Wheeling Jesuit University
Search
Appalachian Institute Home
Overview
      History
      Mission
      Region
      Partners
      Participants
      Donors
      Contact and Staff 
Appalachian Profile
      Feuds 
      Logging
      Industrializing the Mountains
      King Coal
      Salt & Chemicals
      Steel & Iron
Programs
      Immersion Trips
      Research
      Advocacy
Links
      Research in Appalachia
      Find Us On:
   Image image image
 

History


Inspired by the call for action at the local level made in the 1975 publication This Land Is Home to Me: A Pastoral Letter on Powerlessness in Appalachia by the Catholic Bishops of the Region, the Appalachian Institute was founded in 2002. AI has as its mission to serve as a center of research and analysis, education and action attuned always to the struggles and dreams of the Appalachian people. In focusing on contemporary Appalachian challenges and opportunities, it uses a unique set of resources, including religious leaders, community organizers, academic experts, and students, and its reputation of a facilitator of dialog on contentious issues. With these tools the Appalachia Institute seeks to create safer, healthier, and stronger communities in the central Appalachian region and beyond. Reflecting the values of its culture and the values and ethics embodied in the Appalachian Bishops' pastoral letters, the Institute joins in the region's work of building a sustainable and promising future.

The Appalachian Institute at WJU is named to honor Rev. Clifford M. Lewis, the first Jesuit to reside in Wheeling in 1953. Two years earlier, at the request of Bishop John Swint, Fr. Lewis initiated a two-year feasibility study which led to the founding of Wheeling College. An area native, Fr. Clifford M. Lewis dreamed of an institution that would "provide independent enlightenment to tomorrow's problems." His dream lives on in the Appalachian Institute, which derives its inspiration from, and is guided by, This Land is Home to Me, the pastoral message from the Catholic Bishops of the Appalachian region.

"The dream of the mountains' struggle, the dream of simplicity and of justice, like so many other repressed visions is, we believe, the voice of the Lord among us. In taking them up, hopefully the Church might once again be known as

  • a center of the Spirit,
  • a place where poetry dares to speak,
  • where the song reigns unchallenged,
  • where art flourishes,
  • where nature is welcome,
  • where in a wilderness of idolatrous destruction,
  • the great voice of God still cries out for Life."

from This Land is Home to Me, Appalachian Catholic Bishops, signed February 1, 1975 at Wheeling College - Full Pastoral Letter

"More and more people recognize that a new social order is being born. Indeed, the spirit of God presses us to this recognition. We do not understand it all, but we know we are part of it, in Appalachia, our nation, across the world."

from This Land is Home to Me, Appalachian Catholic Bishops, signed February 1, 1975 at Wheeling College - Full Pastoral Letter

"We continue to believe in the spiritual depth and creativity of the people of Appalachia. We believe that they can find a way to remain at home in the web of life."

from At Home in the Web of Life, Appalachian Catholic Bishops, First Edition 1995 - Full Pastoral Letter

"We dare to speak, and speak strongly, because we believe that the cry of the poor is also a message of hope, a promise that there can be a better way."

from This Land is Home to Me, Appalachian Catholic Bishops, signed February 1, 1975 at Wheeling College - Full Pastoral Letter

The Institute's continued success comes from the generous support of donors and collaborators across the region and the country who are interested in promoting the "message of hope, a promise that there can be a better way" encouraged by the Appalachian bishops in This Land Is Home to Me.

Since its inception in 2002, the Appalachian Institute has counted among its supporters and collaborators:

  • The Maryland Province of the Society of Jesus
  • The Jesuit Conference
  • The Wheeling Jesuit University Jesuit Community
  • The Congregation of St. Joseph
  • The Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston
  • The Project on Economic Justice of the American Friends Service Committee in West Virginia
  • Laughlin Memorial Chapel
  • Grassroots Leadership, Inc.
  • The Rockefeller Foundation
  • The Ford Foundation
  • The West Virginia Humanities Council
  • AmeriCorps*VISTA
  • and generous individual donors


    Calendar |  President's Welcome |  Virtual Campus Tour |  Services |  Financial Aid |  Campus Directory |  Apply Online


    © 2013 Wheeling Jesuit University, Inc. • 316 Washington Avenue • Wheeling • West Virginia • 26003 • (800) 624-6992 • Legal
    Website Powered by ActiveCampus™ Software by Datatel