Praise for HHH

Praise for Healing Haunted Histories: A Settler Discipleship of Decolonization

“Our Sunday school class at Waterford Mennonite Church is studying Healing Haunted Histories, and finding it to be very stimulating. Participants have expressed appreciation for your careful work, engaging ideas, new words to learn, and potentials for change. People are digging into their family histories with new questions. I too am very grateful for you and the ways you are helping the church move forward with hope.”
Luke Gascho
Executive Director Emeritus of Merry Lea Environmental Learning Center of Goshen College, Indiana

“Healing Haunted Histories is a book every white person needs to read… Elaine’s Mennonite narrative is a powerful modeling of vulnerable and truthful storytelling.”
 Drew Hart
Author of Trouble I’ve Seen: Changing the Way the Church Views Racism (see more here)

“A very timely and very well crafted book.”
— Tom Yoder Neufeld
Professor Emeritus, Religious Studies & Theological Studies, Conrad Grebel UniversityGoshen College.

“This profound, timely, humbling, but ultimately empowering study is exemplary in every way, offering a path through thickets of intense debate and hope amid cacopho­nies of denial and anger.” (from review in Christian Century)
— Rev. Dr. Samuel Wells
Vicar of St. Martin-in-the-Fields in London and author of Learning to Dream Again and A Nazareth Manifesto.

“I was profoundly moved by Healing Haunted Histories. It felt like one of those moments of finding just the right voices, just the right encouragement, and just the right challenge at just the right time.”
— Dr. Nathan Stucky
Director, Farminary Project, Princeton Theological SeminaryIndiana

Healing Haunted Stories is a wonderful and important book, relevant for the racial questions in America… You have shown a way to go on that does not deny the terror of the past, but gives a future.  The reading of the rich young ruler is terrific.  Thanks for this book.”
— Dr. Stanley Hauerwas
Gilbert T. Rowe Professor Emeritus of Divinity and Law, Duke Divinity School

“This might be one of the most healing books I have read in some time. It is both great scholarship weaved with personal narrative that provides guidance for those seeking to do justice while wrestling with complex, colonial histories.”
— Patrick Reyes
Director of Strategic Partnerships, Forum for Theological Exploration

“Elaine Enns weaves the story of her own family’s history with the stories of Indigenous peoples in North America, inviting her readers to reconsider the stories we tell ourselves about our families, communities, and faith. This book is so needed in our time: an invitation to look to the future with both honesty and hope. Highly recommended.”
— Alison Etter
Pastor, Knox and Warden United Churches, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia.

Healing Haunted Histories shows how it is possible—even necessary—to braid together the truth of family stories of immigration, including their traumatic silences; a thoughtful inhabitation of places and watersheds; a radical Christianity, not the religion of power and whiteness; and a deep commitment to confronting the settler mythologies of entitlement in North America. Practical and personal, this book will be a trustworthy guide for many in the decolonizing work that lies ahead.”
—Roger Epp
Professor of Political Science, University of Alberta

“I didn’t know how Enns and Myers would hold it all together, but they did! I was especially impressed (coming from a historian’s perspective) with their ability to traverse the Canada/US divide. The histories are different, but the book showed us both the common ground and the differences seamlessly, and didn’t let either side of the border off the hook! The insistent and yet compassionate interrogation of the authors’ own family narrative is a rare gift—and a model. The personal threads woven throughout the work help keep it indeed ‘intelligible and accessible,’ but without sparing us the important critical theory or the necessary details.”
—Sandra Beardsall
Professor of Church History and Ecumenics, St. Andrew’s College, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan

“Beautifully written, I can feel the heart, courage, and passion that went into this text. I learned a ton about Mennonite history, trauma, and the importance of ‘bloodlines work.’ I was inspired by the compassionate and bold call to imagine and dance a reparative future. More importantly, Healing Haunted Histories, through its careful weaving of personal narrative, decolonizing theory, and biblical imagination, fills a real gap. I know nothing like it! Routinely, I paused while reading and said to myself, this is going to be used in church circles, and it’s going to make a difference.”
—Steve Heinrichs
Director of Indigenous-Settler Relations for Mennonite Church Canada

“I was inspired and challenged and re-oriented. I’m so grateful to have been part of this conversation over the years, and reading this now (in a time when my mind/heart/body is caught up with many complex institutional responsibilities in a very unstable time) has been life-giving. The authors’ re-membering and discipleship have lifted my eyes to broader horizons and deeper longings. Their explorations of archaeology and cartography were deeply engaging for me.”
—Eileen Klassen Hamm
Executive Director, Mennonite Central Committee Saskatchewan

“This is an excellent book. The rubric of ‘haunted histories’ is a compelling one with real heuristic value. It is well-written, well-organized, remarkably well-researched, and combines very powerful storytelling with outstanding analysis. I think it sparked about five hundred sermon ideas! Haunted Histories has put into words so many of the ‘deep knowings’ that I have as a settler/aspiring ally. I’m very grateful for that, knowing that I’ll be much more articulate on these matters as I continue in the work and continue as a preacher.”
—Russell Daye
Lead Minster, St. Andrew’s Church, Halifax, Nova Scotia, and author of Political Forgiveness

“I will use this book in materials I continue to develop for the United Church of Canada. I really feel like it is a piece that we can use to take responsibility for our ongoing complicity in colonization. Thanks to the authors for doing the work, which I know is hard.”
—Sara Stratton
Reconciliation and Indigenous Justice Animator, Toronto, The United Church of Canada

“Intimate, rigorous, accountable, and transformative—Enns and Myers offer both challenge and accompaniment to white settler Christians striving to bring their whole selves to the necessary work of deep, authentic, and radical solidarity with Indigenous peoples. The centering of women’s voices and experiences makes this book an even more essential read for those prepared to risk being truly ‘unsettled’ in the pursuit of justice.”
—Jennifer Henry
Executive Director, KAIROS: Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives, Toronto

“In Healing Haunted Histories Elaine Enns and Ched Myers excavate the traumatic impact of settler colonialism and reckon the resulting settler amnesia with a Christian model of restorative justice that foregrounds Indigenous perspectives, experiences, and histories.”
—Jonathan Cordero
(Ohlone and Chumash), Assistant Professor of Sociology, California Lutheran University

Healing Haunted Histories is a powerful testimony, a prophetic witness, and a humble gesture toward ‘saving the soul of America’ through deep engagement with our own family stories. The ‘bloodlines, landlines, and songlines’ motif echoes the ancient Hebrew folk wisdom ‘a cord of three strands is not quickly broken’ (Eccl 4:12). The interbraiding of all three strands is what will make these transformational conversions hold strong. As people of faith, we trust that it is possible to heal the past. The authors’ healing work here is skilled and true. Each one of us must learn and practice telling our own stories in a restorative justice mode. That is how we enter the joyful ceremony of mature humanity. If you were to map all the place names mentioned here in North America, it almost creates a circle: Saskatchewan, British Columbia, Pacific Coast, Laguna Pueblo, New Orleans, across the South, up to DC, New York, Toronto, and back to Saskatchewan. A great Turtle Island round dance for the healing of the nations!”
—Rose Marie Berger
Author of Bending the Arch: Poems, and senior editor at Sojourners magazine

“Rarely is a book so timely, urgent, and compelling. I believe that people will feel their hearts woven into the stories, the healing, and the challenge. Will we be made whole? This book of discipleship, filled with knowledge, insight, and information that you will find both practical and revolutionary at the same time, has quite a few artifacts from the world to come. I hope that many will be read by it.”
—Mark MacDonald
National Indigenous Anglican Archbishop for that part of Turtle Island that is often called Canada