Connect to the 2024 Abolition Advent Calendar

Abolition Advent Calendar

The Days Are Surely Coming: Reducing Harm, Preparing the Way

 

The days are surely coming, says the Holy One, when I will fulfill the promise
I made to…execute justice and righteousness in the land.  – Jeremiah 33:14-15

 

Welcome to the 2024 Abolition Advent Calendar 
Since our first Abolition Advent Calendar, the UCC’s Join the Movement toward Racial Justice initiative has embraced the season of Advent as an invitation to hold together visions of the future for which we are waiting and preparing and the recognition of how deep our longing is for that future to be made flesh in our midst. In this way, our practices of Advent are practices of abolition, because abolition calls us to dismantle the enslaving paradigms of our day as we imagine and prepare the way for a future of freedom and flourishing for all.

In this crucial moment in our country and our world, we recognize that the marginalization, stigmatization, dehumanization, and criminalization of people who use drugs, along with the overdose crisis these systems have created, form one of the most intractable enslaving paradigms of our time.  In this season we are called not only to recognize the strategies and tactics of enslavement as they manifest among us, but also to witness the way they call us anew to the sacred work of abolition.  Investing our time, energy, imagination, and resources in the freedom-bringing work of harm reduction can prepare the way for the new day of love and justice that is surely coming.

Harm reduction is beloved community.
It is transformative anti-oppression. It is liberation.
It is reciprocity and reconciliation.
It is sanctuary. It is the gospel.
And it is our obligation to ensure that this gospel of dignity, compassion, of love,
that this gospel of harm reduction, is accessible to all.  – Erica Poellot

So this Advent, as we await and prepare for the coming of transformational Love in flesh and bone, we want to invite your engagement with generative connection between scripture readings for the season and contemporary abolition movements, in particular this year, the harm reduction movement.  Each week we will explore a one of the principles of harm reduction as the lens through which we are encountering the Advent scriptures and imagining abolition.

  • Week 1 – Harm reduction calls for the non-judgmental, non-coercive provision of services and resources to people who use drugs and the communities in which they live in order to assist them in reducing attendant harm
  • Week 2 – Harm reduction affirms people who use drugs (PWUD) themselves as the primary agents of reducing the harms of their drug use and seeks to empower PWUD to share information and support each other in strategies which meet their actual conditions of use
  • Week 3 – Harm reduction recognizes that the realities of poverty, class, racism, social isolation, past trauma, sex-based discrimination, and other social inequalities affect both people’s vulnerability to and capacity for effectively dealing with drug-related harm
  • Week 4 – Harm reduction ensures that people who use drugs and those with a history of drug use routinely have a real voice in the creation of programs and policies designed to serve them

 

Each reflection will be posted below daily throughout the season.  We hope you will make these reflections part of your waiting, hoping and preparing this Advent, as you deepen your understanding of abolition as part of the work of practicing antiracism.

 

Freedom Songs for the Waiting and Preparing
At the heart of every movement toward collective freedom and every abolition movement, are songs.  Our movement ancestors and leaders have always known that putting the messages and values of our movements to music is one way to dream new ways of being in the world into our bones.  They also drew on the wisdom that singing together means breathing together means learning how to be in principled struggle and stay together.  So this Advent, as part of our Abolition Advent Calendar, we are including simple movement songs that you can learn and carrying with you throughout the season.  We hope that the more you sing these songs of freedom, the more they will become prayers and visions that live in your bones, until we all know that liberation and love by heart.

 

Sign up!

Sign up here to receive Abolition Advent Calendar reflections via email.

 

 

“Abolition is about presence, not absence. It's about building life-affirming institutions…what the world will become already exists in fragments and pieces, experiments and possibilities… Abolition is building the future from the present in all the ways that we can.”

- Ruth Wilson Gilmore

Share Stories. Build Movements.

We know you are doing creative, innovative, and heartfelt antiracist work in your communities. And we want to hear about it! Share stories about your work for racial justice to inspire and equip others in their advocacy and activism. By contributing your voice and listening to others, you help build the movement toward racial justice, across cultural expressions and lived experiences. Submit your story today.

Submit Your Story

Stay Connected. Nourish Movements.

Sign up to receive alerts about new stories and resources. You’ll also enjoy our Join the Movement newsletter, featuring changemaker profiles, reflections on current events in the movement toward racial justice, and more. Get sneak previews and information about upcoming events, workshops and webinars.

Name