Duane Shank was Associate Editor for Sojourners magazine and was on the staff from 1995 to 2014.
Duane has been active as an organizer and administrator in the peace and justice movement for 35 years, beginning as a draft resistance and antiwar organizer during the Vietnam war. He has worked as a community organizer in the rural south, in interfaith coalitions, and in the nuclear weapons freeze and Central America solidarity movements of the 1980s. His positions have included Associate for the National Inter-religious Service Board for Conscientious Objectors; National Coordinator for the Committee Against Registration and the Draft; Deputy Director and Acting Executive Director for SANE/Freeze; and Research Fellow for the Institute for Policy Studies.
Duane attended Eastern Mennonite University. He is a Anabaptist/Mennonite, and currently an active member and serves on the worship leadership team of the Community of Christ ecumenical congregation in the Mt. Pleasant neighborhood of Washington, D.C. His views on faith and politics have been shaped by (among others), John Howard Yoder, Abraham Joshua Heschel, Martin Luther King, Jr., Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and Oscar Romero.
Duane is married to Ellen Kennel. They have a daughter, Celeste, a graduate of Goshen College, IN, the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University, and the University of Chicago Divinity School.
In addition to family, church, and work; his passions are baseball (Washington Nationals), blues (Buddy Guy and Stevie Ray Vaughan) and bluegrass music (Ralph Stanley), and barbecue.
Posts By This Author
The latest news on Faith in the news, Advocating for the poor, Education reform, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, and Select Op-Eds.
Health care summit. President Obama declared Thursday that the time for debate over health-care reform has come to an end, closing an unusual seven-hour summit with congressional leaders by sending a clear message that Democrats will move forward to pass major legislation with or without Republican support.
Iran-Syria. The presidents of Iran and Syria on Thursday ridiculed U.S. policy in the region and pledged to create a Middle East "without Zionists," combining a slap at recent U.S. overtures and a threat to Israel with an endorsement of one of the region's defining alliances.
Burma. The Supreme Court in Burma has rejected an appeal by pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi against an extension of her house arrest.
The latest news on Health Care, Jobs, Afghanistan-Marja Offensive, Aghanistan-Dutch Troops to Leave, Dubai-Mossad, Iraq, Darfur, Electronic Waste, and Select Op-Eds.
Haiti. Next month in New York, the international community's commitment to Haiti's reconstruction will face its first big test. At a meeting of donor nations and international organizations, the Haitian government is to present its preliminary reconstruction plan, which it hopes will set the stage for a large and lasting commitment by the rest of the world.
Afghanistan-Civilians Killed. One day after Afghan President Hamid Karzai made an impassioned plea for American-led forces to do more to avoid killing civilians in their fight against the Taliban, a NATO air strike killed as many as 33 civilians in southern Afghanistan.
Immigration. An ambitious, multibillion-dollar project to hot-wire the new Southwest border fence with high-tech radar, cameras, and satellite signals has been plagued with serious system failures and repeated delays and will probably not be completed for another seven years -- if it is finished at all.
Quote of the Day. "If you were to take the best engineers in the world and try to design the perfect plug for a child's airway, it would be a hot dog. I'm a pediatric emergency doctor, and to try to get them out once they're wedged in, it's almost impossible." Gary Smith, director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, OH, on a study urging that hot dogs be "redesigned" so they are less likely to become stuck in children’s throats. About 17% of food-related asphyxiations in children are caused by hot dogs. (USA Today)
The latest news on Stimulus and Jobs, Foreclosure Prevention, Free Speech or Supporting Terrorism?, Food Politics, Environment, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Dubai and Mossad?, Somalia, and Select Op-Eds.
Dalai Lama. Activists say they are hopeful that a visit to the White House today by Tibet's spiritual leader signals a change in President Obama's foreign policy toward China and its abysmal record on human rights.
Egypt. Dozens of Egyptian women and human rights activists have staged a protest in Cairo against a recent decision that bars women from holding judicial positions.
Education. Senior House Republicans and Democrats plan to announce Thursday that they will team up to rewrite the No Child Left Behind education law, a rare show of bipartisanship in the polarized Congress.
Quote of the Day. "The majority of our immigrant families are 'mixed families,' meaning that some members are legal United States citizens and some are not. Because of this reality, these families will stay together and we will continue to have some people living in the shadows of legality. Both the Congress and our president have the responsibility to help bring an end to these people living in the shadows of our society -- often deprived of basic human rights and exploited by employers -- and onto a path which would eventually bring them into full legal residence.” Cardinal Roger Mahony of Los Angeles, in his Lent message. (San Fernando Valley Sun)
The latest news on Health Care, Tea Party Movement, Afghanistan, Iran, Zimbabwe, and Select Op-Eds.
