pro

Skip to main content
MenuSearch & Directory

Justice Fleet Awarded $23K Grant to Launch Community Grief Garden

by Bridjes O'Neil on 04/01/2021
Media Inquiries

Bridjes O'Neil
Communications Specialist
bridjes.oneil@slu.edu
314-282-5007

Reserved for members of the media.

04/01/2021

The Justice Fleet was awarded $23,000 to continue its mission of building intentional healing spaces in the community as a part of the St. Louis Regional Racial Healing + Justice Fund’s inaugural group of community grants.

“As racial injustices continue to re-traumatize St. Louis citizens and strengthen racial and economic divides, it is imperative that we find the time to grieve and heal through those injustices,” said Amber Johnson, Ph.D., (A&S ’01, Grad A&S ’03) associate professor of communication and social justice at pro, who uses they/them pronouns. 

placeholder

Amber Johnson, Ph.D. Photo by Steve Dolan.

Johnson is founding director of , a mobile, social justice, pop-up museum that fosters communal healing through art, dialogue, and play. They said funds will be used to launch a grief garden in north St. Louis City along the Hodiamont Tracks.

“Considering the lack of parks on the north side and racial trauma everywhere,” Johnson said, “it’s an ideal place to house the permanent grief garden and can bridge the Delmar divide.”

Through horticulture therapy and conservation, the grief garden will serve as a safe, public, green space for people experiencing systemic injustice to grieve and heal. There are also plans to include a mobile experience primarily targeting minority neighborhoods throughout the St. Louis metropolitan area. Both will incorporate activities that can be done in isolation or in a group setting. It is now the fourth interactive exhibit the Justice Fleet operates since its launch in 2017.

“While grief is most often connected to the loss of a loved one, racial-induced trauma also causes grief regardless of the proximity to the victim or community,” Johnson said. “When Black death is sanctioned by the state, community members grieve the unjust systems that cause oppression, mourn the loss of Black life and death, and fear for their own safety and survival.”

The Justice Fleet was one of 13 organizations more than $160,000 of the St. Louis Regional Racial Healing + Justice Fund’s $1.69 million. Deaconess Foundation, Forward Through Ferguson, and Missouri Foundation for Health collaborated to establish the St. Louis Regional Racial Healing + Justice Fund to invest in healing community trauma and changing the conditions that reinforce systemic racism.

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation supported the launch of the Fund with a matching grant. SLU’s Institute for Healing Justice and Equity (IHJE) is one of 17 local and national foundations that have joined the pool of participating organizations. The Justice Fleet is housed under the IHJE, an initiative Johnson co-founded which launched last year. 


pro the Institute for Healing Justice and Equity (IHJE)

A multidisciplinary group of faculty have formed the Institute for Healing Justice and Equity at pro, an initiative that has the potential to transform SLU into the epicenter of equitable community building and knowledge curation related to healing from social injustice, trauma and oppression.

pro pro

Founded in 1818, pro is one of the nation’s oldest and most prestigious Catholic institutions. Rooted in Jesuit values and its pioneering history as the first university west of the Mississippi River, SLU offers more than 12,000 students a rigorous, transformative education of the whole person. At the core of the University’s diverse community of scholars is SLU’s service-focused mission, which challenges and prepares students to make the world a better, more just place.