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2025 Youth Mission Trip
July 27- August 1

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Chicago
Environmental Justice

This summer, youth from CHN and St. Andrew's youth participated in a service and learning trip in our very own Chicagoland! Chicago--a city known for its rich cultural history, towering architecture, and beloved deep-dish pizza--is also a place where the impacts of industrialization and urban development are deeply felt. Built along the shores of Lake Michigan, Chicago's waterways fueled its growth, but that same industrial success has led to significant environmental challenges. Pollution, resource depletion, and the effects of climate change have disproportionately impacted Black and Latinx communities in the city, leaving them to bear the brunt of toxic air, unsafe drinking water, and limited access to green spaces. In response, residents of these neighborhoods have come together to fight for environmental justice, advocating for clean air, safe water, and sustainable living conditions. 

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During our time in Chicago, participants examined how environmental issues are intertwined with racial and economic injustice. We took part in a "toxic tour" of the city's southwest side, where grassroots organizations are working to address the environmental harms that have plagued the area. In addition, we participated in efforts of restoration and sustainability by volunteering at a community garden and connecting with Faith In Place to learn about how congregations form "green teams" focused on environmental advocacy. We even called our representatives to advocate for issues we care about! This trip gave our youth a chance to not only witness the challenges Chicago faces but also support local initiatives striving to create a healthier and more just environment. â€‹

Our Partners

Be the Neighbor partners with community organizations in their trip locations.

As we learn which partners we'll be connected with, we'll highlight them here. 

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Be The Neighbor is a justice-based service-learning trip ministry that equips youth and adults to live lives of love, service, and justice. ​Be The Neighbor visualizes a world where, through love of neighbor, justice is realized, people flourish, and communities are made whole.

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Be The Neighbor values

  • love for all people and creation

  • being spiritually anchored in and moved by our faith

  • building community and living as neighbors

  • affirming the dignity and humanity of all​

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Faith In Place works to empower people of diverse faiths and spiritualities to be leaders in advancing environmental and racial justice, providing resources to educate, connect, and advocate for healthier communities across Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin. Faith In Place works in five program areas: Climate Change & EnergySustainable Food & Land UseWater PreservationAdvocacy, and Youth Empowerment in close collaboration with 358 faith partners and over 180 Green Teams (groups of three or more people from a spiritual community or area who join to create healthier communities by advancing environmental and racial justice). Faith In Place is also an affiliate of Interfaith Power & Light, a national organization working for environmental justice across the United States. ​​

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People for Community Recovery's mission is to enhance the quality of life of residents living in communities affected by environmental pollution. PCR advocates, educates, and organizes on community-identified priorities including environmental and climate justice, safe and affordable housing, economic equity and community health.

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Our students will participate in the PCR's toxic tour of the Lake Calumet Industrial Area, located on the southeast side of Chicago. The Toxic Tours explore the surrounding landfills, industrial facilities, waterways, and the proximity of residential communities to this area. The late Hazel Johnson, the "mother of the environmental justice movement", labeled this area the "toxic doughnut," a name which gained widespread notoriety and shed light on the connection between industrial pollution and negative health outcomes in minority communities.

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"Transforming urban waterways into wildlife sanctuaries, creating opportunities for people of all backgrounds to connect with nature in new and meaningful ways”

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Look at a river running through any major city around the world and you’ll probably find the same thing — metal seawalls where riverbanks used to be. These walls remove essentially any natural riverbank habitat for plants and wildlife. In many cases, these seawalls cannot be removed. In order to reintroduce habitat within this industrial infrastructure, Urban Rivers builds artificial floating gardens that can fit into existing waterways. These gardens are filled with native wetland plants that provide food, shelter, and overall high quality habitat for native wildlife — a sanctuary in the middle of the city. These sanctuaries aren’t just for the fish, birds, and turtles: floating boardwalks allow human communities to access these thriving pockets of nature.

 

At Urban Rivers, transforming urban waterways into wildlife sanctuaries is not only an important environmental mission but also a critical social one. Access to nature and greenspace is not equally distributed in our cities, and historically marginalized communities have been disproportionately impacted by environmental degradation and pollution. Urban Rivers seeks to target and transform historically degraded areas of the Chicago River into lush gardens and public walkways that benefit the communities around them, improving environmental quality and increasing access to nature.

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Mission and Values

A Just Harvest’s mission is to fight poverty and hunger in the Rogers Park and greater Chicago community by providing nutritious meals daily while cultivating community and economic development and organizing across racial, cultural and socioeconomic lines in order to create a more just society.​​

 

Feeding Hunger

We feed hungry people, but we also feed our common hunger for hope, for fellowship, and for a strong sense of community. We feed people’s hunger to serve, to improve our communities, to be creative, and to be a powerful agent for justice. ​

 

Cultivating Abundance

We are blessed with resources and are called to be good stewards of these resources, to be co-creators with God. On a practical level, we do this by sharing resources with our neighbors who don’t get enough to eat, by growing food sustainably and doing other economic development work, and by organizing for policies that help ensure we can all enjoy access to and be good stewards of our resources.

