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Knitting Behind Bars

Posted: 05/21/2012 11:44 am

At this very moment, a group of crazy recent grads are in a big blue converted school bus buzzing around somewhere in Nevada. Met with surprise, confusion and questions wherever we go, we are Bus 52, and our mission is to tell stories.

Turn on your television, open your paper, read your blog. You have a higher chance of feeling worse about the world than before you started. Nowadays, negativity sells. While it's definitely important to report the bad, all too often, the good falls by the wayside. Our mission at Bus 52 is to highlight inspiring people in every corner of the United States who are doing great things for their community.

For 52 weeks, we're hitting all of the lower 48, showing that no matter where you go, you can find inspiration. Every week, we post new videos, showcase community innovation, and hopefully brighten your day. Our first story looks at two retired women's limitless energy and drive in providing knitting behind bars.

"Listen, if I can do it, then anyone can do it."

Every Thursday at five o'clock, you can find Lynn Zwerling and Sheila Rovelstad, needles in hand, providing encouragement and guidance to diligent pupils working on hats or sweaters.

As students and teachers settle into the quiet hum of the knitting circle, a cloud of relaxed calm falls across the group. Lynn and Sheila's knitting class is like many others across the country. Except theirs takes place in prison and their students are inmates.

At the Jessup Pre-Release Unit (JPRU) in Jessup, Maryland, the relationship between the inmates and the women is like family, and the bond between inmate and knitting is just as natural.

Knitting Behind Bars grew from Lynn and Sheila's passion for their chosen obsession.

Throughout a stressful career, Lynn found knitting to be much more than a hobby. "When I learned how to knit I saw that I'd think about it all day. I could get through most anything, any stress... because I knew I could go home and knit."

After retiring and starting a knitting group that counts over 500 members, she saw the calming effect and atmosphere of camaraderie that knitting gave its members.

If knitting could bring together people who have nothing in common but a love of knitting, what could it do for people who had never been exposed to knitting, ever?

So she decided to take her knitting behind bars.

Wardens concerned with safety and doubtful of the interest among inmates repeatedly turned Lynn away. After five years of pounding the pavement, Lynn finally got her chance. JPRU gave her the opportunity to prove that Knitting Behind Bars could contribute to the prison population's well being.

As participation, interest, and even a waiting list for the program grew, the prison began to recognize the value of KBB.

Just as Lynn had predicted, the men that attended the weekly, two-hour class immediately started to experience knitting's calming effects. An atmosphere of focus and normalcy effortlessly interrupted the monotony of daily life in prison.

"They come in, they're kind of worked up, they'll sit down and just calm right down."

There has been an additional benefit: the opportunity to practice social skills often cast aside behind bars. Lynn believes that knitting is an "opportunity to practice, to hone their social skills... there's no such thing as socializing in jail." The relationship Lynn and Sheila have developed with the knitters is almost like family.

With a broad smile, Ritchie Horton, a former inmate and member of the JPRU knitting circle, reflects that "it's kind of like they're moms coming in."

Sheila and Lynn understand the value of treating inmates as people.

"There is no 'them' and 'us.' I think as members of society we have to understand that this line doesn't exist." She believes that Knitting Behind Bars provides a transition from the world of prison to the world outside.

Outside of the prison's walls, Sheila runs a business dyeing yarn. At Wüllenstudio, she names each yarn's color scheme after a different rock song.

Recently, Sheila saw an opportunity to use her business to help grow the Knitting Behind Bars program by developing a yarn inspired by the inmates. She developed a competition online, asking for ideas for the new yarn's color scheme. Over fifty different yarn enthusiasts contributed their ideas for the special edition yarn appropriately named 'I Fought the Law, and the Law Won.'

Sheila wrote each submission on the blackboard at JPRU. She then asked the knitters to choose the color scheme they wanted. Shocked to be given a choice, the members of the group were initially overwhelmed by such a crucial decision. They unanimously selected blue, green and black -- blue for the sky, green for the grass, and black for the bars that keep them from the sky and the grass.

