free Dinner Movie and Discussion of “The Way”

Tuesday:

9 am to 6 pm Various Community Projects for all ages; 3 to 6 pm Food Pantry

Wednesday:

9 am to 6 pm Community Projects; 11:30 am free lunch for helpers at Turley United Methodist Church, 6050 N. Johnstown Ave., 6 pm Classic Country Concert with Johnny and The Oklahomans, and 6:30 pm free dinner for helpers at the Welcome Table Center.

Thursday:

9 am to 6 pm Various Community Projects for all ages; Food Pantry 3 to 6 pm

Lenten Prayer Service 6 to 6:30 pm, Welcome Table Missional Community

Friday

9 am to 6 pm Various Community Projects

3 to 7 pm Turley area Litter Pickup Event and Jupiter Jump and Party at The Welcome Table Community Center

7 to 9 pm Live Rock Music, featuring the band “Built For Comfort”
For more information, or to sign up to help, contact Ron Robinson, Executive Director, A Third Place Community Foundation at 918-691-3223, or see www.turleyok.blogspot.com

Don't miss these exciting events coming up in our area free to all; share the news of all that is happening in Turley and Far North Tulsa


Turley/NorthTulsa Community COMING EVENTS

@ The Welcome Table Free Community Center and Park

5920 N. Owasso Ave. and 6005 N. Johnstown Ave. www.turleyok.blogspot.com

1. Food Pantry every Tuesday and Thursday, 3 to 6 pm at the community center. This past January we gave out 11,000 pounds of food to our neighbors. You can help us with donations of food but also cash donations, tax deductible, because we are able to buy much food through the Food Bank for a much lower cost than people can buy at the store on their own and donate to us; but either way we appreciate all donations as the need is so great here and growing and the shelves become empty so fast.

2. Turley Area Public Town Hall Meeting and Community Association, Tuesday Jan. 31 and Feb. 28, 7 pm O’Brien Park Recreation Center, 6147 N. Birmingham.  We had a good presentation on the developments at the Vann GreenPark Industrial Park here in Turley and what we hope will be some new economic development soon there; also heard from Commissioner John Smaligo on removing more abandoned properties and working with the Health Dept to force property owners to clean their properties; heard from new Park Activities Director Kelly Chassee about new renovations coming to the O'Brien Park Center, and about signing up for the renewed presence of both North Tulsa Youth Baseball and Softball at O'Brien; and heard from us at A Third Place about all the activities in the community.

3. Future of Turley Planning Meeting, Thurs, Feb. 2, 3:30 pm, community center. A Presentation by the Health Dept. on their new building in our area; a presentation by The Lighthouse Charter School on their plans for location in the Greeley School, and about the closing of Greeley plans; and about disaster response networking, incorporation, a tour of Turley, Cherokee School plans, post office, and more.

4. Pancake Breakfast, Turley Odd Fellows Lodge, 6227 N. Quincy Ave., Sat. Feb. 11, 8-10 am

5. Gardening Day, all welcome, sign up for vegetable beds, Sat. Feb. 11, 10 am to dusk, KitchenGardenPark and Orchard, 6005 N. Johnstown Ave.

6. Volunteer Training, Community Center, Thur. Feb. 16 noon to 2 pm.

7. Town Hall with State Rep. Seneca Scott, Tulsa Community College NE Campus, Apache and Harvard, room 617, Friday, Feb. 17, 5:30 pm. A presentation by the director of the State Dept. of Human Services.

8. Turley Neighborhood Safety, Thurs. Feb. 23, 6:30 pm, community center.

9. African American History Month documentary: Stubborn Like A Mule, Dr. Cornel West and others, Tuesday, Feb. 21, 6:30 pm, free meal, at the center. A documentary featuring a Tulsa native, about the struggle for reparations for African Americans.

10. Ongoing Gatherings: Recovery 12 step groups. Saturdays, 5 pm Jerks Anonymous, 7:30 pm, Alcoholics Anonymous, community center….Turley Water Board Public Meeting, last working day of month, 8:30 am, 6108 N. Peoria Ave….Turley Fire Dept. Meetings Thursdays 7 PM, Fire Station, 6408 N. Peoria.

11.  The Welcome Table community gatherings at the Center, Sundays 9:30 am to 1 pm, study, communion, common meal. Rev. Ron Robinson. Ash Wednesday Service, Feb. 22. Evening Prayer Services, Thursdays during Lent beginning Feb. 23, 6 pm at the center.
12. Looking Ahead: Join us for our Annual Week of Service in the community, March 11-16, as we clean and plant and renew our area working with our partners; also plan now to attend the Dedication Ceremony of The Welcome Table KitchenGardenPark and Orchard, 6005 N. Johnstown Ave., on Saturday May 12, from 10 am to 2 pm; and plan to attend the Cherokee School Reunion at the school on Sat. Sept. 22. Stay tuned for more exciting news about Turley Heritage Day and other events and dedication of our Community Center building and grounds.

Growing Healthy Lives and Neighborhoods in 74126 and 74130

Saturday

Coming Events, Recent News, The "Go To Others" missional community

Hi all. Since our last email....lots of small acts of justice done with great love, as we carry out our mission of growing healthy lives and neighborhoods in the 74126 and 74130....Go to www.facebook.com/revronrobinson to follow us day by day.

...We conducted our first mobile food van visit, using the Cherokee School grounds, and fed more than 150 families with about 60 pounds of food each. We hope to arrange more of those soon.

 ...We started a community wide Recycle opportunity with a new bin located at the community center.

