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Huss Future Festival 2010!
Wow--it was a ton of work to put together the first annual Huss Future Festival, but what a wonderful event! The day began with a soaking downpour and predictions of severe thunderstorms barreling toward us across the Midwest, but the parking lot filled up and the skies cleared and for all eight hours we were open, the hallways were abuzz with people.

The day's events included...


We ended the day completely exhausted, but with so many reasons to be grateful. So many donors and volunteers (including our interns) helped make the day possible through their generous giving and creative skills. So many friends and family members came from out of town to show their support and experience the day. So many neighbors showed up and offered stories, photos and kind, encouraging words.

All in, we had around 350 people come through the doors and took in about $1,500. The numbers themselves are impressive, but beyond that, we really feel like the event successfully conveyed the vision and potential for the space. It was alive!

For more visuals, stories and audio recordings of Huss Future Festival 2010...

If you're in the Three Rivers area, drop by Huss School today for our first annual Huss Future Festival! The festival features a giant rummage sale, art vendors, live music, free fair trade coffee from World Fare and tours of the building. We've even got a ping-pong challenge and an apple barrel train!

We'll see you there!

Water Festival 2010

Each June, the Three Rivers Area Chamber of Commerce sponsors the Water Festival, a three-day event with carnival rides, live music, fireworks, crafts, children's events and SO much more. This year, for the first time, *cino had a presence with the non-profit booths to publicize what's happening at Huss School, including the community garden. The garden folks put together an amazing display, including huge stand-up veggies and some of their very own monstrous radishes that everyone kept mistaking for beets!

Rob, Paul and I had a good time hanging out in the park for a couple of days introducing people to the vision for the old school. One thing Paul found interesting as he talked with folks at the booth is that everyone knows where Huss School is, which affirms what a landmark building we've inherited. We acknowledge that the task of stewarding an historic building with so much community memory invested in it is a special task indeed, requiring a lot of care and community involvement.

We also witnessed some of the negativity that has plagued the second district neighborhoods--too many people simply have no hope for the place and were surprised when, for example, we said we hadn't had any vandalism to the community garden yet. We look forward to inspiring imaginations to the contrary!

On May 22, 18 folks from Englewood Christian Church in Indianapolis--9 adults and 9 children--made the trek up to Three Rivers to spend a day getting to know our city and working at Huss School. Interestingly, the church finds itself in the middle of a similar project to ours, having recently taken ownership of an old school building next to their church that they are converting to 32 rental units for neighborhood housing. So, not only did we get a lot of work done around Huss School, we also learned a lot about the things Englewood has been doing to both raise funds and renovate their property. It was a great day!

Group photo

Saturday morning was gray and misty, but warm as we gathered to speak words of blessing and break ground for Triple Ripple Community Gardens at the Huss School property. Many denominations, ages, colors, neighborhoods and vocations were represented around our circle and each minister brought a distinctive angle to the task at hand, calling God's abundance onto the land in so many different voices.

There have been many moments since *cino's purchase of Huss School last spring that Rob and I have felt overwhelmed with gratitude at the sense that this project is being carried beyond our limited human efforts, and the garden blessing was one such moment. To be sure, God will require our practical participation in the weeks and months ahead, from recruiting young gardeners to hauling watering cans. But as Pastor Bennett reminded us all during the blessing: God provides the water. We are gifted with the raw materials and with the imagination to put them together in a new way in a new place. And in this sense, all our labor is pleasure, whether it's the welcome pleasure of a successful tomato transplant or the more difficult pleasure of trusting the Spirit to help us overcome a relational challenge.

In the moment of the garden blessing on Saturday, I believe we all glimpsed what is possible in that place beyond what we were expecting.

Watch for video footage of the community garden blessing soon. In the meantime, enjoy these photos.

River Country Journal and WLKM have run press releases about Saturday's kick off for Triple Ripple Community Gardens at the old Huss School property. There will be a blessing by local ministers at 10:00 a.m. and all are welcome to attend! Orientation for volunteers will follow.

Thanks to local media for helping get the word out and to Julianna and Brenda for all of their hard work in getting the garden started!

