An Evening with John McKnight and Ivan Illich

April 4, 2009

Lots of people at Tab are excited about the Asset Mapping process Kit Danley discussed at the Tab@Home Retreat.  This coming Monday, you have the opportunity to hear from John McKnight, one of the creators of Asset-Based Community Development.  This event might lead to very important conversations about what “doing ministry” should look like.

What:
“An Evening with John McKnight and Ivan Illich: A Posthumous Conversation to End Helping”

When:
Monday, April 6th
6:30pm-8:00pm

Where:
Broadway United Methodist Church
609 E. 29th St.
 

John L. McKnight is professor of Communication Studies and co-director of the Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD) Institute at the Institute for Policy Research (IPR), Northwestern University. 

McKnight is internationally recognized for his critique of the ways in which social service and other organizations “problemize” people. In his view, seeing “needs” instead of “capacities” and “assets” cripples not only those supposedly being helped, but their communities as well. He saw that by focusing on meeting needs and deficiencies, these organizations were seeing the glass as being half empty—instead of half full. But by shifting their paradigm from needs-based to asset-based, communities and organizations could maximize their “human resources.” To aid communities and organizations in this transition, he co-founded the Asset-Based Community Development Institute with John Kretzmann in 1995 under the aegis of IPR. Through the ABCD Institute, he has advised communities in both the U.S. and other countries including Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, and the Netherlands. His work in this area has had enormous influence on how epilepsy is treated, how foundations such as the United Way distribute their funding and view their “clients,” and how the developmentally disabled can be reintegrated into mainstream society. Above all else, John is a master storyteller.

Ivan Illich (1926-2002): 
Ivan Illich was born in Vienna in 1926. He was forced to leave school in 1941 under Nazi race laws because of his mother’s Jewish origins. He went to Italy where he studied in Florence and later was a student of philosophy and theology at the Gregorian University in Rome. He later returned to Austria where he obtained a PhD in history at the University of Salzberg.

He first came to the United States in 1951, working as a parish priest and championing the cause of Puerto Rican immigrants in New York City. Later he was appointed the deputy rector of the Catholic University of Puerto Rico where he began his work developing an intensive and culturally grounded training program for American priests whose ministry allowed them to work among Latinos.  Ivan Illich became increasingly frustrated with the bureaucracy of the church and left the priesthood in 1969. He went on to co-found the Center for Intercultural Documentation (CIDOC) in Cuernavaca, Mexico–a training research center which also served as a think-tank for innovative educators world-wide. It was there that he wrote his ground-breaking critique of the educational system, Deschooling Society (1971), arguing that school made people dumb.Since the 1980s, Illich divided his time between Mexico, the United States, and Germany where he taught at the University of Bremen. Ivan Illich died on December 2, 2002, in the northern German city of Bremen where he had lectured in sociology for the past decade.


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