 ...We took a trip to Austin, Texas to work with a church there to promote community gardening and missional church work; they will be coming back to work with us in our next Week of Service here, March 11-16. I also preached there on "Freely Following Jesus", a sermon you can read at http://www.progressivechurchplanting.blogspot.com/2012/01/freely-following-jesus-sermon-preached.html

 ...We have kept working on the site preparation and already begun planting again at our northside community Welcome Table KitchenGardenPark and Orchard, 6005 N. Johnstown Ave., and we have begun cleaning up the abandoned old parsonage building on our Center grounds and plan to turn it into a 24 hour prayer and meditation space, as well as a showcase for native plant landscaping, and more.

 (We will be doing other "guerilla" cleaning, beautification in our area on a weekly basis due to so much need; for example, for a week now there has been a dead dog left in the parking lot of the abandoned Cherokee School building, even though school employees have driven by it daily, and county and city officials who do animal pickup have been notified; we are hoping the school will take care of it soon, but we also may do it on our own (I am thinking the dog deserves a special burial and service now, especially because of the treatment in neglect of its body); and the old gas station/domino parler/alternator shop right across from Cherokee School continues to get worse and vandalized and in need of attention, and as we seek to try to attract new partners for the abandoned Cherokee school we need to make the surrounding area as appealing as possible; so we may just start cleaning up the property as we did the historic fire dept building and old feed store building near the school.)

 ...We have marched together in the candlelight vigil march during the Martin Luther King, Jr. day, enjoyed the interfaith service, and had a parade entry in the MLK Parade.

 ...We have distributed 20 cases of tomatoes throughout the community, and so we can now imagine how numerous families are eating shared food together this weekend, in a variety of ways, in a kind of community wide communion or agape meal; and we continue to sign up and feed many new families each week during our Food Pantry Days Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3 to 6 pm.

 ...We have continued to support Greeley School with student of the month lunches, and McLain School through support of its alumni and community foundation and school projects; McLain is going to be offering intensive after school tutoring work until 8 pm in the evenings in hopes of helping senior students adjust to newer much stricter testing standards this year, and we have agreed to help these students take that important extra effort by providing food for the students who stay that long. We need your help to help us provide these important meals for the students at both schools, so please make a contribution at www.turleyok.blogspot.com, safe and tax deductible and every little act makes a huge difference. Don't think someone else is going to do it...Even though we have many repair needs and renovation and roof repair and vandalism repair in our own community center building to serve the public, we keep making the vital and missional move of putting our resources into the wider community first such as helping our local school children; in this way we keep decentralizing our work, and creating a "go to them" instead of a "come to us" culture.

 ...Coming up this week are several important gatherings:

 Sunday, Jan. 29, our missional church will meet at 9:30 am for viewing and discussion of an episode of the progressive Christian curriculum Saving Jesus, as we focus on new understandings of the "atonement" through the work of biblical scholars like John Dominic Crossan and others; then we will have communion, common meal, and at 1 pm a special missional movie showing of the classic "The Grapes of Wrath", and talk about the parallels between Dust Bowl and Depression Oklahoma and the U.S. and today's neglect of the poor and the abandoned places, and how solidarity can grow as we resist the forces that seek to drive people apart. Come for any or all of the events.

 Monday, Jan. 30, 6 pm, a board meeting of the A Third Place Community Foundation here at the community center, 5920 N. Owasso, as we set our major planning dates and goals for the year. Auction, Valentine's Day Party, Community Center Dedication Service, KitchenGardenPark and Orchard Dedication Service and Celebration, Our Week of Service in March, our festivals for the community throughout the year, our volunteeer work days, and volunteer training days, our own Board retreat and leadership development, our partnerships with OU and other groups.

 Tuesday, Jan. 31, 7 pm, at O'Brien Park Recreation Center, the Turley Community Association public townhall meeting to connect residents with area and local officials and get updates on the happenings and issues in the community.

 Thursday, Feb. 2, 3:30 pm at the community center, the monthly Future of Turley planning session, an important group and this month an important meeting as we will hear presentations on the new Health Department building under construction now near us, and also hear a presentation from the proposed The LightHouse Charter School with plans to partner with Tulsa Schools to go into the current Greeley School site. Greeley, where Cherokee students were moved to when it was closed by us last year, would be closed and students not in the charter school would be moved into the Gilcrease School area. These are both exciting developments in offering more educational opportunities in a part of our area, but with many questions and with the stress of more change happening here in our already stressed and impoverished neighborhoods and families. We will also be signing up people to work on our ongoing work and updates about Disaster Response, Cherokee School, Post office closings, and Incorporation, and establishing planning to improve the area through more destruction of abandoned properties, and improvements.

 Looking ahead, we will begin again with a weekly vespers service in the evenings when Lent starts. We will have an Ash Wednesday service on Feb. 22 and then the evening prayer services on Thursdays at 6 pm beginning Feb. 23. Stay tuned for more on those....And on Tuesday 6:30 pm Feb. 28 we will cap Black History month with our monthly movie and discussion and free meal, as we view the new documentary "Stubborn As A Mule" featuring Tulsa native Dr. Cornel West and others looking at history in the U.S. and the struggle for reparations for African Americans. After our Monday evening planning dinner, we will also have many more dates to promote.

 I hope you will join us at the Unitarian Universalist Christian Fellowship Revival and Retreat in the Washington, D.C. area March 22-25 as we explore Welcoming the Feminine in Christianity, with major lectures by Dr. Amy Oden, an Oklahoma native and author, and dean of Wesley Theological Seminary, Dr. Mary Hunt, author and director of Women's Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual, and best selling author and lecturer Margaret Starbird, and with many and varied worship services and workshops and small group and social experiences. If you can't make it, please forward this on to others you know, and perhaps in the area, who might be interested in attending. For more go to www.uuchristian.org/revival. We have full time, single day, and even single event registration, and all worship services are free and open to the public.