The wild success of Knitting Behind Bars shows that inspiration is waiting in the things we love. Lynn and Sheila's passion has been a positive presence for the inmate population of JPRU for the past two years.

Sheila and Lynn's energy and excitement is infectious. If they have their way (and chances are they will), Knitting Behind Bars will not only continue to flourish at JPRU, but will be the inspiration for similar programs across the country.

For more information on Knitting Behind Bars visit their website (knittingbehindbars.blogspot.com). Volunteers and those interested in donating to Knitting behind bars can put requests through their website. If you're interested in purchasing Sheila's yarn, 'I Fought the Law, and the Law Won,' you can visit her Etsy site (http://www.etsy.com/shop/Wullenstudio).



 

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At this very moment, a group of crazy recent grads are in a big blue converted school bus buzzing around somewhere in Nevada. Met with surprise, confusion and questions wherever we go, we are Bus 52, ...
At this very moment, a group of crazy recent grads are in a big blue converted school bus buzzing around somewhere in Nevada. Met with surprise, confusion and questions wherever we go, we are Bus 52, ...
 
 
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VeggieLove
apparently, my micro-bio is empty
09:53 AM on 05/28/2012
A truly inspiring story. The smiles on the men's faces says it all.
12:14 PM on 05/23/2012
I think it was awesome to take this into the prisons. We can judge people on crimes they commit but you don't always know the true heart of a person. I'm sure this act has greatly affected the lives of some behind those bars, who's course could be changed as a result of it. True inspiration!
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lovetostitch
08:38 AM on 05/23/2012
What a wonderful story! It truly is inspiring. I know from personal experience how calming and meditative needlework can be, and it also lends itself to conversation. As shown in this article, handwork can be an avenue to rehabilitation. This reminds me of a project I read about in a cross-stitch magazine where inmates in the UK do needlepoint. Some of the designs they produce are gorgeous!

I hope these ladies are able to spread their project and that others can take up similar endeavors. Though I'm not really a knitter, if my health improved I might have to consider helping on something like this.

Thanks, HuffPo, for presenting this article! And thank you, Lynn and Sheila!
03:50 AM on 05/23/2012
Blessings be to you Wonderful Souls ~
~*~
~ "the hands create what the HEART feels" ~
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tozomona
04:59 PM on 05/22/2012
Women like this are my real heros! Yay!!!!! THANK YOU SO MUCH.
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Amethystt
04:19 PM on 05/22/2012
Every little bit helps.
09:51 AM on 05/22/2012
In some parts of the world, specifically South America, knitting is considered "a man's art" Very few women knit and the guys, their needles fly! Making something with your own hands is a gift. Paying attention to each stitch and watching your project come to fruition gives you time to shake off the inconsequential cares of this world. I love m dp needles! Hats off to these knitters!
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njgal4obama
All others will be towed.
09:41 AM on 05/22/2012
I am an avid knitter, and a former correctional officer...albeit in a county jail setting, rather than in a prison.

This program would also be beneficial to prison staff. It's a very stressful job. I used to bring my knitting to work with me, and it made the job so much easier.
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Annespeaks
06:35 AM on 05/22/2012
very touching.
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08:46 PM on 05/21/2012
This has got to be the most positive and illuminating project ever in at least 10 yrs. People in a situation where they are only allowed to have a very small portion of control need a new frame of reference. Handiwork, as it's been called, is refreshing on many levels. I'm sure the perserverence of these ladies is just as refreshing. I am absolutely inspired, to the point of needing a place to consider how I may help this project. Prisoners are so often neglected. People who went into our prison system who were very much capable of growing past their downfall, but were discouraged because the Dept. of Corrections spends so little effort on rehabilitation, should be allowed hope and rest and time to reflect. It shouldn't be difficult so to create any program that helps.
05:36 PM on 05/21/2012
fantastic story, trust two women to take it to the prisons, good onya Lynn and Sheila for persisting with making your vision become reality!
01:29 PM on 05/21/2012
This is brilliant! Well done B52 - look forward to more stories. RP