Bayh to Retire. Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana announced Monday that he will not seek a third term in November, a decision that, coming on the heels of other Democratic departures, could imperil the party's prospects of retaining control of the Senate.
Haiti. A school partially collapsed in north Haiti after a mudslide yesterday, killing four children and bringing further catastrophe to a country already devastated by last month's massive earthquake.
Pakistan. The capture of top Taliban militant commander Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar in the Pakistani city of Karachi is the most important catch for the American CIA and the Pakistani intelligence service since March 2007.
Quote of the Day. "There are more people in the shadows. This is our busiest year ever." David Bates, president of Olive Branch Mission, the oldest rescue mission in Chicago, which is now on the front lines of the new homelessness crisis. (USA Today)
The latest news on Republicans, Afghanistan, and Iran.
Immigration. An unusually wet winter in Arizona this year has been lethal for illegal immigrants crossing from Mexico into the United States, with nine people dying from hypothermia since November. The same number of immigrants died of hypothermia during the previous three winters combined.
School Lunches. By this summer, the U.S. Department of Agriculture will have launched its most sweeping safety reforms in a decade for the food it buys for school lunches. But much work remains to ensure that food purchased for the National School Lunch Program -- in particular, ground beef -- is 'as safe, wholesome and high quality' as the best commercial products.
Haiti. The Jan. 12 earthquake was an equal opportunity leveler with such mass deadliness that it erased the individuality of its victims. According to the Haitian government, more than 230,000 people died in the disaster, but initially few had ceremonies to mark their deaths.
Quote of the Day. “If the government were not to continue the same level of support, it would be very detrimental, like cutting the legs off a wobbling child and expecting it to run a marathon. It’s very possible we’ll still be at this level of need five years from now.” John Katalinich, chief lending officer at the Inova Federal Credit Union in Elkhart, IN, on federal government plans to wind down many of its emergency programs for housing. (New York Times)
The latest news on Job Creation, Banking Reform, Tea Party Convention, Haiti, Bombings-Pakistan & Iraq, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Select Op-Eds.
Bank of America Charged with Fraud. Bank of America and two of its former bosses have been charged with fraud for allegedly misleading shareholders during the takeover of Merrill Lynch.
Obama & Dalai Lama. The sudden deterioration in US-Chinese relations is set to accelerate after the White House confirmed today that Barack Obama will meet the Dalai Lama in Washington later this month in defiance of Beijing.
Unemployment. The United States economy shed 20,000 jobs in January, the government said Friday, deepening concern that relief from the deepest economic downturn in a generation would be slow to come. But even as the economy struggled to start creating jobs again, the unemployment rate fell to 9.7 percent from 10 percent in December.
Quote of the Day. "Like polar bears, these high-elevation butterflies were already living in extreme environments, and now they don't have any options … Their environment is changing so quickly that they just can't cope.” Matthew Forister, a biologist at the University of Nevada-Reno who led a study of beleaguered butterflies in California. (USA Today)
The latest news on Haiti Aid, Haiti Aftermath, King Day, Massachusetts Election & Health Care, FBI & Phone Records, Iran, Chile Election, and Select Op-Eds.
Haiti Immigrants. Calling the aftermath of the earthquake "a disaster of historic proportions," the secretary of homeland security, Janet Napolitano, said she was granting a designation known as temporary protected status for Haitian immigrants because their safety would be at risk if they were deported.
Working Women. In a trend that researchers call "the rise of wives," women are increasingly better-educated than their husbands and have emerged as the dominant income-provider in one of five marriages.
Afghanistan. A small but determined squad of at least seven attackers laid siege to the heart of the Afghan capital Monday morning, detonating explosives, hurling grenades, and engaging in a fierce four-hour gun battle with security forces in one of the most brazen insurgent assaults on Kabul in at least a year.
Quote of the Day. “It’s like we’ve got more going on in our parking lot than we do within the walls of the church.” Craig Goodwin, pastor of Millwood (WA) Community Presbyterian Church. When the church was told it would have to close its farmers’ market on the church parking lot or the lot could no longer be claimed as tax-exempt, it decided to keep the market and pay the $700 in annual taxes. (New York Times)
The latest news on Religious Response to Earthquake in Haiti, Roots of the Economic Crisis, Tax on Banks, Health Care, Civilian Deaths, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iraq.
Earthquake in Haiti. Survivors strained desperately on Wednesday against the chunks of concrete that buried this city along with thousands of its residents, rich and poor, from shantytowns to the presidential palace, in the devastating earthquake that struck late Tuesday afternoon.
World Response. After a warning from the country's Prime Minister that the eventual death toll could top 100,000, governments and aid agencies from around the world were working to channel personnel and supplies to the battered Haitian capital.