 An important message about our chaotic way of working on transformation, our calling, and our calling to you, comes from the new book by Reggie McNeal, "Missional Communities: the rise of the the post congregational church" who writes: "Orchestral concert-goers are acquainted with the dissonant and chaotic sounds emanating from the orchestra pit prior to the performance. Musicians create a cacophony of noise as they tune their instruments and warm up for the show. No one thinks the lack of harmony or coordination is a sign of trouble. In fact, just the opposite is true. This is necessary preparation for the performance. The unconnected riffs actually increase the anticipation for what is to come. The seeming pandemonium gives way to organized beauty once the conductor takes the stand....We are warming up for the next great performance of the church. It is a collaborative score called "The Church As Missional Communities." Some people are already in the pit, making noise. Others are being recruited. This is your chance. Now is the time. Grab your instrument. The Conductor is approaching the podium. The world waits for the music."

 Bring your passion to partner with us and make beautiful music together.

 blessings, and thanks for all you are and all you do, and more soon,

Ron Robinson

918-691-3223 and 918-794-4637 918-430-1150


Friday

Donate By Year's End To Our Amazing Story of A Third Place projects on the Far Northside miracles among the ruins

...Become now a part of the miracles among the ruins and help launch us into an even more incredible year of growing healthy lives, neighborhoods in the 74126 and adjacent zips, renewing community, empowering residents, all through small acts of justice done with great love and hope....

You have been reading all year of the work going on, of the lives touched in small ways and of the grand plans that have emerged and are on the verge of the great tipping point to turning around our community area serving from 46th to 76th St. North and from the Osage County line to Highway 75. Now you can become a part of that story...

Make your online donation by year's end at www.turleyok.blogspot.com; you don't need paypal to use the online service. Or send a check to A 'Third Place Foundation at The Welcome Table Community Center, 5920 N. Owasso Ave., Turley, OK 74126. Or bring it by during our New Year's Eve gathering beginning at 9 pm tomorrow evening.

If you missed it, here http://www.turleyok.blogspot.com/2011/12/this-incredible-year-in-turley.html is our annual end of the year report to the community. Please find ways to share it with others, and go to the website and read and share of the many other events and issues and projects underway in our area.

Be an underwriter, be a presence in this abandoned place of the Empire:

$100 helps us provide one of our many community meals throughout the month

$300 pays for a whole month's mortgage for us, or a whole month's insurance for us, or helps us staff the food center for a month.

$500 pays for a whole month's utilities for us, keeping us open and as a warming station for those without heat during these cold months, keeping the computer center alive.

$1000 will announce us to the world with new community signs for the center and for the kitchengardenpark and orchard.

Help us keep the mission alive...

The Week Ahead:

Sat. Dec. 31, beginning at 8 am and going all morning, we will be doing major site preparation work at our emerging community garden park kitchen and orchard at 6005 N. Johnstown Ave. This has been one of the amazing stories of this past year, and so come witness as we take another leap forward on the last day of the year turning abandoned property into an oasis for healthy food and community connections.

Sat. Dec. 31, 9 pm. to after midnight. This has been the year we also bought another old historic abandoned building and turned it into our community center, so it is fitting that we end the year relaxing and enjoying this place of renewal, where passions meet the world's great needs, and people find purpose and hope in giving back to others. We will have food, play board games, watch the Best Picture Gandhi to usher in a year of revolutionary peace, and community liberating presence here in our area.

Tuesday, Jan. 3 and Thursday, Jan. 5, from 3 to 6 pm, our Food Pantry Center, where we also provide healthy recipes and healthy meals made out of the food pantry ingredients, where we will be signing people up and handing out tickets for the great food giveaway on Jan. 13 we are coordinating with the Food Bank.

Thursday, Jan. 5, 3:30 pm our Future of the Turley Area deep planning session; we will be unveiling and working on the boundaries for the incorporation of a city of Turley, working on taking our disaster response network to the next level by identifying resources and leaders in sixteen neighborhoods within our currently unincorporated area, hearing reports from partners and networking our organizations.

Thursday, Jan. 5, 5:30 pm, helping the Advisory Board of the O'Brien Park welcome its new activities director with a public reception. This is one of our partners in the community.

Also help plan our parade presence in the Martin Luther King Jr. parade and candlelight vigil and events. And stay tuned in January for the start or something new...

Merry continuing Christmastide, and a happy new year to you and to your communities.

Ron






The Christmas Words

from The Welcome Table

a free universalist christian missional community

5920 N. Owasso Ave., Turley, OK 74126


feel free to forward and share with others...


Soon it will be the season of Christmas. Already though its spirit of surprising love, abundance, peace, joy, and hope have been felt here in our area. Thanks for letting us share them with you. Our wish is that these reports bring you as much goodwill as you all have brought to us.


We call this area of North Tulsa and Turley at this time of year especially a "new Nazareth." Scriptures report that people believed that the village of Nazareth had such a bad reputation that "nothing good could come from it." At the time 2000 years ago, Nazareth was little known and little regarded. Just a few miles away stood the bigger, shining new city of Sepphoris, a kind of suburban sprawl built by and for the economy of the Roman Empire, taking up land that had sustained the poor, displacing people. Nazareth was even moreso then a place for the left out, the left behind, the decidedly uncool people. And yet, today, so few have ever heard of Sepphoris, while Nazareth, well Nazareth is known the world over for the good that came from it, and that keeps coming.


