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Prison Fellowship International

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Prison Fellowship International
Founded1979
FounderCharles W. Colson
FocusBiblical studies inprison,rehabilitation,child sponsorship
Location
Area served
112 countries
Key people
President and CEO: Andy Corley
Websitewww.pfi.org

Prison Fellowship International (PFI) is aChristian internationalnon-governmental organization of national prison fellowship organizations from 112 countries. The organization is based inWashington, D.C.,United States, and its current president is Andy Corley.

History

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The organization has its origins in thePrison Fellowship organization, which aims to support prisoners, founded in 1976 byCharles W. Colson, a former politician imprisoned for his involvement in theWatergate scandal.[1][2] In November 1978, a meeting was held inGreat Britain for the formation of a British antenna and to give an international dimension to the organization.[3] Prison Fellowship International was officially founded in 1979,[4][5] and works in 112 countries as of 2022.[6]

Programs

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Bible studies

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For prisoners, groups ofBible studies are offered.[6]

Assisting children and families of prisoners

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Prison Fellowship International runs achild sponsorship program which aims to help needy children of prisoners with support in education and health care.[6]

The Angel Tree Program is an outreach to the children of prisoners atChristmas. Members of local churches volunteer to sponsor these children by purchasing a gift based on information gathered by PF volunteers and prison chaplains.[7]

Restorative justice

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Through the PFI Centre for Justice and Reconciliation, PFI seeks to promote the principles and practices ofrestorative justice—an approach to justice focusing on healing broken relationships, repairing the damage done by crime, and restoring the offender to a meaningful role in society.[6]

The centre operates Restorative Justice Online and provides information and consultation to national PF organizations,[8] governments,[9] theUnited Nations,[10] and other organizations.

The PF restorative justice program is known as either the Sycamore Tree Project[11] or Umuvumu Tree Project.[12] Notably, in Rwanda, in response to thegenocide of 1994, Prison Fellowship introduced the Umuvumu Tree Project through 11,000 traditional courts, resulting in more than 32,000 genocide offenders confessing to their crimes.[12] 23 PF national ministries ran the STP in 2009.

Promoting faith-based prisons

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Based on APAC, the Brazilian model of faith-based prison communities, national PF organizations are adapting their own APAC projects. These faith-based prison communities are presently operating in 16 countries.[13]

Consultation

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As an NGO, PFI maintainsConsultative Status (Category II) with theUN Economic and Social Council[10] and is an active participant in the Alliance of NGOs on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice.[14]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Gregg Barak,Battleground: Criminal Justice [2 volumes], ABC-CLIO, USA, 2007, p. 279
  2. ^Timothy J. Demy Ph.D., Paul R. Shockley Ph.D.,Evangelical America: An Encyclopedia of Contemporary American Religious Culture, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2017, p. 344
  3. ^John Perry,God Behind Bars: The Amazing Story of Prison Fellowship, Thomas Nelson Inc, USA, 2006, p. 150
  4. ^OLIVER KENDRICK,The Origin and Development of Prison Fellowship International: Pluralism, Ecumenism and American Leadership in the Evangelical World 1974–2006, Journal of American Studies, Volume 51, Number 4, 2017, UK, p. 1224
  5. ^George Thomas Kurian, Mark A. Lamport,Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States, Volume 5, Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2016, p. 1865
  6. ^abcdPrison Fellowship International,What We Do, pfi.org, USA, retrieved 5 November 2022
  7. ^The Post & CourierAngel Tree program helps give Christmas to children of inmates 26 December 2008
  8. ^PFI Website – The Mission of Prison Fellowship InternationalArchived 26 April 2003 atarchive.today
  9. ^Jamaican Ministry of Justice – Press Release 9 December 2005Archived 14 August 2007 at theWayback Machine
  10. ^ab"United Nations Website – Description of Prison Fellowship International's ECOSOC Status". Archived fromthe original on 15 December 2007. Retrieved26 August 2008.
  11. ^New Zealand Ministry of Justice – Newsletter – Te Ara Whakatika, Winter 2004, Issue #22
  12. ^abUmuvumu Tree Project: A Ministry of Reconciliation in Rwanda USA, 3 February 2003
  13. ^Correctional NewsA Matter of Choice July/Aug 2003[permanent dead link]
  14. ^Alliance of NGOs on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice – Description of Prison Fellowship International's membership to the aforementioned organisation[permanent dead link]

External links

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