The Renaissance Mennonite. A friendly service dog. A teddy bear. A creative prankster. Hot Rod Howie.
Many names were tossed at the night of May 23, as his writing career and restorative justice work were humorously honored with a 鈥渞oast鈥 at 91短视频. While most retiring professors of 窜别丑谤鈥檚 stature and worldwide celebrity are feted with a more standard banquet, a roast more suited both the man and his varied work.
More than 300 attendees agreed, traveling from around the world to honor 窜别丑谤鈥檚 influence as a reformer, teacher, a mentor, and visionary; to mark his retirement as a full-time faculty member; and to celebrate the 25th聽anniversary of the publication of 窜别丑谤鈥檚 groundbreaking work, .
The evening also provided an opportunity to support the ongoing work of the , of which Zehr will remain a co-director with friend and colleague . A silent auction of global artifacts, artwork, locally crafted food and libations, and books, along with other donations, also raised about $15,000, not including pledges, for the continued work of the Zehr Institute.
After dinner鈥
Among comedians, a 鈥渞oast鈥 is a gathering at which a guest of honor is subjected to both praise and good-natured jokes at their expense. Stauffer, dressed in a suit and tie, emceed the evening鈥檚 festivities with , a longtime colleague since 窜别丑谤鈥檚 arrival at the in 1996. Jantzi came more appropriately appareled to the podium in the requested 鈥淗oward Zehr-styled formal wear:鈥 boots, tan khakis, a tan shirt, a camera slung about his neck and a Indiana Jones-looking hat.
When queried by Stauffer about his neckwear, Jantzi looked at his floral tie and retorted: 鈥淭his is a tie that’s as ugly as sin. I tried to get one as ugly as Howard would wear, but this is the best I could do.鈥
First on the program was a panel of alumni roasters, all of whom remarked in some capacity on their strong and shared personal friendship with Zehr, his sense of humor, and quiet way of inspiring confidence and empowerment. Among them was , MA 鈥08, now restorative justice coordinator at the Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General in Vancouver, Canada, who spoke of becoming 窜别丑谤鈥檚 student one day and shortly after, accepting an invitation to co-present with Zehr at a conference.
鈥淗oward sees something in you before you see it in yourself and he nurtures it until it comes to fruition,鈥 said , MA 鈥99, a 14-year veteran of working federal capital cases who is herself a pioneer of an approach called defense-oriented victim outreach.
The youngest member of the panel, MA 鈥13, spoke of the in her native Mexico, between Zehr – in Tamaulipas to present the keynote address at the First National Conference of Alternative Dispute Resolution Mechanisms – and poet and victims advocate Javier Sicilia, 鈥渢wo men who share similar bodies and souls.鈥
MA 鈥04, contextualized Zehr with a reference to Malcolm Gladwell鈥檚 “The Tipping Point,” which describes three types of “change makers.” 鈥淗oward for me is the consummate connector,鈥 said Malec, citing Zehr’s skills in networking between practitioners and connecting his colleagues and students with exciting opportunities.
MA 鈥09, took the microphone in 鈥減rotest鈥 to argue that the breadth and sheer vivacity of Zehr’s creative contributions in a variety of fields do not render him 鈥渢he grandfather of restorative justice,鈥 as he’s sometimes referred to, but rather 鈥渢he Lady Gaga of restorative justice!鈥
, MA 鈥06, a founding member of the nonprofit Latino Initiative on Restorative Justice, spoke movingly of 窜别丑谤鈥檚 influence on her personal journey from her native Ecuador and her current work as an educator and training of restorative justice in many Latin American countries.
, which focused on the aging body, took the brunt of several spirited jokes from , MA 鈥00. Toews is a former student who has written and co-edited .
Guest Roasters
A panel of guest roasters included nine distinguished colleagues, some of whom wrote or provided video greetings: RJ practitioner honored 窜别丑谤鈥檚 influence in New Zealand, criminologist John Braithwaite sent congratulations from Australia, and 窜别丑谤鈥檚 longtime friend, Bruce Bainbridge, did the same from the State Correction Institution Graterford, where he is serving a life sentence.
, currently co-director of Mennonite Central Committee‘s Office on Justice and Peacebuilding, proclaimed that she had 鈥30 years of stories鈥 to fit into the next three minutes, speeding through Zehr’s powers of suggestion, his fast pace of speech, and his commitment to well-made coffee.
Actor, director, and playwright Ingrid DeSanctis remembered ,” based on Zehr’s book which received a standing ovation from 500 inmates at Graterford Prison in Pennsylvania.
, a mediator and consultant with a history of teaching in Center for Justice and Peacebuilding programs, proclaimed that he and Zehr shared something that nobody else in the room did: both are alumni of Morehouse College, a historically black college in Atlanta, which boasts graduates such as Martin Luther King Jr.
鈥淵ou carry the mystique of a Morehouse man well,鈥 said Hooker, adding that the 鈥淢orehouse man鈥 is 鈥渨ell-read, well-traveled, well-spoken, well-balanced and鈥︹ He stopped. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to work on well-dressed,鈥 he concluded, to laughter from the crowd.
Kim Workman, director of the New Zealand-based organization Rethinking Crime and Punishment, not only told humorous stories, but played the keyboard and sang an original ditty he called 鈥淥de to Howard.鈥
The Zehr bobble-head
As the evening drew to a close, 窜别丑谤鈥檚 family joined in the fun. His wife, Ruby, recalled one of their first dates in college, when Howard invited her to the snack shop to share a Coke because he did not have enough money for two. She was followed by Howard’s brother, Ed Zehr, who reminisced about Howard’s boyhood skills tinkering with electronics and gadgets.
When Zehr assumed the stage after 9 p.m., he was met with a standing ovation. Cracking jokes, he recounted the early days of restorative justice work with Canadian colleague David Worth, announcing their next 50-year plan for the field 鈥 expansion to a social movement.
At the end of the night, , director of the and mastermind behind the festivities, presented the honoree with a custom Howard Zehr bobble-head doll.
鈥淩uby says my memorial service is taken care of, so she won鈥檛 need to have one when I die,鈥 Zehr reflected afterwards. 鈥淚 got off pretty easy overall!鈥
