Check out this video about IMYM’s 2023 Keynote speaker John Watts

Friends, let’s give a warm welcome to the 2023 IMYM Annual Gathering Plenary Speaker: Jon Watts of QuakerSpeak and TheeQuaker Project. Jon, a Quaker songwriter and video creator, has produced over 220 videos and brought 3.5 million plus eyes to the Religious Society of Friends. We asked Jon to join us in our quest of Becoming the Quakers the World Needs Today and his keynote, interest group, and Young Friend sessions will help us rise to the occasion. Intro text block

Jon Watts is a member of Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, which holds his ministry under its care. He is a Quaker media creator and spiritual entrepreneur. As a songwriter, Jon toured the world sharing stories of the Early Friends and his own spiritual journey growing up in a Quaker intentional community and attending the Quaker Leadership Scholars Program at Guilford College.Trailing text block.

IMYM Presiding Clerk Spring Newsletter!

 Update from the Presiding Clerk

*Photo Credit to A Colorado Wildflowers Guide, Blanket flower photo by Sweet Babeejay

After years of seeking, George Fox’s spiritual transformation occurred when “I heard a voice which said, ‘There is one, even Christ Jesus, that can speak to thy condition’ and when I heard it my heart did leap for joy.”  It is the experience and practice of Friends that this spiritual transformation can happen to anyone and everyone during silent, expectant worship, regardless of the words used to represent “Jesus.” The reality of this experience is the heart of Quaker light and life. Through communal expectant worship we can experience this connection and transformation. Of course, in the 21st century, the world is  considerably different from (that of) George Fox’s day. We have more “noise” and distractions as a result of many factors including consumerism, mass media, social media, and rapidly progressing technological change.

Does the Quaker way (continue to) speak to our “condition?”

Come to Annual Gathering to experience (our beloved) community, relax, have fun, and together learn how to become the Quakers the world needs today.

Annual Gathering 2023 registration is open at imym.org.

The Way Forward Working Group

I began my term as interim presiding clerk in September 2022, with my term ending at the rise of Annual Gathering 2023. During this time, with the help and support of many Friends (thank you!), we have managed to continue much of the work of the yearly meeting. My other goal has been to facilitate a vision for IMYM’s future. If we accept that our yearly meeting is important to us, what do we want it to be? We have a wide range of options to consider, including: An entirely online, virtual community? A yearly meeting providing a wide range of services and support to our monthly meetings? A yearly meeting that supports and engages with the broader Quaker community of organizations? The Representatives Committee formed and has charged the Way Forward Planning group to discern a future for IMYM. The purpose of this work is for IMYM to come to unity on a shared future vision and structure at Annual Gathering 2024. The Representative’s Committee has developed an outline for an operating plan to complete the day-to-day management of IMYM through the rise of Annual Gathering 2024. My concern as Interim Presiding Clerk is that no one is in place and prepared to develop and do the detailed work of this outline.

In Light & Life,

Jerry

*Photo credit to Judi Dressler (Boulder Friends Meeting) for the stunning Sandhill Cranes image.

Annual Gathering Registration is NOW OPEN!!!

Featuring Keynote Speaker: Jon Watts of QuakerSpeak

Friends, come one, come all, to Intermountain Yearly Meeting Annual Gathering 2023, online and in-person at Ft. Lewis College, Durango, Colorado.  Please join us Wednesday, June 21st through Sunday, June 25th. We’ll come together for daily worship sharing, meeting for worship with concern for business, awesome youth programs, excellent interest groups, all-ages special events, fellowship with friends, rejuvenation, and FUN, FUN, FUN.

Register Now

Monthly Meetings – soon check your postal mail for a special care package with an eye-catching event poster (to hang in your Meetinghouses) and event “tickets” you can share with your community to help encourage a full and lively Annual Gathering 2023.

The IMYM Peace and Social Justice Roundtable

The IMYM Peace and Social Justice Roundtable provides an online space for IMYM community members to share and discuss their personal, Meeting, or Worship Group peace and social justice interests, concerns, and projects. Please ZOOM with us on the last Saturday of every month at 2pm mountain time (Denver). Open to ALL Friends! Click HERE for more info!

