We sponsored a tiny house!

Big hugs of gratitude to all those at Corvallis UU Fellowship who joined together to “adopt a home” at Hub City Village in Albany! We were able to collect everything needed for a home interior plus several extra things to add to the next home! Yay UU!!!!

The process of building this empowering community continues, so feel free to contact UUFC Member Joyce Marvel-Benoist at marvelbenoist@gmail.com if you’d like to participate in other ways. And if you’d like to see photos and information, check out creatinghousing.org. Big thanks for the support of the Secure Housing and Food Team at UU and dozens of members and friends!

Hub City Village is 27 long-term homes serving those without secure housing.
It includes collaborative community co-op, residential center, organic gardens, solar power, and ongoing support and education. Homes are close to finished, the peer support specialist is running interviews for applicants, and homes will be ready for occupancy by July! All types of volunteers will continue to be invited to support this beautiful model. The plan is to continue duplicating this model throughout the region.
This is love and justice in action!

“Which Way To Turn?” 5/5/2024

The turning of the earth, of the year, of the seasons, of the heart. Turning inward, turning outward, turning away, turning toward. “To turn” is a fruitful way to describe and understand the religious life. As the old Shaker song says, it’s by ‘turning, turning that we come round right.’ In these days turning often feels frantic, as in which way to turn? Is there anywhere safe to turn? Turning can become spinning, and dizziness, and falling. What can we learn that will help us in all this turning?

Rev. Jill McAllister

Between Us

May is the month for our Fellowship Annual Meeting (May 19). Planning for the meeting, and the participation of many of us which even this small democracy requires, has been underway for several months. Not everyone quite gets this juxtaposition between the religious life of the congregation (and our own religious lives) and the necessity of participation in sustaining it. I suppose it is an acquired taste, and at the very least it takes practice. All of the team, council and board meetings about the budget, the bylaws, the goals and plans, evaluation of current work, all of the challenges and struggles and learning about new ways to communicate and interact – ALL of this is how we sustain this local and unique democracy. It may seem quite boring to some, even passe, yet in these days there is nothing more important.

The extent to which our national democracy is in danger and to which all of our highest values are at stake (even more than in 2016) cannot be overstated.
It is nearly unbelievable how precarious the system is right now. It could very well be that the collective mindset of those who believe that something different is needed – authoritarianism at the very least – is so deep and wide that it is like a tsunami wave building. Certainly there is a wave. Anything and everything we do, here and in the wider circles of community, to practice and sustain democratic structures, makes a difference.

Many of you know more than I do, and have much more articulate political opinions. I am no political pundit. Nevertheless I am convinced that given the possibilities we need to begin now to plan for how we will organize our congregational life to take care of each other, and others who will be at even more risk, should the worst-case scenario come to pass. If this is something you can help with, please let me know. And for all you are already doing to help sustain democratic ideals – thank-you!

Sunday Services This Month

May 5, “Which Way To Turn?” with Rev. Jill McAllister
May 12, “Tending Our Selves” with Guest Speaker UU DRE Jen Shattuck
May 19, “Air, Breath, Music!” UUFC Choir with Rev. Jill McAllister
May 26, “In Memoriam” with Revs. Jill McAllister and Leslie Chartier

Congratulations to Skyla King-Christison

Our Director of Religious Exploration was recently awarded the status of Credentialed Advanced Religious Educator by the UUA. This credential required many months of study and learning, plus oral exams. Congratulations Skyla! All are invited to help celebrate Skyla and this achievement following the service, in the Social Hall.

Queerly Beloved 5/19/24

Sunday, May 19th in the UUFC Social Hall

4:00 pm to 6:00 pm

This month, we’ll have a casual potluck and some icebreaker games, hosted by Ginny and Linda! Come and get to know your queer community and make new friends! Bringing food is optional, but welcome! Join us! Allies are always welcome/you don’t have to identify as LGBTQ to attend.

Join LGBTQ+ folx and allies for social gatherings centered on queer issues and themes. We understand the importance of queer community, and our goal is to provide a safe space where people can find that sense of belonging right here in Corvallis. We meet monthly on the 3rd Sunday in the afternoon. All are welcome! Questions: connect@dreuucorvallis-org

QUEERLY BELOVED is an affinity group of UUFC. uucorvallis.org/queerly-beloved

Men’s Gathering, 4/28

11:45 AM, Room 9, Contact: Jerry Buthmann

We discuss meaningful topics and forge deeper relationships with other men. Share what’s currently moving in your life, and listen actively to others to gain understanding. Open to all who self-identify as men.

