Letters Convey God’s Love
The diocesan Office for Life, Peace and Justice sponsors two prison pen pal programs.
One program pairs local Catholics with inmates who have ties to the San Diego area and have not been sentenced to death. The other program, operated jointly with the advocacy group San Diegans Against the Death Penalty, matches local faithful with death-row inmates.
The pen pals evangelize through correspondence, conveying the message of God’s unconditional love and sharing the role that faith plays in their own lives.
The guidelines and requirements for both programs are similar. Pen pals commit to writing a one- to two-page letter every month to the inmate assigned to them. For privacy reasons, most do not sign their full names and they use the Life, Peace and Justice Office as their mailing address.
Robert Ehnow, director of the Office for Life, Peace and Justice, said inmates are hungry for human connection and for contact with the outside world. He estimates that his office receives at least 10 to 12 letters each week from inmates and, sometimes, as many as five or six might arrive in a single day.
Anyone interested in the pen pal programs may contact the director, Robert Ehnow.