Taize Prayer/ Songs

12+

with Hanna van Dijk-Alāč

Taize prayer is a form of contemplative spiritual practice, rooted in the Christian tradition, and originally developed in the context of an international and intergenerational praying community in France. Taize songs share words of scripture, often with multiple language options, and are usually repeated to build a sense of peace and meditation. Come and explore contemplative prayer through calming songs. We’ll try a few.

about the facilitator

Hanna has been a Cahoots participant for years and is sharing her first session this year! She has loved Taize prayer ever since she encountered it for the first time while working at Queens U, living in Kingston. The local Catholic Church would have Taize nights: a choir singing in the dark with candles and she thought it was like heaven. She then visited the Taize community in France in 2001 and is excited to share this year!

Recovering from Religious Trauma

12+

with Deanna Fraser

Recovering from Religious Trauma is a conversation that is desperately needed within faith communities and beyond. This session will share personal stories of religious trauma, responses and survival, explore the latest research, and have space for discussion and conversation for mutual learning. Whatever experiences you bring to the session, know that our intention is to hold space for your stories and move towards a healing community.
Since this session engages trauma, Deanna encourages all participants to engage in the way that is best for them, including taking breaks or leaving if need be. Resources and content information will be provided, and a chaplain will be available to listen.

about the facilitator

Hi! I’m Deanna (she/her). I am a religious trauma survivor and a sociology nerd. I am a 4th year Social Psychology student at McMaster, a queer single mom of 2, and a piano and voice teacher. In my spare time, I listen to nerdy podcasts and audiobooks, cuddle my pup, go on adventures with my kids, and go to therapy.

I was a missionary for a fringe section of a non-denominational Charismatic organization for six years and grew up as a ministry kid before that. I was twenty-seven when I burned out so severely I wanted to end my life. Over the next nine years, I began deconstructing my faith and discovered the phrase “religious trauma.” I became invested in learning as much as possible about it, connecting with others with shared experiences and finding ways to heal together. I have since facilitated two online religious trauma recovery groups and currently facilitate an in-person support group for survivors of religious trauma in partnership with Stardust Therapeutic Collective. I am currently involved in a capstone research project on the intersection of faith and disability and working on a proposal for a research project on the effects of leaving religion. It would be my great honour to hold space for your stories and share with you mine. We heal in community.

Protest as Prayer

12+

with Julian Munro / King Julez

The need for spiritual care arises in all aspects of life and it is of critical importance to nourish one’s inner spirit. When it comes to justice work, protest movements and encampments those involved can become exhausted in mind, body and spirit. In 2024, Julian, along with classmates and faculty provided spiritual care to those present at UofT (University of Toronto) Pro Palestinian Encampment. As a result of this experience, Julian will invite us to consider how protest is like a deeply sacred prayer that transforms and works in us. Join in a meaningful and important discussion of what it means to find protest as prayer today.

about the facilitator

Julian (they/it) is a student at Emmanuel College. It is training to be ordained into ministry in the United Church and a registered psychotherapist. They are an activist, animal lover, and drag clown! Come to “Protest as Prayer” to hear stories from the UofT Pro-Palestinian Encampment and how activism and prayer unite.

Playing with emotions and concepts through clay sculpture

All Ages

with abi lyon wicke

Do you like to create? Are you interested in expressing yourself in a unique way? Come get your hands messy while keeping your mind and heart open as we explore the possibilities of emotion and expression through clay. No need to stress about expertise as this is a safe and open space for anything you have to bring to the workshop.

about the facilitator

abi lyon wicke (she/her) is a maker of things, a keeper of gardens, chickens and bees. She spends her days learning alongside her children, rescuing, repurposing and mending things with her partner, Chris, tending life in many forms and trying to evolve.

Jasper Wicke (she/they) began drawing as soon as she could hold a crayon and has rarely been without a drawing tool in hand in the thirteen years or so since that time. Jasper has been described as an old soul but they also brim over with youthful enthusiasm and a passion for tending what is broken in our world.

Jasper and abi both love to encourage others in their creative pursuits. This will be their second co-facilitation of a Cahoots creative workshop together.

Palestine Land Exercise

12+

with Miriam Spies, Diane Blanchard, Sheilagh McGlynn (assisting)

In order to understand the dynamics of settler colonialism in Israel and Palestine, we need to understand how land is being taken from Palestinians through the process of house demolition, illegal building of settlements and confiscation for military purposes. The Palestine Land Exercise shares some elements with the Blanket Exercise that helped many of us look at the history of colonization in Canada and its impact on Indigenous peoples.

about the facilitator

Diane Blanchard – chair of United Network for Justice and Peace in Palestine/Israel (UNJPPI); retired United Church minister; traveled in Palestine/Israel in 2010

Miriam Spies – former SCM-C board member, current chair of WSCF-C; a crip theologian, ordained in The United Church of Canada; traveled in Palestine/Israel in 2009.