Today, we cleaned the barn at the Hermitage and moved over to St. Gregory's Abbey, where we'll be spending our last day together. The hymn for morning prayer this morning was "Lord, whose love in humble service," which seemed a perfect way to finish our time at the Hermitage:

Lord, whose love in humble service bore the weight of human need, who upon the cross, forsaken, worked your mercy's perfect deed; we, your servants, bring the worship not of voice alone, but heart, consecrating to your purpose ev'ry gift which you impart.

Still your children wander homeless, still the hungry cry for bread. Still the captives long for freedom, still in grief we mourn our dead. As you, Lord, in deep compassion, healed the sick and freed the soul, by your Spirit send your power to our world to make it whole.

As we worship, grant us vision, till your love's revealing light in its height and depth and greatness dawns upon our quickened sight, making known the needs and burdens your compassion bids us bear, stirring us to ardent service, your abundant life to share.

Raking: check. Well, the front yard at least. One of the themes of the week has been adjusting our sense of scale with the school as tasks take more time, more people and taller ladders than we expect. That said, our feeling after our last morning of school work was that we made quite a bit of progress. The gym is cleaner than it has been in a while, the building is somewhat aired out, some of the stuff-sorting work is finished and we're starting to get set up for a potential rummage sale fundraiser. Sure, there's a lot more to do, but there's always going to be a lot more to do. We finished our time together working at Huss with a photo in front of the giant leaf pile and a reading of Oscar Romero's famous prayer.

Pile o' leaves

After leaving the school, we enjoyed a more leisurely lunch than we've had all week and took some time after we ate just to rest and read and nap--a welcome space of quiet. Just before 3:00, we commenced our art explorations. First, we walked a half block to the Carnegie Center for the Arts to see the current exhibits, as well as some of the creative learning spaces within the building. Then, we piled in the van (leaving Rob behind to staff World Fare) to visit Larry-Michael and Becky Hackenberg at their wetland property along the St. Joseph River called Floodplain meadow. We took a short walk around to see and hear how they've worked to steward the marshy "fast food restaurant for birds," honoring the creatures and history of their place. Afterwards, we gathered in their warm, cozy living room with hot cups of tea to hear their thoughts about the arts in the Three Rivers community. Larry-Michael is a watercolor painter and Becky is a photographer, as well as the founder of the Three Rivers Artists Guild. They shared some wonderful insights about the relationship between art and place. Larry-Michael expressed how art often serves as a record of the ecology of a place, helping viewers see beauty in their community. He recounted a story of a painting he did of a bosc pear from Corey Lake Orchards, which he used for his series of greeting cards. When someone from the orchard came across his cards, she saw herself in the art, exclaiming, "Hey! I'm Corey Lake Orchard!" Later, when he displayed his cards at the orchard during the annual fall color tour, the farming patriarch of the orchard family took three bosc pears and gave them to Larry-Michael, expressing a common understanding of their beauty. The farmer saw beauty in his pears, and so did Larry-Michael--enough to create a painting of them, which then reinforced the farmer's feelings about the fruits of his labor. Like many other folks we've met with this week, Larry-Michael and Becky also wanted to hear from the students, particularly about why they chose to come to Three Rivers for spring break and how they see art being part of both Huss School and their lives in the future.

Our departure was a continuation of the day's theme as Liz, who's been working on a series this week for a photography project, took a portrait of Larry-Michael and Becky with the marsh in the background. We said our thank yous and good byes and headed back downtown to see Police, Adjective at the Riviera Theatre, which we'd just visited and toured yesterday. The film was sometimes excruciatingly slow and quiet, but intentionally so, as the story followed a Romanian police detective trailing a group of pot-smoking teen-agers. Though many first reactions were, "What the...?" our conversation afterwards and over dinner helped uncover some of the film's complexities and purpose related to themes of language and a culture negotiating its post-Communist identity.

Our evening meal was a delicious collection of Asian delights, including bi bim guk su, a spicy Thai lemongrass soup with fresh cilantro, kim chi and citron tea. In a town that has good pub food, but not much in the way of really creative cuisine, it's great to be able to call on our friend Julie to make ethnic dishes with fresh, local ingredients as part of her start-up, on-the-side catering. Just like Rob's and my experience going to college in the middle of cornfields, we're exploring how to make our own fun when someone's not providing it for us.

Matt, a local artist friend, joined us today, and Julie joined us later for the movie and dinner. J.D. Yoder and Bruce Snook also made brief appearances at the school. Oh, and let's not forget Taggy--J.D.'s curious and friendly pup, so-named for her habit of tagging along. Overall, another great day of connections, of the human, animal, culinary and idea varieties.