The New Nazareth: All you have to do, anytime there is a story about any sort of crime, and in fact a story even about any sort of new development or plans or groundbreaking, here on the northside of Tulsa, is to go to the Tulsa World online and read the comments left by people to the story. The refrain is the same; people get what they deserve because they are there, meaning here, and if they were smart they would leave, and no one would ever or should ever move there, and nothing good will last because our neighbors won't let it, and it has nothing whatsoever to do with the lack of resources and the history of segregation and neglect and decisions made by people who leave elsewhere breaking apart the social communities, it is all about people making bad choices they and their children even should be punished for. We hear this all the time from people who have grown up and spent many adult years in the Tulsa area without ever coming to this area, and how afraid they are when they do, and how others warn them not to. It is not that we don't have struggles and problems of crime, and bad choices so often driven by so many addictions, and lord knows it is so much easier to get people to respond based on fear of something or someone than to get them to respond out of a desire and belief that they can make this part of the world, and their lives, better.


And yet, just a few days ago, we held a party here, threw open our doors for anyone to come, had no security guards, and had no idea how many would come celebrate Christmas with our small group; the past few years in our old community center space just a half mile north of us now, we had had a good time with about 20-30 people from the area, most of whom we knew. But this year, in our new and still emerging community center space, without still being able to afford much attractive signage on the outside to let people know what this big building is being used for, our Christmas Party had some 125 people, a majority of whom hadn't been here before, or only for our Halloween Party when we had 300 people show up, and no security guards then either, and no violence then either. We fed people with Christmas tamales and pizza from businesses right here, and from what we and another church provided; we brought and got gifts to hand out and in a fishes and loaves moment kept finding gifts to give out to all the children who came; and we sang as a community christmas songs and hymns, these voices of people who hadn't sung together before, and might not have another opportunity to sing with others this season.


And yet, here in the new Nazareth, at that party, a little girl said, to no one in particular, as she was moved by the spirit of the moment of community, "This is the best night of my life." Think about that. It was both a moment of great wonder; like an angel proclaiming in a night full of danger and oppression and isolation "Be Not Afraid for I bring you great tidings..." And it was heart breaking too. She had not had this experience before, so many people gathering in peace, joy, hope, and love. She probably, if she is like so many we live with here, a few in her family and perhaps estranged from other family, so no extended family expereinces, no church expereince, no means to go outside the area much if at all; the lights of Christmas, the excess and abundance of Christmas, the story of Christmas itself, mostly comes to her through the screen of a television, which both connects her to a greater world and accentuates her own isolation and disconnect from it. Her family has had to choose between keeping utilities on and having food and having gifts; we make it just a bit more bearable by helping with the food and gifts so they can spend on the utilities, though skimping on all of it.


And yet, here we were all for her, celebrating, blessing our meal and running out of it and getting more of it and all saying Amen, and people making connections for the first time, and hearing about all we have been doing and will be doing, people impromptu volunteering to help us at the food pantry this past week even as they come to get their own food in what has been our busiest ever week; we have run out of turkeys from the food bank and have had to purchase more on our own to meet the need; and this week in another amazing event the children in our neighborhood school, Horace Greeley Elementary School, who are all on free lunch programs themselves, they and their families filled up 15 boxes of food in the month of Nov. and Dec. and on the last day of school contributed it to our food pantry, which many of them use. And yet that night, and this month has all been very ordinary; it has taken so little effort, really, on our part; so few people have created it; no one has been stressed out or worried about its outcome; no one has tried to control it and shut it down out of fear of what might happen, or what might not happen, not have enough, or get this or that wrong.


And yet, though most of our commercial and public district is dark at night even in this season, we have lighted up our building, and we have even lighted up the historic memorial arch and evergreen tree in the courtyard of Cherokee School that has been closed since we finished our summer daily free lunch there. These few lights are what that little girl sees though with her own eyes, not through a screen, and I believe they mean more than all the bright lights on the other side of town, because they are here where she lives.


And yet, I like to think of what has been experienced here in the past few weeks (including the worship and discussions and movies and common meals we have on a regular basis in the missional community gatherings and with our Advent Vespers too) all as a truly living nativity scene. Not one that has people dressing up to look like the manger scene, as wonderful as those are; Not a pageant either; but a truly living embodied nativity scene, for at our Christmas Party, at our overflowing food pantry experiences, at the Greeley school food drive for us, Christ was born again.


That is what Christmas is about, especially here; it is about creating "And yet" moments, an "And yet" world. The world was ruled in terror; the rich kept getting richer and the poor kept growing in number and kept getting poorer with fewer places to turn to for help; the land was being used up; the religious authorities were becoming servants of the Empire; technology was improving and the spirits of people were declining; the prophets were getting their heads cut off and more were jailed, more silenced, more made refugees. And yet, a baby was born...at the same time, then as now, that babies thousand times over in numbers die, are killed, and yet a baby was born...and in that fragile, vulnerable particular event, is all of divinity and eternity, the spark of possibility that not only is another world possible, but in that birth another world has been started, all in order to remind us that it is such abandoned, fragile, vulnerable, and very ordinary particular people and places and events that we are to go in search of the Sacred.


"This is the best night of my life." I hope, truly, that our Christmas Party, our place, ourselves, all become a fading memory for that little girl here. I hope another world embraces her and she has so many other better best nights of her life that this one will be lost to her. I hope that other world happens right here too, and that she is nurtured here and able to grow and give back to others all right here, instead of having to flee to Sepphoris. Mostly, I hope we are able to continue creating such nativity events for others like her in many more ways, places, and times around our community here. For all that, go to www.turleyok.blogspot.com and read all we have done and are doing through our community foundation work; this letter has been about the spiritual center that is the hub for all the spokes of the other work, though you can at the link above easily make a donation and be a part of our community here where such a little amount makes such a big difference.


