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June 10th, 2010
Open Spaces Sacred Places

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In 1996, Tom and Kitty Stoner started the TKF Foundation in Annapolis, Maryland, to create spaces that would “offer a temporary place of sanctuary, encourage reflection, provide solace, and engender peace.” The foundation has helped develop more than one hundred sites, from urban community gardens to labyrinths and healing spaces at hospitals, medical centers, churches, prisons, and correctional facilities. Each project is developed in partnership with local community leaders. We talked with Tom Stoner and executive director Mary Wyatt who explained why these open spaces are also sacred places.

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Todd Marcus runs Newborn Holistic Ministries, a faith-based organization that works to revitalize Baltimore’s Sandtown-Winchester and Upton neighborhoods. He and a group of volunteers restored the empty lots around Martha’s Place, a center for women recovering from drug addiction.

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In an alleyway behind Amazing Grace Lutheran Church in East Baltimore, the rubble from once abandoned row houses has become a prayer labyrinth and community garden. Pastor Gary Dittman and gardener Jessie Scott talk about the site as a place of meditation, transformation, healing, and hope.

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Gloria Carpeneto is director of the Northeast Interfaith Peace Garden, located on the grounds of St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church in Baltimore. The labyrinth featured in this meditation garden and community sanctuary serves as a path for silent walking and contemplative exercises.

Produced by Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly production assistant Fabio Lomelino and Web producer Fred Yi

widepost-tomIn 1996, Tom and Kitty Stoner started the TKF Foundation in Annapolis, Maryland, to create spaces that would “offer a temporary place of sanctuary, encourage reflection, provide solace, and engender peace.” The foundation has helped develop more than one hundred sites, from urban community gardens to labyrinths and healing spaces at hospitals, medical centers, churches, prisons, and correctional facilities. Each project is developed in partnership with local community leaders. Watch founder Tom Stoner and executive director Mary Wyatt explain why these open spaces are also sacred places.

We visited some of the foundation’s faith-based partners in Baltimore to talk to them about how sacred places serve their communities.

Todd Marcus runs Newborn Holistic Ministries, a faith-based organization that works to revitalize Baltimore’s Sandtown-Winchester and Upton neighborhoods. He and a group of volunteers restored the empty lots around Martha’s Place, a center for women recovering from drug addiction.

In an alleyway behind Amazing Grace Lutheran Church in East Baltimore, the rubble from once abandoned row houses has become a prayer labyrinth and community garden. Pastor Gary Dittman and gardener Jessie Scott talk about the site as a place of meditation, transformation, healing, and hope.

Gloria Carpeneto is director of the Northeast Interfaith Peace Garden, located on the grounds of St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church in Baltimore. The labyrinth featured in this meditation garden and community sanctuary serves as a path for silent walking and contemplative exercises.

 

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2 Responses to “Open Spaces Sacred Places”
  1. jean sweeney says:

    The TKF foundation’s vision and generosity brings such love to dry and empty places. I live not too far from a transformed spot behind St Anthony Church in Falls Church. Between back walls has been created a Peace Garden with peace poles from many different faiths and justice organizations, a fountain that speaks of the living water for all, gardens and benches to come and meditate. I have sat there alone, and have come with others as they shared their pondering of God. Thanks to Kitty and Tom Stoner for a model of stewardship of money.

  2. zeka says:

    the discussion is more realistic with a lot of living examples.talk more of sacred places in African society.

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Related R & E Material:

Labyrinth

Related Links:

Veriditas: Experience the Wisdom of the Labyrinth

Labyrinth Society

Related Reading:

OPEN PLACES SACRED SPACES by Tom Stoner and Carolyn Rapp

WALKING A SACRED PATH by Lauren Artress

LABYRINTHS FOR THE SPIRIT by Jim Buchanan

THE UNENDING MYSTERY: A JOURNEY THROUGH LABYRINTHS AND MAZES by David Willis McCullough

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