Letters from home



Dear Reader,

I’ve been thinking about letters lately.

Even after the mail strike, we noticed a lull in letters to Canadian Mennonite this winter. Was the magazine content not interesting? Why was there no response to a sexual assault story.

When we invited readers to join our Lenten digital detox, we didn’t intend it to be socially isolating, so we actually hand-wrote and mailed letters to our detoxers. One wrote back: “I was really encouraged that you took the time to reach out personally with that note—it was a concrete sign that what [we] are trying to do, is done in community with others.”

Hand-written letters addressed to participating detoxers. Photo: Susan Fish

Similarly, we’ve heard of at least one Mennonite church in Canada who’ve begun writing letters to American churches, as a form of solidarity in Christ during a time when politics threaten to divide us.

I just finished writing a novel told in letters. The main character lives an isolated life and writing letters gives her a way to work through questions of identity.

And, if our identity is found in Christ, Augustine reminds us, “The Holy Scriptures are our letters from home.”

Is this a shameless plug to encourage you to write to us? Sure.

But it’s also a reminder that, whether it is the biblical letter from home or the (less authoritative but hopefully still interesting) writing in CM, these are conversations to which we can each respond, in our lives and words.

Looking forward to hearing from you,

Susan


Armin and Edith Krahn describe how speaking up can bring healing or pain in Life in the 80s. Photo: Kristin Klassen



Some people with very few words communicate more than most of us. Melody Steinman profiles one such individual in [[link]](Dis)Ability and Belonging: Let your words be few. Photo: Maarten Deckers/Unsplash



Who says there’s no good news? Be encouraged by the University ministry celebrated story of what’s happening among University of Manitoba students. Photo: Gladys Terichow



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