Finally, here is some of the news of the ways we gather:

Saturday, Dec. 24, 5 pm join us at the Turley United Methodist Church for a Christmas Eve candlelight service, at 6050 N. Johnstown Ave. across from our Welcome Table KitchenGardenPark and Orchard.

Sunday, Dec. 25, 9:30 am join us for Christmas Morning Worship of our own Lessons and Carols and Communion Service and Meal here at 5920 N. Owasso Ave. We will take a break from our Justice for the Poor video series and resume it on Jan. 1.

Thursday, Dec. 29, 6:30 pm the neighborhood safety meeting his held here.

Saturday Dec. 31 beginning at 9 pm we will have a New Years Eve Watch Party here, games, watching the movie Ghandi to bring in a new year of peace and resistance to Empire, with refreshments, black eyed peas and more.

Sunday, Jan. 1 New Years Day worship, 9:30 am to 1 pm our usual gathering for video series from Sojourners, communion and meal and service.

Thursday, Jan. 5, our Future of Turley planning group here at 3:30 pm, and at 5:30 pm at O'Brien Park, 6147 N. Birmingham Ave., we will join the Advisory Board to welcome at a reception our new activities director there.


More to come in the New Years Letter....till then, live justly, love mercy, walk humbly with your God, and pay attention to the many ways Christ is being born in, among, and beyond you, remembering that Christmastide begins, not ends, Dec. 25 so keep it in your heart, share it and celebrate it throughout the 12 days; to help in that go visit www.uuchristian.org and go to the Christmas links there on the home page, and keep checking back for the gifts of Christmas there; and pause to reflect on how Christmas is not your birthday (even those of you born on Dec. 25 lol) but is the birthday of the one whose wish list is to bring good news to the poor.


blessings, and thanks again,

Ron Robinson

This Incredible Year in Turley

Hi and thanks to all for your interest and presence with us this past year. We just finished hosting another wonderful group from Leadership Tulsa today on a tour of the northside, so much to say and talk about in so short a time, and so I come away wishing that everyone could walk with us through the year, the ups and downs, the detours and deadends and surprising openings that mark our journey each year. This letter might fall in the category of Things I Kept Thinking About....I hope you will also read it and consider ways to give to us at the end of the year after you hear about what a year it has been in so many different ways.

 2011 has been a phenomenal year when things kept getting worse, and things kept getting better, side by side. It has been a year in this regard unlike any before in our own history here, and perhaps in our community's.

 We began the year by purchasing the abandoned church building that had been a central fixture for years in this community but had been foreclosed and empty for years, a symbol of so many vacant and abandoned and rundown structures here. We were able to buy it thanks to equity we had from a few months before, with your help, buying the city block of abandoned homes where we have put in our still emerging and blossoming KitchenGardenPark and Orchard on North Johnstown Ave. Along with a grant from the Zarrow Foundation, we were able to buy this old building and start reusing it even before renovating it. Thanks to a grant from the Flint Family Foundation we have been able to settle in to the building better and keep up our outreach and services and grow them.

Right away though we had the great winter blizzard that shut down the community for weeks and kept us from moving in for about a week, and which opened up more problems with the roof to go along with the major vandalism attack that had hit the building for the first time in its long 90 year history. But as soon as we were able to move in, we held a Community Art Event where area residents were able to help us clean and paint art and brighten up the building on the outside. During this same time though we lost our community health clinic from OU which had closed their others in north Tulsa the previous year. It would herald a year of increased abandonment in this area where so much community wise had closed.

We held community organizing events with OU on several issues facing our community, and worked more on the community health worker proposal that would help take primary care out of the clinic and into the neighborhoods themselves in revolutionary new ways of growing health that lasts. We are looking forward to more service learning projects with OU Social Work as 2012 begins and will be reporting on it.

In the Spring we got word that our post office, which we had had for as long as there had been a community here more than 100 years, was scheduled to be closed. After organizing petitiions, after working to actually get the story out in the public, the post office was still closed. We are hoping to find some place in the community now, though, that would like to work with us to host a possible Village Post Office to replace what we lost. This area where people have the least resources to be able to get to other alternatives to the post office is the place where they close; it is a symbol of the way values of the powerful reinforce convenience for the privileged over comfort for the afflicted.

 
At the same time we also got the report that the former Turley School, now Cherokee School, was scheduled to be closed; we worked on getting information out to residents, and coming up with alternatives, but the school was closed, and the communities suffer from not having a major place like school where community and residents can intersect. And we are likely to see more schools closing, possibly with charter schools placed as possible alternatives in Greeley but not Cherokee, which is better than having it closed too like Cherokee was, but we still have the major building in the heart of the community at Cherokee being vacant. We are working with OU and others to try to dream up possible new community friendly uses. Our children go to an increasingly different number of schools so far away from our community these days that this continues to be a difficulty in making the connections for community here where there are so few avenues available to do that.

Speaking of Cherokee, we have lighted up the archway and Christmas tree at Cherokee School even though it is closed so it will not be darkened this holiday season. And we have lighted up the community center building so our area will have a few public and commercial buildings with decorations showing spirit and a source of light in this time of darkness, when almost no other buildings for miles along North Peoria have any decorations for the public and our community again this year; part of the problem that comes when people who own the businesses or run the places don't live here. I know that most people in Tulsa will never see these few little holiday decorations and night lights, but I believe, in the spirit of Charlie Brown's Christmas Tree, that they signify more meaning about the reason of the season than all the glitz in other areas of the city and suburbs. We are going to do the same at the Welcome To Turley signs as we head toward the beginning of Christmas. It is part of our mission to make the community look better even before we spend on ourselves. And we are working with the Cherokee School reunion committee; and we are part of a major community food policy grant proposal that if it is received we might be able to lobby for some of its use in our area.