Host Family Needed

We need a Host Family for our Heberto Sein visitor. IMYM hosts a delegate chosen by Mexico City meeting at our Annual Gathering each year. Ernesto de Jesús is our Heberto Sein visitor. IMYM needs a host family to assist with Ernesto’s participation in IMYM’s Annual Gathering. The host job is to provide hospitality to Ernesto as needed. This includes picking up at the airport, providing food and lodging for a day or so, transportation to and from Durango and the Annual Gathering, providing transportation back to the airport after the end of the Annual Gathering.

For more information contact Jerry Peterson, clerk@imym.org303-726-8960.

Friends World for Consultation (FWCC), Section of the Americas SOUTHWEST REGIONAL GATHERING VIA ZOOM MAY 6, 2023, 11 am Denver Time, 2 hours.

Traveling minister Emily Provance will help us explore the challenges of meeting via computer. Can we sense the “Presence of the Room” when the room has no walls? How do we maintain unity? The meeting will be conducted in both English & Spanish. All Friends are welcome. Click HERE for more info.

Quaker United Nations Office (QUNO)75th Anniversary Celebration

This June, we are celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Quaker United Nations Office (QUNO) in New York. Since its inception, QUNO has worked with diplomats, UN officials, and community members to implement the original vision of peace and human rights enshrined in the United Nations’ Charter. Our commitment to lifting up diverse perspectives, insights, and concerns has led Quakers to be seen as trusted partners who create the space for new and creative solutions in response to global challenges. Click HERE for more info!

SOUTHWEST FWCC REGIONAL GATHERING:  LISTENING TO GOD ONLINE (BILINGUAL) Via Zoom May 06, 2023

Traveling minister Emily Provance will help us explore the challenges of meeting via computer. Can we sense the “Presence of the Room” when the room has no walls? How do we maintain unity? The meeting will be conducted both in English and Spanish. All Friends are welcome.

We’ll meet for 2 hours, starting at:

10AM Pacific Time| 11AM Mountain | 12 noon Central |1PM Eastern

Please register to attend using the following link and the zoom address will be provided to you:

https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07ejp6hnio9d94a99a&oseq=&c=&ch=

Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC)

Section of the Americas

1506 Race Street, Philadelphia, PA 19102

americas@fwccamericas.org

CO Regional Spring Gathering – Sunday April 23, 2023 In Denver and via Zoom

Tension Between Science and Religion- conflict or misunderstanding?

Colorado Regional Meeting of Friends announces our Spring Gathering on Sunday, April 23, 2023, in person at Mountain View Friends Meeting, 2280 S Columbine Street, Denver CO 80210 and also on zoom for the morning worship and afternoon speaker. All Friends are welcome.

If you will be joining us at the Meeting House, please allow time to find parking on the street and join into worship.

To join online use this Zoom Link Or Dial-in: (669) 900-9128   Meeting ID: 720 689 917, Password: 547913  (If you are asked for a personal ID just stay on the line)  This is the regular Sunday worship zoom link, and will stay open during the entire Colorado Regional Program this Sunday.

Colorado Regional Friends Meeting is pleased to offer this Gathering with no registration fee. You may make a voluntary donation when registering.

Spring Gathering Program Schedule:

10:45 am Worship with Mountain View Friends (in person & on zoom)

12:15 pm Potluck Lunch hosted by Mountain View

1:00 pm Speaker: Jennifer Russell (in person & on zoom) on “Tension Between Science and Religion– conflict or misunderstanding?” followed by discussion and closing worship. 

2:30 pm  (Immediately following close of program discussion)  Brief Meeting for Business to approve the Regional Meeting’s 2023 Budget.

A Children’s program will be available during morning worship and after lunch.

About our Speaker

Jennifer Russell is a Member of the Wyoming Friends Meeting.  She is also the Treasurer and a former Recording Clerk for WFM.  Jennifer was raised in the Roman Catholic Church but never felt at home there.  She came to the Religious Society of Friends thanks to a quiz on the Beliefnet website and is still learning (after ten years) what it means to be a Quaker.

