Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
Anonymous
New Account
Forgot Password
News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: Sending Stories Home From Prison
Title:US IL: Sending Stories Home From Prison
Published On:1998-01-02
Source:San Jose Mercury News
Fetched On:2008-09-07 17:45:24
SENDING STORIES HOME FROM PRISON

Parents Who Can't Read To Their Children At Bedtime Record Their Voices
Instead

LINCOLN, Ill. -- Erika Gonzales is reading to her 2-year-old boy, Jimmy.
It's a simple book about the simple things children do: visit the corner,
take the bus to Grandma's, go to first grade.

But barely a sentence along, she tosses the book down.

Crying and swiping at tears with the palms of her hands, she whispers, ``I
can't read it.''

Then she gathers herself and starts reading again -- into a cold, black
tape recorder. Jimmy is 125 miles away in Joliet. Gonzales is in prison.

``Mommy misses you and loves you,'' she tells the recorder. ``She's going
to read you a book to let you know this is me and I love you.''

She soon finishes the story, then gives the recording to the volunteers who
will make sure it is mailed.

This is the Storybook Project, a program built around the simple idea that
parents in prison should have a chance to read to their children.
Volunteers collect books and recorders, take them to prisons and let
inmates record stories and personal messages.

``It's an amazing experience to go in and realize just how much these
parents care for their kids,'' said Linda Ketcham, who runs the program for
Lutheran Social Services. ``Part of what we're trying to do is make sure
kids know Mom is OK. Many of them are very frightened for their parents.''

Gonzales, a soft-spoken 18-year-old with her hair in a long ponytail, said
her sister is caring for Jimmy while she serves a year for robbery and
battery. She has not seen him in almost five months.

``I just want him to hear my voice,'' Gonzales said. ``I've been doing a
lot of thinking. I'm ready to go home to my child. I want to quit drinking
and all that stuff.''

The Storybook Project gives her a way to reach her son. But the volunteers
staffing the project try not to get carried away over the impact of that
contact.

``We're talking about a little 15-minute experience here,'' said volunteer
Linda Thomas. ``This is not going to cure the family's problems. But I
can't help thinking (that) from the child's perspective, it will be a
memory of a loving moment.''

The volunteers arrive at Logan Correctional Center, a medium-security
prison with 641 women and 1,038 men, about 9 a.m. It is past 9:30 before
security allows them in.

Most have been doing this monthly since May. That's when this central
Illinois project got its start. It is modeled after similar programs
serving county jail prisoners in southern Illinois and Chicago.

Inmates at Logan leaped at the chance to take part, said Sandra
Kibby-Brown, an assistant warden. Dozens of inmates have signed up, with
more requests coming in every day.

The volunteers set up in one of the prison classrooms, filling it with
books: ``Big Bird's Busy Day.'' ``David and Goliath.'' ``A Is for Africa.''
``Willie Mays.''

Books for little children can be recorded in just a few minutes. With
longer books for older children, prisoners commonly record the first
chapter and encourage the children to finish it for themselves.

Once the recording is done, the tape and book are packaged and sent off to
the child.

Volunteer Sally Wolf said some prisoners cry and some maintain their
composure -- at first.

``Even the most stoic ones get a little emotional by the end,'' Wolf said.
``It's that `Bye, I'll see you' thing that gets them.''

She recalled one inmate who brought dog-eared pictures of her children. She
placed the pictures on the recorder and read to them.

``We were both bawling,'' Wolf said.

Alice Turner has not seen her five children in months. She should get out
in March after serving more two years for burglary. In a classroom next to
a set of 1978 encyclopedias, she reads ``Sweet Pea's Thank-You Book.''

``That was a nice little book,'' she tells the children. ``Give each other
a big kiss for me. Bye-bye.''
Member Comments
No member comments available...