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Healing the healers. Series 1, Faith leaders as first & second responders [electronic resource] / Odyssey Impact presents ; in association with Institute for Collective Trauma and Growth ; director/producer, Kirsten Kelly ; a TransformFilms production for OdysseyImpact!.

Contributor(s): Kelly, Kirsten [film director,, film producer.] | Crebbin, Matthew [interviewer.] | Shochet, Michael (Cantor) [interviewee.] | Collective Eye Films [production company.] | Transform Films [production company.] | Odyssey Impact!
Material type: FilmFilmPublisher: [New York, N.Y.] : Odyssey Impact, [2019]Description: 1 online resource (1 video file (24 min.)) : sound, colorContent type: two-dimensional moving image Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceOther title: Faith leaders as first & second responders | Faith leaders as first and second respondersSubject(s): Clergy -- United States -- Interviews | Ex-police officers -- United States -- Interviews | First responders -- United States -- Interviews | Pastoral counseling | Church work with bereaved persons | Psychic trauma -- Religious aspects | Violent crimes -- Psychological aspects | Terrorism -- Psychological aspects | Mass shootings -- Psychological aspects | September 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 -- Personal narrativesGenre/Form: Interviews. LOC classification: BV4470Online resources: CTS Interviewer: Reverend Crebbin.Summary: Before Cantor Michael Shochet, a Senior Clergy at Temple Rodef Shalom in Falls Church, VA, was ordained, he was a police officer in Baltimore who experienced the trauma of his partner being shot in front of him. Today, in addition to serving his congregation, he also leads the Police Chaplain unit for Fairfax County, VA. He has been on call during such traumas as the Pentagon terror attack on 9/11, the Washington Sniper shootings, and many local traumas related to gun violence and terror attacks. Cantor Shochet and Reverend Crebbin discuss the similarities between Police and Faith Leaders as responders to tragedy, the importance of self-care for faith leaders in the aftermath of trauma, the possibility of being re-traumatized when similar events, like the Parkland shooting, occur, and the uses of sacred rituals and theology in the midst of such events.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
eVideo eVideo John Bulow Campbell Library Available P627MSV5

A project of Odyssey Impact!.

Interviewer: Reverend Crebbin.

Before Cantor Michael Shochet, a Senior Clergy at Temple Rodef Shalom in Falls Church, VA, was ordained, he was a police officer in Baltimore who experienced the trauma of his partner being shot in front of him. Today, in addition to serving his congregation, he also leads the Police Chaplain unit for Fairfax County, VA. He has been on call during such traumas as the Pentagon terror attack on 9/11, the Washington Sniper shootings, and many local traumas related to gun violence and terror attacks. Cantor Shochet and Reverend Crebbin discuss the similarities between Police and Faith Leaders as responders to tragedy, the importance of self-care for faith leaders in the aftermath of trauma, the possibility of being re-traumatized when similar events, like the Parkland shooting, occur, and the uses of sacred rituals and theology in the midst of such events.

In English.

Title from from landing page (Alexander Street, viewed November 07, 2019).

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