By profession and personality, Jennifer is an engineer (in the water resources field).  She worked in the consulting field for 26yrs and currently works in the construction division of the Wyoming Water Development Office, which funds many of the agricultural and municipal water projects in the State, and is the technical advisor for the State Revolving Fund program (EPA funded).

Having grown up all over Kansas (GO CATS!) and Nebraska, Jennifer has lived in Cheyenne for 26yrs and started attending Meeting for Worship with the Cheyenne group for approximately 10 yrs ago (since just after her 40th birthday).  She’s been married for 28yrs to Chris (also an engineer but the kind that “drives” trains).  Jennifer and Chris have no children of their own but have hosted a dozen high school exchange students, most for a full school year.

Documents In Advance

Coming Soon.

Call to Intermountain Yearly Meeting’s Annual Gathering 2023

“Becoming the Quakers the World Needs Today”

Wednesday, June 21 through Sunday, June 25, 2023
Hybrid, online and in person, at Fort Lewis College – Durango, Colorado  

Dear Friends,   Please join us at the IMYM Annual Gathering 2023 to enrich one another, love one another, and experience one another as wise and caring people committed to strengthening our beloved community.

We anticipate a spirit led and worshipful meeting for f/Friends of all ages to enjoy fun activities, inspiring interest groups, and nourishing fellowship.

We’ll also continue visioning the Way Forward for IMYM.   The Program Working Group is excited to welcome Plenary Speaker, Jon Watts of QuakerSpeak and TheeQuaker. Jon is devoted to our future as Friends and has brought over 3.5 million new eyes to the Religious Society of Friends through his modern media projects.
Our theme for 2023 is “Becoming the Quakers the World Needs Today.” It is OUR responsibility to engage in the work of listening, understanding, and acting. Are you ready?   IMYM is committed to creating an inclusive and accessible environment that encourages full participation in the life of our Yearly Meeting. Friends who have previously stayed away from Annual Gathering due to accessibility challenges at Ghost Ranch, will find Fort Lewis College a truly accessible venue.  

Registration Online registration will open in March 2023, so please stay tuned to your email or visit www.IMYM.org for the registration link. Registration closes Sunday, June 4th.  

Pricing is “pay as led”. This means that you pay the amount you feel able to pay. Please don’t let the cost of attendance prevent you from joining us.   Payment is due upon registration, by credit or debit card.  

For pay as led pricing work, IMYM needs individuals and monthly meetings to contribute generously to the Equalization Fund.  

In the words of Gila Friends Meeting: “Have hope, choose love, be kind.”

Looking forward to seeing you all in June,  
Jerry Peterson Interim Presiding Clerk Intermountain Yearly
Meeting Email: clerk@imym.org
Website: www.imym.org

Epistle to all Friends from Intermountain Yearly Meeting – 2022

Fort Lewis College, Durango, Colorado, USA
June 12-19, 2022

To Friends Everywhere:
We send greetings from Intermountain Yearly Meeting (IMYM) at Fort Lewis College in southwestern Colorado. We have returned to the southern edge of the San Juan Mountains after many annual gatherings in the high desert of northern New Mexico. We were grateful to find the sky relatively free of haze from the fires that have been burning throughout the southwest. A cool breeze greeted Friends as they gathered outdoors on the first day of early morning worship. We welcomed the sun, as we welcomed one another, celebrating the warmth that we feel in the company of Friends. Although we were attentive to lingering public health concerns and took precautions, we were thankful for friendly smiles and hugs. It was good to come home to this kind of fellowship, which helps us heal from the challenges we have all faced during the pandemic.

Our theme this year, offered to us by our children, was “Celebrating the Divine in All of Us.” With all of us in mind, our clerks and representatives were intent on making this year’s gathering as inclusive as possible. The accessibility of campus facilities enhanced our experience. For those who were unable to attend in person, access to programming was provided on a virtual platform. The technology team worked hard to create a hybrid welcome that included many friends zooming in on a big screen at the front of an auditorium. Well-placed monitors enabled Friends on Zoom to see the “live” audience and vice versa. Closed captioning further enhanced accessibility and provided some unintended levity with a few muddled translations including the transcription of “IMYM” as “I Am Yam.”