 

Seeing Beyond

We see beyond a world with hunger, brokenness, and despair, and we believe a new world is possible. We see beyond economic policies and political systems that create and perpetuate poverty and vast economic inequality, and we proclaim a vision for a future where all have plenty and no one is left in need. We see the potential of people in despair and communities experiencing oppression and are committed to helping all people find their gifts and become leaders in creating a more just society.We also create opportunities for people to see beyond (and learn from) the differences that usually divide us – differences like disparities in wealth or education, race, religion or national origin – and to build authentic relationships with one another.

 

Building Power

Power is the ability to act – to get things done. We want to be a powerful organization so that we can improve our community and be effective in the fight against hunger and poverty.Too many people are going hungry in America. Too many people are unemployed or underemployed, losing their homes to foreclosure, and struggling under debt. It is our analysis that many of our economic policies create and perpetuate these problems. We believe ordinary people must have the power to hold our elected officials and other powerful decision-makers accountable for acting in the broad public interest in order to eradicate hunger and poverty. We also want to provide opportunities for people in relatively powerful positions to be effective voices for social change through our work.A Just Harvest is known for being a resource to people in need 365 days a year. At the core of the mission of A Just Harvest, is to be part of the thriving—not simply surviving—of our community. We work intentionally to be a part of the transformation of the community, for and by the people living here. This requires listening, walking with and remaining humble in our efforts. It also requires steadfastness in our commitment to not perpetuate our own existence, but remain relevant to the needs of the community.

Curious about last year's trip? 

Learn more about our trip to the Twin Cities. 

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Further Reading

Keep the learning going with book recommendations available in our Children & Youth Lending Library and in our Bookshop.org storefront.

Itinerary

Day 1
Sunday
July 27

3:30 pm: Meet at CHN for packing and prayer

4:00 pm: Depart from CHN 

Travel to Chicago, IL

Arrive in Chicago around 5:30 pm

Dinner, Orientation, Community Worship

Day 2
Monday
July 28

Breakfast & Morning Gathering

Faith in Action x 2

Reach Learning Time

Free Time

Day 3
Tuesday
July 29

Morning Gathering

Faith in Action x 2

Reach Learning Time

Free Time

Day 4
Wednesday
July 30

Morning Gathering

Faith in Action x 2

Reach Learning Time

Free Time

Day 5
Thursday
July 21

Morning Gathering

Faith in Action x 2

Reach Learning Time

Free Time

Day 6
Friday
August 1

Community Worship

Pack Up and Depart Chicago

Group Activity

4:00 pm: Arrive to CHN

What to Bring
*as recommended by Be the Neighbor

  • Pillow

  • Sleeping bag or twin sheets & blanket

  • Towel and washcloth

  • Shower shoes

  • Toothpaste and toothbrush

  • Soap and shampoo

  • Deodorant and other personal items

  • Dirty clothes bag

  • Sleeping clothes (appropriate for group setting)

  • Undergarments

  • Cropped pants/pants/lightweight jeans (at least one pair)

  • Shorts for working (4-5 pairs)

  • T-shirts for service sites (please thoughtfully consider any messages on your t-shirts; do the messages include or exclude? Can the messages potentially draw an overly strong response?)

  • Shorts and t-shirts for evenings (3-4 of each)

  • Sweatshirt or hoodie for cool evenings

  • Closed-toe athletic/sneaker-type shoes that can get dirty and wet

  • Athletic shoes/sneakers for walking/hiking

  • Light rain jacket

  • Socks

  • Hat or cap

  • Small waist pack to wear to service sites if needed for personal items

  • Sunscreen

  • Sunglasses

  • Insect Repellant

  • Refillable water bottle

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You May Bring: 

  • Cell phones

  • Chargers

  • Journals

  • Pens

  • Bibles

  • Books

  • Games

  • Snacks to share

  • Money for souvenirs or extra treats

  • Construction tools if needed for your site

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Please do not bring: 

  • Items of monetary or sentimental value

  • Alcohol, tobacco, vapes or nicotine products, illegal drugs, fireworks, weapons, toy weapons, or knives​​​​​

ADDRESS

Church of the Holy Nativity

275 S. Richmond Ave

Clarendon Hills, IL 60514

630.323.6820

ABOUT US

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Church of the Holy Nativity is an inclusive community committed to making our church a place of belonging and nurture for all people. We are singles and families, young and old, conservative and progressive, gay and straight, and from many nations. We believe such diversity brings God closer to us and us closer to God, the Creator and Lover of all. All are welcome here.

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OFFICE HOURS

Tuesday - Thursday

9:00 am - 2:00 pm

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