Deportation of Haitians Suspended. Immigration officials said it was clear they could be putting Haitians’ safety at risk by sending them back to a country staggering from the vast destruction of the quake. About 30,000 Haitians in the United States are facing deportation orders, immigration officials said.
Quote of the Day. “There are people digging with their hands, searching for people in the rubble. There was unimaginable destruction.” Bernice Robertson, an analyst with the International Crisis Group. (New York Times)
The latest news on Health Care, Immigration, Afghanistan, Iran-Professor Killed, and Select Op-Eds.
Yemen-Somalia. Thousands of Somali boys and teenagers fleeing war and chaos at home are sailing to Yemen, where officials who have long welcomed Somali refugees now worry that the new arrivals could become the next generation of al-Qaeda fighters.
China-Missiles. China has tested a new technology that can intercept and destroy missiles in mid-air in a display of military strength just days after the United States angered Beijing by selling Patriot missiles to Taiwan.
Bank Bonuses. The budget that President Obama submits next month is likely to include new fees on financial firms as the White House seeks to recover the full costs of its $700 billion bailout of the banking industry, officials said.
Quote of the Day. "When I was a kid growing up … it was a special thing to do. Now, it's like you're getting on a Greyhound bus to go somewhere. The crowding, the screening through the security … in the last couple years, flying is just not a pleasant experience." Tom Seeley, Brooklyn, NY, on why he and his family now drive to Chicago to visit relatives. (USA Today)
Oldest Known Hebrew Script, Recently Deciphered, Links Worship and Justice
The latest news on Health Care, Guantanamo Detainees, Military Recruiting, Climate Change, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and UK-Israel.
Immigration Reform. Democratic lawmakers, led by Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., on Tuesday filed the first comprehensive immigration reform bill in the current Congress, giving renewed hope to millions of undocumented immigrants in South Florida and around the country.
Iran. Iran says it has successfully test-fired an improved version of a medium-range missile, drawing western protests.
DC Same-Sex Marriage. The District was on the verge Tuesday of becoming the sixth place in the country to legalize same-sex marriage after the council gave final approval to its bill allowing the unions.
Quote of the Day. “How can one remain indifferent in the face of problems such as climate change, desertification, the degradation and loss of productivity in vast agricultural areas, the pollution of rivers and aquifers, the loss of biodiversity, the increase in extreme weather, and the deforestation of equatorial and tropical areas?” Pope Benedict XVI on environmental ethics in his World Day of Peace message. (National Catholic Reporter)
The Latest News on Health Care -- Abortion, Health Care -- Access, Jobs, Food Banks, Foreign Workers, Death Penalty, Climate Change, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Iran, Israel-Palestine, and Select Op-Eds
The latest news on Unemployment, Education, U.S. Military, Afghanistan--U.S. Policy, Afghanistan--Civilian Workers, Iraq, Israel--Palestine, Korea, and Select op-eds.
Health Care. The Senate Finance Committee legislation to revamp the health-care system would provide coverage to 29 million uninsured Americans but would still pare future federal deficits by slowing the growth of spending on medical care.
Iran. The first death sentence for participation in Iran’s post election protests was handed down on Monday, an Iranian reformist website has reported.
Darfur. An African Union panel is due to hand over a report aimed at finding a peaceful solution to the conflict in Sudan's Darfur region. Former South African President Thabo Mbeki led the inquiry and will deliver his findings to the AU in Ethiopia.
Quote of the Day. "Culture and religion inform every decision about health, illness, disease and care, about true caring, about who can live, about the measure of quality in a life, about when suffering begins and how it ends. We bring our full selves to every bedside." Dawn Seery, head of the Methodist Healthcare System in San Antonio, on the role of hospital ethics committees in assisting families making end-of-life decisions. (USA Today)
The latest news on Immigration, Education, Youth income falls, Missile defense, Mideast, Somalia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, and Select op-eds.
Lack of health care. As medical care has improved for people with health insurance, the consequences of being uninsured have worsened, according to a new study that says the lack of coverage translates into nearly 45,000 deaths each year among working-age Americans.
Religious Charities. Nearly 60 groups concerned with civil rights, labor, health and education urged Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. on Thursday to renounce a Bush-era memo allowing religious charities that receive federal grant money to discriminate in hiring.
Global working poor. While economists in developed nations are cautiously pointing to the first signs of renewed economic growth, the global financial crisis is slamming some of the working poor around the world, Ban Ki-moon, the United Nations secretary general, said Thursday.
Quote of the day. "For those of us who are battling the time crunch and those of us [for] whom access to fresh food is an issue in our neighborhoods, farmers' markets are a really important, valuable resource that we have to support." First lady Michelle Obama, opening a new farmer's market just across the street from the White House. (Washington Times)
The latest news on Death penalty, College loans, Missile defense, Japan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, and Select op-eds.