Fort Lewis College also strives for inclusivity. It was designated as one of six Native American-serving, non-tribal colleges by the U.S. Department of Education, which is especially appropriate given the deep indigenous roots in this region. This land is the ancestral land and territory of the Nuuchiu (Ute) people who were forcibly removed from most of their homeland by the United States Government. This land is also connected to the communal and ceremonial spaces of the Jicarilla Abache (Apache), Pueblos of New Mexico, Hopi Sinom (Hopi), and Diné (Navajo) Nations. It is important to acknowledge this setting because the dominant cultural narratives in this region have long been told without full recognition of its original residents who continue to inhabit and connect with this land.

Ernest House Jr., our plenary speaker this year, offered us a deeper sense, from the perspective of the Ute Mountain Utes, of what that connection has meant and still means. Given those who came before him–including his great grandfather Chief Jack House, the last hereditary chief of the Ute Mountain Ute tribe, and his father, longtime tribal leader Ernest House, Sr., our speaker exemplified a family tradition of leadership.

He offered Friends an introduction to the history of the Utes in this region, reminding us of many broken promises and treaties separating his people from their ancestral homelands. But he also pointed to the resilience of the Utes who have managed to maintain traditional ways of being on the land, such as hunting, fishing, and gathering plants for food and medicine. He shared stories of the annual Bear Dance which continues to be an important ceremony of relationship and renewal. He also spoke of efforts to sustain Ute Culture and language through education, including a new charter school in Towaoc, Colorado which Friends expressed interest in supporting.

Ernest reminded us that land acknowledgement statements referring to the long-time presence of indigenous people are only meaningful if they represent a commitment to reconciliation and healing. Part of that process for Friends, as we were reminded in a session led by Paula Palmer the following day, means coming to terms with the history of Indian boarding schools. Quakers established and ran some of these schools, which forced tribal students to abandon their cultural inheritance and identity in a misguided attempt to assimilate them. Ironically, given its advocacy for indigenous students today, Fort Lewis has institutional roots in one such boarding school, which was located in a former army fort in nearby Hesperus, Colorado from 1892 until 1956. Friends were deeply moved by stories related to Fort Lewis and other Indian boarding schools. These are hard stories to hear, but as Friends of the Truth, we must hear them. Friends were led to pray in this session for support and guidance as we enter into the early stages of this truth and reconciliation journey.

As Ernest House, Jr. said, this will be a long and challenging conversation, but we are intent on seeing it through. To that end, we passed a minute reconfirming our support for “The Truth and Healing Commission on Indian Boarding School Policy Act,” soon to be reintroduced in the U.S. Senate. We also passed a minute reaffirming our commitment to nuclear disarmament. We realize that stating our intentions is only part of fully engaging issues like nuclear disarmament. Whether it involves our advocacy for disarmament, dealing with climate change, or standing up for the humanity of migrants along our borders, our best efforts will be faith-based, as Anika Forrest from Friends Committee on National Legislation reminded us. As we continue to grapple with these and other issues, we sustain ourselves with good cheer, fellowship, steady worship, and a strong sense of community, all of which we have found here at yearly meeting.

But it takes a lot of work to sustain a yearly meeting, and we have faced challenges, as all yearly gatherings have, related to the pandemic, not to mention an aging population. Often, it has been difficult to fill positions of responsibility. This year, we arrived at our gathering unable to find unity on a nomination for presiding clerk. And so we open ourselves to the Spirit and invite the kind of support and guidance that will help us recognize and celebrate that of God in one another, while also acknowledging our differences and divisions. It helps us to sit together in the silence and stillness of worship and it helps us to listen deeply to one another in worship sharing. It helps us to sing together. We are grateful for the joyful voices of younger friends who remind us to that it is good to be open and vulnerable and ready to play. They remind us that the Spirit is in our midst,

