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JPSI - Articles
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"JPSI Articles
More articles coming soon!
A Visit to a Prison Through the Eyes of a JPSI Volunteer by Burt Caplan
Chaplaincy Today by Gary Friedman
A Visit to a Prison Through the Eyes of a JPSI Volunteer
Burt Caplan
Hendry Correctional Institution - a state prison in Hendry County, Florida. On a Monday morning, we arrive at the parking lot, and as we unload the prayer books and other religious material and the food for our Kiddush, we gaze at the foreboding, sprawling compound. Our eyes can't escape the two high chain link fences encircling the prison, each surrounded by immense coils of razor-sharp barbed wire. We approach the guard house and show our identification. For the hour we'll be here, visiting with the Jewish prisoners, we know that we can't just let ourselves in and out of buildings, including the guard house. As we enter the room to check in, we know that during our visit, we can't voluntarily enter and leave buildings. A guard will open and lock every door, or will allow us entry from a buzzer system. While we think how demeaning this is, something we endure two days a month, we think of the men in this facility whose lives are this regulated twenty four hours a day, every day; some for more than 20 years.
Often, after we've signed in, a guard will thoroughly search the bags we are carrying in, and occasionally we are searched to make sure we are not bringing in any contraband. This is something we never get used to. The chaplain then escorts us to the chapel where we'll be meeting with the Jewish inmates. On the walk from the Security Center at the entrance to the prison, across the prison compound, we see hundreds of men, all wearing the same outfits -- blue shirts and blue pants with a white stripe down the side.
As we near the chapel, some of the Jewish men are waiting outside for us to help ca"
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