Twomey Center for Peace Through Justice

Twomey Center
for Peace Through Justice
Predecessor Institute of Industrial Relations
Established 1947 (1947)
Founder
Louis J. Twomey S.J.
Director
Alvaro B. Alcazar
Main organ
Blueprint for Social Justice
Affiliations Loyola U. New Orleans
Jesuit, Catholic
Staff
Six
Website Twomey

Twomey Center for Peace Through Justice at Loyola University New Orleans began in 1947 with the efforts of Fr. Louis J. Twomey, S.J., an early advocate for the rights of labor, and his distribution of the newsletter Christ's Blueprint for the South to his fellow Jesuits. Sixty-nine years later Twomey's efforts have expanded to a variety of programs in support of the faith that does justice.[1]

History

In 1947 Louis J. Twomey, S.J., founded the Institute of Industrial Relations to defend the rights of labor in the workplace. He published Christ's Blueprint for the South to advance this cause, and his struggle soon extended to opposing racism in a prophetic way that was unpopular with many in the churches and among his own Jesuit brethren at the time. He saw labor and race issues as "two sides of the same coin," with justice for both coming together.

The widening scope of Twomey's work is reflected in the name changes of his Center, to Human Relations Institute and then to Twomey Center for Peace Through Justice since 1991. By 2016 the Center could celebrate surviving cuts and consolidations in LU programs[2] and continue to pursue social justice on many fronts: human rights and workers' rights, conflict resolution, racism, the impoverished in general and educational opportunities for all.[3]

Twomey Center has been supported by funds from 16 organizations including Campaign for Human Development, USDA,[4] and Bread for the World for which it is the local affiliate.[5]

Activities

The Center facilitates, on and off the Loyola campus, involvement in community issues through various initiatives.

Blueprint

Beginning in 1948, Christ's Blueprint for the South came to be circulated among Jesuits worldwide, with a special focus on those in studies, as a guide for social justice formation and the apostolate. Twomey died in 1969, after seeing his efforts confirmed and furthered by the Second Vatican Council of Catholic Bishops, and after his death the Blueprint began to be distributed beyond his preferred, Jesuit audience to the general public. Under various editors Blueprint expanded its coverage and spawned other efforts. It currently focuses on social justice with an emphasis on cultural diversity and inter-religious dialogue.[13] Recent issues are freely available on the Center's website and back issues are available in Loyola University library.
The Center has supported itself in part by soliciting business for its printing services.[14]

References

Coordinates: 29°56′03″N 90°07′18″W / 29.934236°N 90.121685°W / 29.934236; -90.121685

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.