Elaine Enns and Ched Myers’ most recent book.
Healing Haunted Histories:
A Settler Discipleship of Decolonization
Praise for HHH | HHH Media & Press | HHH Resources
In Healing Haunted Histories: A Settler Discipleship of Decolonization, Elaine and Ched take on the “ghosts” of settler colonialism, Indigenous displacement, and white supremacy that inhabit our landscapes, our family histories and our souls — and map out a process for engaging and healing them.
Available for order now, this 400-page book is equal parts memoir (mostly focusing on Enns’ Mennonite family and community, who endured the Russian Civil War, fled the Soviet aftermath and settled on Indigenous land in Saskatchewan in the 1920s); social analysis; theological reflection; and workbook for those ready to “do their own work.” It explores how the history of genocide against Indigenous peoples continues today in racist and inequitable practices and policies, and models how to learn and navigate one’s own family and community stories of complicity. The aim of this study is to call and equip Christians (and other people of faith and conscience) to build solidarity with Indigenous communities, including experimenting with practices of reparation.
The story of Elaine’s family and community’s experience as refugees, as settlers on the Canadian prairies, and as neighbors with Cree communities invites readers to consider:
- Landlines: Where did our families come from, and how did they get here? Were they forced or pushed from their places of origin? Who was displaced by their arrival in North America, and how does the land hold these stories?
- Bloodlines: What do we know about our family immigrant and settler histories? How might our communal stories be devised or distorted? What traumas or privileges have we inherited because of their experiences?
- Songlines: What faith traditions and/or cultural practices fostered resilience in them, and which have been passed on to us? What touchstones feed our spirits, minds, and bodies today, and inspire our commitment to work for justice and healing?
Interrogating our own communal past and present takes us into often painful and complex terrain, but invites us into personal and political transformation.
Praise for Healing Haunted Histories
“This profound, timely, humbling, but ultimately empowering study is exemplary in every way, offering a path through thickets of intense debate and hope amid cacophonies of denial and anger.”
— Rev. Dr. Samuel Wells, vicar of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London
“I was profoundly moved by Healing Haunted Histories. It felt like one of those moments of finding just the right voices, just the right encouragement, and just the right challenge at just the right time.”
— Dr. Nathan Stucky, Director, Farminary Project, Princeton Theological Seminary
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