During the summer even after the school closing, and all the grief it caused, we managed to get the school to stay open throughout the summer so we could hold the Summer Cafe daily free lunch program for all under eighteen years old, and we stayed open longer than any other site and served more because of it. Our summer was hit hard by two natural events though, the long record setting drought and heat wave and the wildfires. We were able though because we had bought the center building to be able to open it up as the first response shelter for all the evacuues; just as we had used it as a tornado shelter in the Spring storms. Out of that experience came our renewed Turley leadership planning group that is concentrating on disaster response and deep issues. One of our residents was killed at night because of the lack of street lights and that we have no sidewalks along our major street, also a state highway, that people have to use to get to and from walking to the store or other businesses; including those in wheelchairs who have to use the highway lanes. This group is planning ways to build up the infrastructure needs of our area and are working again on plans to incorporate our own citizens and a city of Turley, or at least to find out if people will go for it. Our summer was also marked by a week of service where we hosted a church group from Wildflower Church in Austin, Texas who helped us during all this keep up our spirits and make plateau changers in some of our community sites. And at the end of the summer we were partners with OU on community health research that we hope will help us to grow more connections and the health worker plan; we are now helping with research on healthy food with the Indian Health Care Resource Center.

Even in the heat wave, we were able to win our community orchard and organize a major volunteer effort to plant forty fruit trees during the hottest day of the year. Seeing the growth of the garden and orchard has been a major accomplishment of the year; our fall harvest helped feed our neighbors and bring them together and we have so much more to do as we move forward expanding and turning it into an outdoors third place. We also helped spur on the county's commitment to removing many of our abandoned and rundown houses; this is an ongoing concern and project and we still have so many dangerous commercial and residential buildings that are left to waste. This year we also got the Federal Home Loan Bank grant that has helped us to turn the old abandoned homes into our GardenPark; it is a great example of putting all three legs of the stool into collaboration to make a huge difference in an underserved area; we used government through OU students who helped us prepare and envision it; private business through Freedom Bank and the home loan grant program; and ourselves as a nonprofit and help from grant writers at the government US Dept of Agriculture Tallgrass Resource and Conservation District to all work together to bring it about.

This Fall we have been picking up the pieces from the losses, helping Greeley School transform for the new students and staff and faculty, helping to renew the advisory board at O'Brien Park, and helping out with the continued growth of the McLain Foundation and the big event of the Taste of North Tulsa promoting healthy food and lives; and yet, in the midst of it have had to suffer our own personal losses due to the unexpected deaths of two of our own board members, Gwen Goff and Linda Taylor, and our major partner in food justice Steve Eberle. These emotional losses tempt us to turn toward our own selves and needs though we know to honor their legacies we need to continue their work making the world right outside our doors a better, safer place. Our new board members, Deb Carroll who has taken on the renewal of our food pantry justice and sustainability center, and Elaine McDondle of Sarah's Residential Living Center by McLain High School, and Demalda Newsome of the North Tulsa Farmers Market, all are giving us renewed hope and spirit as we begin to enter a new year. There is still a good buzz of wonder and hope from our sponsored community Halloween Festival that drew 300 people; and from our smaller but significant Thanksgiving turkey dinner giveaways and our Thanksgiving community meal.

By the way we just received today our 125 vouchers to distribute to 125 families in our area to be able to take big boxes of food at our Major Food Giveaway on Friday, Jan. 13 from the Mobile Food Van of the Community Food Bank. And we don't just give out food; but we teach about healthy food, give out recipes, connect people with community gardens, and with all of our community events throughout the week, and recovery groups on the weekend.

We end up the year with our Christmas Community Party on Tuesday Dec. 20 from 6 to 8 pm. Come sing with us, have refreshments with us, play games with us, get face painted, watch Christmas videos, and get to know each other better as we dream and make those dreams real in ways that continue to amaze all of us.


I wish I had been able to tell all this to the Leadership Tulsa guests today. I would have told them better what a remarkable gift it is to be able to live here with those who are struggling but still find ways to give of their strengths and spirit, of the new dreams many have, how just staying here and alive and dreaming is a sign that another world is possible; last night several of us in the community watched the movie Joyeux Noel about how peace broke out and friendships were made and worlds changed on the battlefields of France during World War One on Christmas Eve; they paid a price for creating, for a moment, that different world, but it was one that changed their lives forever, and can still today for us. I should have mentioned more to the group about the growing possibilities and community involvement with the Vann Green Park Industrial Area here, along with our unique setting of hill and bottomland so close to downtown. And I should have said more about how issues of racial justice, reconciliation, ethnic diversity, both still challenge us, and are a blessing to us here as we find ways to deepen our lives together across barriers; living next to one another, serving together with one another, linking and empowering the poor regardless of ethnicity, is all an opportunity we get to have that others may want to do but have to go out of their way to do. More on that as we move toward our participation again with the Martin Luther King Jr. celebrations.

But more of all of that in the new year. It will be for us a Year of Celebrations, when we take time to mark and thank and renew all the partnerships and people that have helped us get to where we are, whom made 2011 a little bit easier and a little bit more bearable for us, as we seek to make it so for our neighbors. A Year When We Go Deeper. Stay tuned.

 
And if you are still here with me at this point, let me ask you to help us enter 2012 on an amazing, surprising, gifted note. We need your End of the Year tax deductible contribution. You can make it easily and safely online at www.turleyok.blogspot.com, or can mail a check to A Third Place Community Foundation at The Welcome Table Center, 5920 N. Owasso Ave., Turley. OK 74126. Everyone of the things I have written about above will still be projects, are still in need of support; including things I didn't mention like how we are a warming station now as we were a cooling station this summer, how we are still building up our free internet center for those here without, how we need more money for our food pantry purchases, for our gardenpark, for new signs to let the world know what we have going on, for the transformation of our remaining building into a community room, for new shelves for the clothing room, for bathroom renovations, for some part time staff to keep the center open and growing a few more hours a day, and for a new website presence. These are all the "uncool" things that make possible the transformational things mentioned above.

