![]() |
Apply |
Contact Us |
Make a Gift |
WJU Home
|
| |
|
|
Appalachian Profile
Appalachia brings to mind many things at once. Winding through the landscape we encounter ever changing terrains. Clear streams fall from ancient mountains which give way to rolling hills and farmland further down the road. The people of Appalachia are as diverse as the landscape they inhabit—miners, mill hands, and mountaineers, farmers, artisans, and musicians, educators, machinists, and entrepreneurs. It is inaccurate to see Appalachia as a place where all the people have Scots-Irish roots. In fact the population has never been all white. Appalachians are Muslim and Buddhist as well as Christian and Jewish. The region's inhabitants are of Native American, African, Latino, Asian and European descent. With such a varied landscape, population and culture, how do we come to understand the complex story of Appalachia? Many have been introduced to the region through two landmark Catholic documents.The first document, This Land is Home to Me: A Pastoral Letter On Powerlessness, observes that the region has been exploited for its energy resources, namely its abundant, high quality coal. Billions of dollars worth of coal resources have been removed from the area, largely by absentee agents. Abuse of the land has resulted in the impoverishment of many of Appalachia's people. This Land is Home to Me is an eloquent study on the social sin of institutionalized poverty and its effects on the good people of the region. |
|
|
|
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 |