In Faith, Hope, and Friendship,

Gale Toko-Ross and Valerie Ireland

Presiding Co-Clerks

Intermountain Yearly Meeting

2022 IMYM Minute on Nuclear Disarmament

Approved by Intermountain Yearly Meeting on June 17, 2022
Background

During our time of gathering this year, we acknowledge with sorrow the 77th anniversary of the birth of the age of nuclear warfare – the Trinity Test at what is now White Sands Missile Range. At the time, one of the creators of the atomic bomb, Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, quoted a line from the Hindu Bhagavad Gita: “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” Just over three weeks later, we saw the impact of “the destroyer of worlds” on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Today we have more than 12,000 nuclear weapons in the hands of nine nations. While that is an 80% reduction from the peak, every one of today’s nuclear warheads is many times more powerful than the explosion Oppenheimer witnessed. The United States has invested billions of dollars in facilities to develop, deploy and store nuclear weapons. We have embarked on a program of “modernization” that will spend $1.7 trillion on nuclear facilities and technology over the next decade.

This is, in essence, a gigantic public works program built on an immoral premise.

It is today’s analogy to the German industry producing Zyklon B gas to exterminate Jews. The world sees the folly of this enterprise; the U.S. joined 190 other nations in agreeing to work toward banning nuclear weapons totally in the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, effective in 1970. More recently, 122 nations agreed to the U.N. Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons on July 7, 2017. Pope Francis has spoken out against nuclear weapons and Santa Fe Archbishop John C. Wester, on January 11 of this year, issued a bold pastoral letter advocating nuclear disarmament: https://archdiosf.org/documents/2022/1/220111_ABW_Pastoral_Letter_LivingintheLightofChristsPeace_Official_Reduced.pdf:

Minute on Nuclear Disarmament

Friends today reaffirm our longstanding opposition to the existence of nuclear weapons, which are still the “destroyer of worlds.” We commit ourselves to opposing the “modernization” of these infernal tools of war, to supporting the U.S. in joining the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and to, wherever possible, advocating for the repurposing of the expertise and facilities of the nuclear weapons complex to peaceful purposes. We have gone down this road too long already!

2022 IMYM Minute on Healing from Trauma of Indigenous Boarding Schools

Approved by Intermountain Yearly Meeting on June 17, 2022

In June 2021, IMYM approved a minute supporting the “Truth and Healing Commission on Indian Boarding School Policy Act,” although a bill had not yet been introduced in the House and Senate. The bill is now designated as H.R. 5444/S. 2907. Intermountain Yearly Meeting reaffirms our support for this bill, which would create a Truth and Healing Commission to address the historical trauma experienced by Native American and Alaska Native children who were forcibly removed from their homes and placed in Indian
boarding schools. The children were taught to reject their Native languages, cultures, and spiritual practices and adopt Euro-American culture. Native Americans continue to suffer multi-generational trauma caused by this policy of forced assimilation and cultural genocide. Quakers were among the strongest supporters of the Indian boarding school policy and operated some 30 Indian schools (some in collaboration with the federal government) for varying periods of time.

We recognize that the history of the Indian schools is more complex than can be described in this brief minute. IMYM urges individual Friends and monthly meetings to watch for this bill and to urge their congressional representatives to support it. IMYM further urges Friends to learn the history of the Quaker Indian schools and consider ways to support Native-managed healing processes, including tribal programs to teach Native languages and prevent youth suicide. Resources for Further Information and Reflection

1) The website for the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition. https://boardingschoolhealing.org
2) Paula Palmer’s video “The Quaker Boarding Schools: Facing our History and Ourselves.”  https://vimeo.com/192219802/376f2f1ddb

3) Paula Palmer’s article  “Quaker Indian Boarding Schools, Facing Our History and Ourselves,” Friends Journal,

4) Toward Right Relationship with Native Peoples website, https://friendspeaceteams.org/trr

5) A First Look at the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative Report, by Portia Skenandore-Wheelock, https://www.fcnl.org/updates/2022-05/first-look-federal-indian-boarding-school-initiative-report

6) Decolonizing Quakers website, www.decolonizingquakers.org

7) Interior Secretary Haaland Opinion|My grandparents were stolen from their families as children.