So, thank you for all you have done, even the important work of spreading the word about us; and as we tell one another here, we are all, regardless of our circumstances, blessed in special ways, with something we each can give. We love to be able to offer to one another here the opportunities to give of our selves in so many ways; we love to be able to extend that opportunity to you too as we end out this incredible year.


 

Sunday

December Coming Events: All Welcome



 @ The Welcome Table Community Center

A project of the local A Third Place Community Foundation

 Resources & Info/Library&Bookstore/Computer Center FoodPantry/Clothing/Chapel/GardenPark&Orchard

 5920 N. Owasso Ave. and 6005 N. Johnstown Ave. 918-794-4637

 www.turleyok.blogspot.com for more information

1.     Food Pantry  Open Every Tuesday and Thursday, 3 to 6 pm at the community center

2.     Turley Area TownHall Public Meeting: What to Do with Cherokee School and Turley’s Future?; updates on Vann GreenPark; and more, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 7 pm O’Brien

3.     Turley Planning Group Meeting: working on Disaster Response Network, Incorporation, Cherokee School Use, Post Office Renewal, and more. Thursday Dec. 1, 3:30 pm.

4.     O’Brien Park Advisory Board public meeting, Thursday, Dec. 1, 5:30 pm, O’Brien

5.     Advent Vespers Worship Thursdays in December, 6:30 pm, The Welcome Table Center

6.     Christmas Decorating Party for Community Center and Turley, Sunday Dec. 4, 1 pm

7.     Movie Night, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 6:30 pm at the Center, “Joyeaux Noel”

8.     Community Christmas Party and Carolling, Tuesday, Dec. 20, 7 pm, at the Center

9.     Turley Area Alliance Against Crime: Personal, Home, and Neighborhood Safety meetings  Thursday Dec. 29, 6:30 pm at the center

10.             New Year’s Eve Watch Party, Sat. Dec. 31, 9 pm, The Welcome Table Center

11.            Recovery 12 step Saturdays, 5 pm Jerks Anonymous, 7:30 pm, Alcoholics Anonymous,  community center

12.            Turley Water Board Public Meeting, LAST WORKING DAY OF MONTH 8:30 AM AT THE WATER DEPT. 6108 N. Peoria Ave.

13.            Turley Fire Dept. Meetings  THURSDAYS 7 PM, Fire Station, 6408 N. Peoria.

14.          The Welcome Table Missional Community, Sundays beginning 9:30 am, conversation on progressive Christianity and justice for the poor, community service, communion, common meal, other worship and prayer classes coming up; see Rev. Ron Robinson. 

 “Growing Healthy Lives and Neighborhoods in the 74126 and 74130”

Tuesday

Turley Community Thanksgiving Meal Party

Come at Noon Thursday to the Community Center for a Thanksgiving Community Potluck. Bring anything, from a bag of chips to juice or ice, or a single apple, we don't care, come and share and eat together in community. Games, TV, computers, library. Meet new friends, see old friends, help us feed our neighbors. RSVP if you can to 918-794-4637 but be sure to come.

Saturday

In the midst of scarcity and struggle here, the blessings emerge; Thanksgiving News and More in Turley and Far Northside

This weekend begins the time of year when we get to lift up to the world around us that God's Dream to which we commit to and work toward bringing out in and through beloved community that exists for others, even in our community of struggle. This dream or worldview is different and more meaningful and life-giving than the American Dream that these days, in difference to how it was originally and has been in times of crisis, seeks to define us as out for ourselves over and against each other. Thanksgiving's time of serving others, Advent's season of waiting, pondering, going deeper into the darkness, trusting in peace, joy, love, and hope against the commercial world's values of getting and keeping. And Christmas time of the ordinary becoming incredibly extraordinary, when the giftedness of all of Creation comes about in someone very vulnerable, very fragile, very marginal.

Today we seek to grow and serve at O'Brien Park, our partners, during the Fall Festival from 2 to 5 pm. Come be with us and meet others and have a fun for all ages time, 6147 N. Birmingham.

 Our recovery groups meet at 5:30 and 7:30 pm tonight.

 Tomorrow we have our special annual Thanksgiving Worship Meal and Reverse Offering. This year from 9:30 am to 1 pm we will have four movements of worship and meal and communion. See the full menu liturgy and explanations at www.progressivechurchplanting.blogspot.com. Come and bring friends and experience God in sacred meal and food justice. Come and bring something to add to the salad or soup or potluck.

Tomorrow at 1 pm come or stay for our missional progressives movie and discussion "Of Gods and Men" about a monastic missional community that had a crises of faith and yet continued to serve their Muslim neighbors through dangerous time.

This Thursday at noon for any who need community we will have a "super potluck" for all.

Next Sunday begins the Advent season. We will have special classes watching the Sojourners video series Justice For the Poor each Sunday at 9:30 am followed by our special Advent worship communion service. Then beginning Thursday Dec. 1 we will have a brief weekly Advent Vespers service at 6:30 pm. This follows our usual Tuesday and Thursday Food Pantry service days from 3 to 6 pm.
 
On Tuesday, Nov. 29 at 7 pm at O'Brien Recreation Center we will be part of a special community association meeting for our area focusing again on our project with OU Design Studio on repurposing the Cherokee building into community use; there will also be a presentation on the renewed Vann Green Park Industrial area in our neighborhood; and many other updates and chances to connect with neighbors.
 