One Story At A Time: Potluck Supper and Update

All are welcome to a potluck supper and update from One Story At A Time, the organization founded by UUFC member Linda Carroll which supported the Perla family in coming to the US. Linda will introduce Maria Lourdes Arias Trujillo, the social worker who has been essential to the work of One Story. Bring a Mexican-themed dish to share.
Thursday, May 2, 6 PM, Social Hall.

Building New Ways to Welcome, Include, and Advocate!

I/DD stands for “Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities.”
I/DD folks are often marginalized and excluded.

The more fully we understand the lived experience of I/DD individuals and their families, the greater our capacity to create the welcoming and inclusive community we’re meant to be. We’ll be exploring activities to share with I/DD community members expressing an interest in our Sunday services, various Connect Up activities, among other options. Contact Elona, elonameyer@icloud.com, if you would like to be included in planning or providing shared activities—or would simply like to learn more about living and thriving with I/DD.

I/DD individuals tend to be vastly over-represented within the homeless and incarcerated populations.

To prevent this unjust, cruel state of affairs, advocacy is needed, particularly within the criminal justice system.

Trained and certified advocates can help I/DD victims, suspects, and witnesses navigate the justice system for more equitable outcomes.

Recently awarded UUFC Justice Outreach funds will be used to help design an I/DD advocacy training and certification program, for potential use both locally and nationally. We are fortunate to have the necessary expertise and experience on our design team! Want more information on the development of the I/DD advocacy program? Contact elonameyer@icloud.com.

Your Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Team (EDI), in collaboration with Misha Marie (from the Arc of Benton County), with support from the Climate Action and Secure Food and Housing teams, requested the use of UUFC Outreach Funds for designing the training and certification program. We are thrilled to see our vision for I/DD advocacy training begin to materialize!

We’ll keep you posted on our progress through the Justice Council publications. A big thanks goes to all our collaborators and to the Justice Outreach team for their careful consideration of our request.

Passover, Freedom and Liberation

For Jewish people around the world Passover began on Monday April 22 and continues through Tuesday April 30. It is the annual observance of the story of the Exodus – the central story of Judaism. This is the story of the escape of the Hebrew people from Egypt, of their liberation from slavery thanks to the intervention of their god, of the beginning of a generation of wandering in a desert until finally arriving at “the gift of the land” – also from their god. In the Western world, this story is the foundation of our notions of social justice, solidarity, and the possibility of collective liberation from oppression and injustice.

Through thousands of years Jews have often observed and celebrated Passover in hard times, in contexts of ongoing oppression and injustice, in situations of danger.
This year the details are deeply complex and difficult, given the ongoing death and destruction in Gaza following a horrendous brutal attack on Jews. Centuries of enmity and injustice are present, exacerbated by decades of struggle between Palestinians and Israel. Few of us are unaware, or unconcerned about this reality.

As Unitarian Universalists, we have long promoted the ideals of freedom, primarily as the freedom of each individual to live, to thrive, to make their own choices. Sometimes we have joined that dedication with movements for collective freedom – for the freedom of groups and peoples from discrimination, oppression and worse. In recent years, with deeper theological reflection, UUs have come to realize that merely supporting “freedom” is not enough; that we are called to deeper commitments to creating possibilities of liberation from unjust systems and structures, by examining and helping to dismantle those structures – of racism, of genderism, of patriarchy, of anthropocentrism, to name only a few.

As always, we are called as religious people to learn more, to be less needful of our own comfort, to live in ways which contribute to collective liberation – therefore to meaningful freedom. For reflection, I share this poem by Rev. Julián Jamaica Soto (formerly Theresa), from their collection “Spilling the Light.”

To the people who have mistaken freedom for liberation

To be free, you must embrace
the breadth of your own existence
without apology, even if they try to take
it from you. You must know, not that you
can do whatever you want; you are not
a kudzu vine, eating entire hillsides for
the purpose of feeding your own lush life. You
must know instead, that inside you are entire
Universes—milky blue, magenta, and gold—
expanding. But to actually be free, you must
know and you must fight for the entire
Universes inside of everyone else.
Being free is not a license, but
A promise.