Health care. A year-long effort by senators to draft a bipartisan overhaul of the nation's health-care system on Wednesday yielded the only congressional proposal that would extend coverage to millions of uninsured Americans while making good on President Obama's pledge not to add "one dime" to budget deficits.
Obama and race. President Obama has long suggested that he would like to move beyond race. The question now is whether the country will let him.
Global poverty. The global recession is expected to push 89 million more people into extreme poverty by the end of 2010, the World Bank said Wednesday as it called on the leaders of the 20 largest economies to engage in "responsible globalization."
Quote of the day. “People say to us, ‘Oh, I grew up with your music,’ and we often say, sotto voce, ‘So did we.’” Folksinger Mary Travers of Peter, Paul and Mary, who died yesterday at 72. (New York Times)
The latest news on Climate change, Congressional agenda, Afghanistan -- U.S. troops, Gaza war crimes, Iran, India, and Select op-eds.
Immigrants & health care. Trying to quell a conservative uproar over his healthcare agenda, President Obama has proposed barring illegal immigrants from a possible government-arranged health insurance marketplace -- even if the immigrants pay with their own money. The move has surprised some of Obama's fellow Democrats and infuriated immigrant advocates.
Women in the pulpit. The percentage of U.S. Protestant women serving as senior pastors has doubled over the past decade, according to the latest study by the Barna Group.
Afghanistan election. European Union election observers have said that about 1.5 million votes in last month's Afghan elections -- almost a third of ballots cast -- could be fraudulent.
Quote of the day. "My life was worthless. Now I have a future. I have a vision for what I can do." Grace Mokeira, who has been on death row in Kenya for 16 years, responding to President Mwai Kibaki's announcement that he was commuting all death sentences to life in prison. (USA Today)
The latest news on Faith-based initiatives, Evangelical churches in Brazil, Abortion, Health care, Immigration, President on Wall Street, Wealthy pay, Cuban embargo extended, Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Pakistan, and Select op-eds.
Children in prison. After murders committed by juveniles spiked in the early 1990s, states toughened laws, making the United States the harshest nation in world in the legal punishment of children, according to a recent study.
Green energy. With the most diverse array of alternative energy potential of any state in the nation, Hawaii has set out to become a living laboratory for the rest of the country, hoping it can slash its dependence on fossil fuels while keeping the lights on.
Iran. The US and Iran are to hold their first face-to-face talks in three decades after the European Union struck a deal to resume nuclear negotiations.
Quote of the day. “We don’t need the news that comes from TV. This is news we care about, and it comes fast enough for us." Ohio Amish farmer Karl Yoder on The Budget, a newspaper that has served as the main source of news for Amish communities since 1890. (Los Angeles Times)
The latest news on Financial reform, Immigration, Extremes in GOP, Climate change, Abortion protester killed, Canadian politics, Afghanistan, Middle East, Iran, and Select op-eds.
Health care. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius pledged Sunday that President Barack Obama will support barring public funding for abortion in any health care overhaul legislation.
Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe can expect no major financial aid or lifting of sanctions until it carries out promised democratic reforms, the first European Union delegation to visit for seven years has warned.
Passing. Norman E. Borlaug, the plant scientist who did more than anyone else in the 20th century to teach the world to feed itself and whose work was credited with saving hundreds of millions of lives, died Saturday night.
Quote of the day. “Because of the union, my father got things like vacation days or a raise in wages. But my mother, who worked as a domestic, had nobody. It taught me from a young age the difference between workers who are organized and workers who were by themselves.” John Sweeney, retiring as president of the AFL-CIO. (New York Times)
The latest news on Health care & abortion, Health care & immigration, US Muslims: backlash fear builds, National Baptist Convention USA, Vitality of American congregations, Afghanistan, Iran, Israel, Al Qaeda.
Poverty growing. The early impact of the worst recession since the 1930s pushed median incomes down, forced millions more people into poverty and left more Americans without health care in 2008, according to new annual survey data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Global warming. The Obama administration’s senior negotiator on global warming warned Thursday that developed and developing nations remained deeply divided in talks on reducing greenhouse gases and that time was running out before United Nations treaty negotiations in December.
UN women "super-agency." The general assembly was set to ratify the new agency – which would have a budget of around $1bn and consolidate four existing bodies that deal with women's issues – before its current session concludes on Monday. But Egypt, Cuba, Sudan and Iran have mounted a last-minute campaign to delay ratification.
Quote of the day. “We used to be able to use 9/11 as a touchstone. The students recognized it as an event they lived through and that affected the way that they lived. Now we view it as an opportunity to have a historical discussion.’’ Robby Chisholm, senior program director for history and social studies for Boston public schools. (Boston Globe)