We have had full Food Pantry days, teaching about healthy foods and giving out recipes as well as food; we have had a great fall harvest at our new kitchengardenpark and orchard, with much of its yield going to the food pantry already.

 We have been supporting McLain High School Parent GearUp program and Greeley Elementary School student of the month luncheons and a special Christmas toy giveaway. You can help us donate to both through safe online giving at www.turleyok.blogspot.com where you will also read more about our presence and our neighborhoods and vision. We are also working on the ongoing work of community renewal through the McLain foundation, through our disaster response network creation, and through other community partners and connections.

 We also have to bite the utility bullet and get our $1000 deposit paid for gas heating for the winter, and work on preparing our newly opened north wing where the food pantry and classrooms and clothing and lending rooms and restrooms are. So any funds at this special time when we are giving so much to an increasing number of neighbors is deeply appreciated by all.
 
We had a wonderful return visit and inspirational talk and dinner with Sherry Clark of Families And Communities Empowered For Safety. She left us with good ideas and practical advice on how to make our lives and communities safer, and through the Turley Area Alliance Against Crime neighborhood watch meetings we are going to move on to a focus on juvenile justice soon.
 
On behalf of our community group, A Third Place Foundation, I was surprised and pleased to receive special recognition from the statewide Recreation and Parks Society for our contribution to the movement through our partnership with O'Brien and through our beginning of the Miracle among the Ruins Welcome Table Kitchen Garden Park and Orchard in our healthy food desert, a place not only where food is grown but relationships and renewal is as well. And posthumously our Board member and long time sustainable activist Linda Taylor received the Distinguished Service Award from the state organization.

 Stay tuned for our Advent and Christmas month news and reports, as our monthly focus will be on lifting up the lives of children and youth in our area and in the world, and more epistles from the adventurous life here in the 74126 and 74130 and adjoining zips where the life expectancy might be much lower but the blessings are never higher and deeper.


blessings, and see you soon, Ron


Thursday

A Dozen Ways We Are Changing Our Community

You are invited to come and be with us at these special opportunities to serve our neighbors....see posts below for our regular events and projects each week. Lifting up lives and neighborhoods in the 74126 and 74130 and nearby.

1. Free Turkey dinners to 20 families, beginning Tuesday Nov. 15 at our Food Pantry open Tuesdays and Thursdays 3 to 6 pm.

2. Watching Restrepo movie about the Afghan war and discussion on how we can serve veterans who have served us. Tuesday Nov. 15 6:30 pm free supper included.

3. Special Thanksgiving Meal Worship Service, beginning Sunday 9:30 am Nov. 20 until 1 pm, come anytime you can for as long as you can, but the earlier the better; The Welcome Table Church sponsoring; where worship is more like a party than a program. Followed at 1 pm by the movie and then discussion on Of Gods and Men, french with english subtitles, sponsored by the missional progressives group, about French monks living in a monastery who serve their Muslim neighbors and decide to stay at risk of their own lives during battles between corrupt government forces and terrorists. Then Thanksgiving Potluck and Games on Thursday, Nov. 24, noon. RSVP for both events if you can but don't let that stop you from coming.

4. Raising $400 to provide a classroom of children at Greeley School with Christmas presents; Whirlpool will provide half of the school kids with presents; we are working with others to provide gifts to all. Join with our holiday service effort.

5. Raising $500 to sponsor the Parent Student GearUp Event, Nov. 17 at McLain High School, trying to help close the educational justice gap for our children on Tulsa's northside; this program works with parents and students to prepare them for the testing programs and to get them ready, emotionally and academically, for entering higher education.

6. Repurposing Cherokee School. We began this partnership with the OU Graduate Design Studio with a community workshop on Nov. 5. We are continuing it this month at the community center getting residents ideas and attitudes about the future of our area and dreaming possibilities and partnerships for reopening Cherokee with a community focus. We will conclude the community input at the Turley Area Community Association meeting Tuesday, Nov. 29 at 7 pm at O'Brien Park Recreation Center.

7. We are partnering with O'Brien in honor and memory of our recently deceased Board Member Linda Taylor to sponsor a community Fall Celebration event at the Park Center, 6147 N. Birmingham Ave., Saturday, Nov. 19, from 2 to 5 pm. Games, refreshments, and more. Free.

8. Feeding The Neighborhood. Besides our twice weekly food pantry, which also hands out recipes and samples of meals that can be made with pantry items, we will be distributing 125 boxes of food on Friday, Jan. 13, from 11 am to Noon, thanks to our partnership with the Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma. Come to the pantry and sign up for the Mobile Van visit.

9. Welcoming the Leadership Tulsa participants to the Turley Far Northside area, Wednesday, Dec. 14. Come help us host this group of community leaders as they learn about our transforming community renewal work on a grassroots level.

10. The KitchenGardenPark and Orchard at 6005 N. Johnstown Ave. Due to the season we have stopped our regular gatherings, but we are still working to prepare more of the site for the next growing season. If interested in a garden, or helping with events and more, contact Bonnie Ashing through the Center or at bjashing@aol.com.

11. We are updating two of our ongoing projects inside the community center: our Community Clothing GiveAway being better organized and focused and expanding into a Community Tools and Services Lending Library, and our Computer Center. Come help and check it out in the weeks ahead as we launch them in the new year. And start to renovate our future much larger Community Room.

12. Stay tuned for news about upcoming Christmas celebrations, and New Years Eve events, music concerts, Volunteer GiveBack Days, and our Community Connections programs in Turley with the University of Oklahoma.

We have a lot going on but we can't do it without you. And we can't continue to do amazing things that we haven't even imagined yet until you help us imagine them. Thanks in advance.