A person is a sort of place. In fact, a person may be a truer,
more abiding place than any geographic location.
I have not relied on my father and mother for shelter in
nearly forty years. But they have been that deep safe harbor. Even when I was far
away, I knew that if I had to I could set a course and find shelter, strength, love.
From his obituary:
Kenneth Neal Wood spent his
life teaching himself and others to seek out and pay attention to experience. He
was a farm boy who grew up to be a minister, then turned to education before
becoming director of experiential learning at Davidson College. In his last
years he was a gardener and abiding friend of nature. He died Saturday. He was eighty
years old.
The cause of death was
amyloidosis, a rare disease involving the buildup of amyloid proteins in organ
tissues, particularly the heart and digestive system, eventually causing their
failure. He had been an exceptionally healthy and robust man. But for the
disease, his family and friends had expected him to live another decade or more.
He was a quiet giant. He
stood six feet four inches tall, all of it broad and muscled. He grew up
milking cows and baling hay, hunting and fishing on days off. Once, hunting for
meat on a distant relative’s ranch in Wyoming, he shot and killed a bull elk
with a royal rack two inches off the Boone & Crockett record. Yet he gave
up hunting altogether when his young children could not bear the carnage of the
rabbits and pheasants he brought home for dinner.
He was a minister who eventually
left the church because he felt it had failed to be the liberating institution
it promised to be. As a minister he worked in the trenches of the civil rights
and anti-Vietnam war movements of the 1960s. He spent much of his professional
life with young people encouraging forms of education that freed them to think
for themselves.
After high school and
before college, he and a friend spent a year driving around the American West
in a Model A Ford, working on ranches and farms. For the rest of his life he
would urge others to pursue their own adventures and learn firsthand from them.
In one of his early
sermons as a Presbyterian minister, he celebrated the value of adventure.
“Late Wednesday
afternoon,” he wrote in 1963, “I parked the car in front of the manse, stepped
out, and was greeted by the excited little voice of my two-and-a-half year old
daughter: ‘Hi Daddy, look where I am!’
“The voice was coming
from an unfamiliar location, high up somewhere. I looked in all the upstairs
windows, and then at the same instant the panic button was pressed. I spotted
her fully twenty feet up a tree in the front of our house. A young eaglet on
its first flight out of the nest couldn’t have been more proud and thrilled and
excited than my little daughter beaming down at me from her perch....
“Pity the adult that
cannot look upon a child straining to reach a perch far above what the adult
world considers safe and not envy the reckless courage and the sense of victory
that belongs to the young climber.... Pity the adult without an inner tree to
climb.”
Ken Wood participated in
the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and two years later was
arrested with others, including the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, on the Selma-to-Montgomery
March. He organized his church in Orchard Park, New York, to work against
inequality. He and other community leaders convinced Saul Alinsky to bring his
Industrial Areas Foundation to organize Buffalo’s impoverished eastside.
Once one of his sons was
told by a stranger in a pickup to go get his father and tell him there was a
man outside who was going to “kick his ass.” When the son reported this news, his
father assumed it was someone upset with his Christian politics.
Turned out it was a
long-absent favorite cousin pulling everyone’s leg.
Ken Wood was born in 1933
in Buffalo, N.Y., and grew up on farms at Evans Center and Sturgeon Point, on
or near the shores of Lake Erie. After the year traveling out West, he studied
history and psychology at Westminster College in New Wilmington, Pa. He spent summers
earning money for college at farm and construction jobs, even stints on freight
boats on the Great Lakes.
At Westminster he met
Sandra Jean Colman, who became his wife, love, and life-long companion.
He studied theology and
counseling at Princeton Theological Seminary and was ordained in the
Presbyterian Church. In 1959 he became founding pastor of Northway United
Presbyterian Church in Williamsport, Pa., and then in 1964 an associate pastor
at United Presbyterian Church in Orchard Park, N.Y. There he developed PACT, or
Park Action, a citizen’s organization for racial justice.
In 1968 he became
director of the Lansing Area United Ministries, where he continued work on race
and justice issues. These led him from church to school interventions. Throughout
this period he worked with school dropouts and alienated teens. He helped
create the People’s Learning Center. In 1971 he joined the Youth Development
Corporation in Lansing. The following year he became a fellow with the National
Program for Educational Leadership at Ohio State University.
Much of his professional
life had been focused on youth, cultivating in them capacities for freedom, critical
thinking, and learning from experience. In 1974 he became director of
experiential learning at Davidson College, where he counseled students about
lives and work they envisioned for themselves and helped them gain real-world
experiences to explore their dreams and build competencies.
During his time at
Davidson he volunteered for Habitat for Humanity. In part because of that work
he won the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award at Davidson College. He and Sauni
gutted and renovated the family’s old house on Main Street, where they continued
to live.
Wood retired from
Davidson in 1995, and spent his remaining years tending bees in his backyard, negotiating
garden rights with woodchucks and deer, tramping Western North Carolina
mountains in search of old-growth forests, reading, listening to music, attending
to birds, visiting with family. He could watch a spider build its web for an
entire morning and consider it time well spent.
Asked about high points of
his life, he remembered volunteering with Sauni at state and national parks, climbing
snowy mountains, hitchhiking in Newfoundland and going out to sea with its fishermen.
He remembered adventures, abroad and at home.
He was preceded in death
by parents, Christian Witmer Wood and Bessie Emily Wertman Wood; sister Janice
Wood Tonder; and son Scot Kenneth Wood.
He is survived by his
wife of fifty-eight years, Sandra; children, John Colman Wood and wife, Carol
Young Wood, of Asheville, N.C.; Melinda Wood and husband, Irvin Wardlow, and
daughter, Rosa, of Decatur, Ga.; Peter Neal Wood and wife, Patricia Sierra, and
sons, Scot Salomon and Esteban Nathaniel, of Coral Gables, Fla. He is also survived
by sister, Nancy Wood Mackenburg and partner Ron Smalt of Orchard Park, N.Y.;
brother-in-law, sister Jan’s husband, Robert Tonder of McCaysville, Ga.;
brothers-in-law, wife Sauni’s brothers, George Colman of Oaxaca, Mexico; Samuel
Colman of Binghamton, N.Y.; Robert Colman of Montpelier, Vt.; and David Colman
of Middlebury, Vt.; along with many loving nieces and nephews.
“Education,” he once
wrote, “...should function to free people and thus enable us to act toward the
solution of our personal and corporate problems. At times I am discouraged by
the complexity and intractability of the problems. But I find within myself, my
family, and in youth, abundant cause to hope and to work for both a better
present and a better future.”
Ken Wood spent his life
climbing such trees.
A celebration of Ken
Wood’s life will be 2 p.m. Saturday, January 11, at the Davidson, N.C., Friends
Meetinghouse on South Street.
2 comments:
long live the inner tree climbers
Indeed. Thanks, Chris.
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