No One Left Alone by Liz Walker
As the first Black woman to anchor the Boston-area evening news, Liz Walker found herself in an industry that defined the neighborhood of Roxbury largely by violence. But when she became a pastor there, Walker grew close to households marked not only by trauma but by courage — including the family of Cory Johnson, a young father who was murdered. In the wake of their worst nightmare, the family reached out for help.
As Walker’s congregation invited neighbors to gather, they created soft spaces for others’ grief to land. There, in the stories told, the meals shared, the tears shed, and the silences kept, people found a space to receive their sorrow. Out of this ministry grew a grassroots trauma-healing program, one now being replicated across the country.
Through this groundbreaking book, begin to imagine what story-sharing groups might look like in your context. Face the disparity of grief that comes from racism and systemic inequality, and learn to confront legacies of harm. Discover the healing power of listening, as well as the art and skills of accompanying someone in pain. Further, grasp how caregivers, pastors, counselors, and other healers — many with their own wounds — can benefit from soft spaces too.
Marked by history and surrounded by violence and loneliness, we all long for healing. In the tradition of esteemed writers like Bryan Stevenson and Cole Arthur Riley, Walker writes about how community helps us transfigure trauma. There is nothing dramatic about listening to someone’s story or sharing our own. But there is mystery here, and sacredness. No one has to be left alone.
About the Speaker
Liz Walker is the founding director of the CAN WE TALK… network, a nationwide collective of spiritually inspired, community-based, clinically supported programs addressing America’s epidemic of post-traumatic stress and grief through the healing power of sharing personal stories. Since it began in 2014, CAN WE TALK… has been replicated in 18 different sites nationally. A master’s graduate of Harvard Divinity School (’05), Liz Walker has long been actively involved in a healing ministry. In 1998, she helped found the Jane Doe Safety Fund, a multimillion-dollar anti-violence initiative in Massachusetts that continues to work on policy and supports domestic abuse shelters and safe houses around the commonwealth. In 2001, she began a 10-year humanitarian mission in South Sudan, one of Africa’s most troubled countries, and helped build a girls’ school there. In 2015, the US State Department invited her to Belgium to help coach a culturally diverse group of young women in self-empowerment and building cross-cultural relations. In New England, Reverend Liz is still best known as one of the region’s most popular television news anchors, a position she held for 21 years. An icon in the Boston community, she has received numerous honorary academic degrees and professional recognition, including two Emmy awards representing the highest honor of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Considered one of the nation’s most healing voices, Reverend Liz launched her first book, No One Left Alone, based on a simple truth: the wounded heal best together. Reverend Liz’s life, like her book, has been described as “Inspiring, thoughtful, and beautiful… a tender reminder and spacious invitation…” to experience the grace and love in all of us.