Over my dead body: green burial today

12+

with Sue Lyon

Green burials involve a natural return to the earth—biodegradable caskets or shrouds are used, bodies are buried three feet down, there is no embalming, and natural decomposition nourishes the earth and can support natural habitats. In most areas, green burial is also the least expensive option, contrasting with the profit-hungry corporate cemetery “services” that often exploit ordinary people at a particularly vulnerable moment in their lives. Green burial resonates strongly with biblical Christian teaching. That we came from dust and to dust we return (Gn 3:19) and that our central human task on this planet is to care for the earth and for each other. Come to learn more about the principles of a green burial, how it contributes to our care of the earth and how we can take back control of the natural process of death.

about the facilitator

Sue is a studio potter in Kingston and an elder at Next church. She has been the convenor for Green Burial Kingston since its inception in 2018. GBK is an advocacy group for green or natural burial. She believes that 2025 will be a milestone year as the City of Kingston will open more than 100 green burial sites.

David Lyon is Sue’s partner, an author and a retired professor who supports Sue in the green burial work. David has written some op eds and articles about green burial.

Gospel Contemplation: The Spiritual Practice of Imagination!

12+

with Randell Neudorf

There are more ways to engage scripture than just Bible study. Engaging with scripture can become a dynamic time of prayer when we allow our imaginations in. Using the spiritual practice of Gospel Contemplation, participants will have the chance to reflect on scripture as the “film director” (set the scene), “the actor” (choose a role) and finally by “breaking the 4th wall” (praying into the story as yourself). Don’t worry if you have stage fright, this movie will only play out in your own imagination! Bring a willingness to read a Jesus story through your imagination, and openness to a fresh ‘encounter’ in your personal experience.

about the facilitator

Randell Neudorf is an artist, musician, and believe it or not, a punk monk on staff with GOHOP (the Greater Ontario House of Prayer). GOHOP is an urban monastic ministry based in Hamilton, Ontario and part of the world wide movement of 24-7 Prayer. Randell loves combining new and ancient spiritual practices in ways that make prayer dynamic, participatory, safe and sometimes even a little fun.

Feel a prayer – Encountering the Divine in Nature

All Ages

with Bailey Eastwood

“If I really wanted to pray I’ll tell you what I’d do. I’d go out into a great big field all alone or into the deep, deep, woods, and I’d look up into the sky–up–up–up–into that lovely blue sky that looks as if there was no end to its blueness. And then I’d just feel a prayer.”
Join Bailey for a walk in the woods and one of their favourite Anne Shirley-inspired spiritual practices. We’ll explore some of the trails around camp (perhaps learning about some of the plants and trees around us as we go!), stopping often to “feel a prayer” in the beautiful and holy spaces we encounter.

about the facilitator

Bailey Eastwood (they/them) is a United Church minister and the National Coordinator of the Student Christian Movement of Canada. Their faith and ministry have been formed and shaped by summer camping ministries, a lifetime of reading, a deep appreciation for the natural world, and their undergraduate education in biochemistry. Bailey loves being in community, encountering new theologies, making things with their hands, and learning just about anything. Their life’s ambition is to be able to identify every tree.

Entering into Trans Solidarity

12+

with Jack! (Silas Foxton)

This workshop will be largely geared towards cisgender folks looking to learn about trans experiences and how to be in solidarity with trans people, to hold a graceful space for learning and exploring uncomfortable questions. Through this workshop we will learn and discuss together the ways that we are all deeply interconnected to the struggles of transgender people and can find in trans liberation a movement towards life-affirming ways of being for all people. Trans and nonbinary people are also welcome to attend, as we can all learn and share something new about eachother’s experiences. Leave behind ideas of otherness but bring any burning question (or simmering ones) you might have about transness.

about the facilitator

Jack is a genderqueer artist and writer of many names and occupations meandering around the great lakes basin. They are deeply invested in trans community care and the relationships that keeps us alive and make that life worth living. Jack has been a rogue trans inclusivity educator for over 10 years and loves having challenging, awkward and important conversations.

Dance our Dreams and Desires for this World

12+

with Sheilagh McGlynn

Let’s take some time to focus on our visions and dreams for our ourselves and for our world. Come and dance those intentions using the free form flow of conscious movement. We will follow our time of movement together with creating an artistic representation of that vision (collage, drawing, etc) that can take home as your vision board. Come and move, dream and tap into your creative spirit! No dance experience is necessary, just an openness to move and be moved.

about the facilitator

Sheilagh has been involved in the Student Christian Movement of Canada since she was in high school. She found her faith identity in working for change in this world. She has worked in church settings (Youth Ministry and Campus Ministry) and in the last decade as a Psychotherapist. She loves helping people reveal their truest potential – finding their calling, expressing themselves fully, or celebrating the gifts they have to offer the world. She has found self-care through movement and playfulness and is looking to offer some of that to Cahoots participants.

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