We did a lot of raking today at Huss School. I'm beginning to realize the scale of this place because I continually underestimate the amount of stuff in the building or on the land. For example, I looked at the front yard today and thought, "There aren't that many leaves here; we can probably finish this in a few hours." Well, at the end of our work period, we weren't quite finished and we had a mountain of leaves collected in a new compost pile on the south side of the gym. The largeness of the building and the yard make everything look small in comparison. I suppose that's a good thing to learn, for all kinds of reasons!

Today's afternoon conversations were really good and informative. We started with a quick tour of a few local businesses in Three Rivers, talking to Tom Lowry at Lowry's Books, Bruce Monroe at the Riviera Theatre, Caryn Wilson at Voyager's Inn and Peggy Deames at Love Your Mother. Each had really interesting observations about running a business in a small town and being committed to this particular place at this particular time. Tom talked a bit about the history of the Three Rivers downtown district: how malls completely changed the landscape and drove out businesses that had operated downtown for decades; how Wal-Mart changed the business landscape again, closing several local stores; and how a vast majority of business attempts simply don't make it at all. The numbers are pretty daunting. 80% of businesses fail within the first five years and, of those that succeed, another 80% fail in the next five years--leaving a 4% success rate after ten years. And small businesses fail for all kinds of reasons, only a few of them financial. Almost every business owner we spoke to recognized these odds and chose to start a business anyway--many of them in middle of one of the worst recessions our nation has ever experienced. These folks really know how to live into hope, disregarding all evidence pointing the other direction.

We concluded the afternoon with a panel discussion featuring several local journalists: Elena Hines from the Commercial-News, Helen McCauslin from Day by Day in Fabius (a daily photo blog), Bruce Snook from River Country Journal, and Buck Hicks from the Liberty 1st forum. We had a great conversation about the possibilities and drawbacks of both online and print media, the way information spreads around the community and is discussed, and the power of the media to tell some stories while missing others (particularly in relation to race). We really enjoyed the conversation and it was great to get all of those folks in the same room talking about what they do in the community.

Today was another full day--which means I am again sitting down to type this near midnight. We don't have internet access at the Hermitage, so I'm posting these updates to the blog while we grab water from our apartment in the morning for cleaning at the school (the school building is winterized, so there's no running water).

The Gospel text for morning prayer today included Jesus saying he was not of this world. When I was growing up, it seemed that we always inferred from this that Jesus was speaking about how the world didn't matter much because we were all going to end up in heaven eventually anyway. It wasn't until I started reading Walter Wink several years ago that I discovered another (more accurate?) reading: the word "world" implies "system." So when Jesus says he's not of this world, he is saying that he has a completely different economic, social and political system in mind for the purposes of human flourishing. The systems in place both then and now were primarily in the interest of the wealthy and powerful; Jesus' economy includes everyone and ensures all receive what they need while delighting in their ability to contribute.

With this in mind, we set off for another day of work at Huss School. We were joined today by J.D. Yoder and Bob Hostetler. J.D. is a local contractor who has shown significant interest in the Imagining Space project and has been remarkably open with volunteering his expertise and equipment to help get things moving. He invited Bob, a tree trimmer by trade, to help cut down several dead trees on the property. In the meantime, the students cleaned some nasty mildew stains in the gym and raked leaves in the front yard. We again managed to get a lot accomplished in a relatively short amount of time!

It's very exciting to have the support of folks like J.D. and Bob. We certainly couldn't afford to hire someone to come and do the work they did today; but they seem to implicitly understand a Kingdom economy, a new way of doing things that Jesus was alluding to in this morning's text. In a Kingdom economy, profit is never the sole motivating factor. Other goods, such as community, relationship and beauty come into a complex equation to determine how we spend our time and talent. The same can be said, of course, for everyone who is helping us out this week. And we simply can't thank you all enough; it's amazing to witness Kingdom economy in action.

Later in the afternoon, we explored downtown Three Rivers and the surrounding parks, concluding with a trip to Lowry's (probably one of the best bookstores in the country). After an amazing meal prepared by Mariann and Liz (with help from just about everyone else), we went for a moonlit hike through the Hermitage woods. It was a beautiful way to end the day.

the campaign for *cino's next incarnation