It Had Become our Nest

I am a nature-lover. Better yet, a wildlife enthusiast. One summer, outside of my window in the room I stayed in at Camp Deerpark, I watched a bird begin to build her nest, twig by twig. Then a few days later, I watched her lay her eggs in that very same nest. Later I witnessed those eggs hatch into small hungry miracles. Eventually, each one of her birds learned to fly. I watched the nest become empty again. This is the story of how Camp Deerpark impacted my life, the youth I worked with, and the lives of my children. I am like that bird.

I was born on a New Jersey chicken farm in 1940. I was raised in Coatesville, Pennsylvania, and at age 11 started attending Newlinville Mennonite Church, one of the first Mennonite Churches established in a Black community. Our pastor invited us to attend Camp Men-O-Lan, also in Pennsylvania, where I met other children of color from DC, Philly, Harrisburg and Reading. My counselor at Men-O-Lan was John Kraybill. I remember building a great relationship with him, and my age mates. As a teenager, I desperately wanted to attend Lancaster Mennonite High School, to keep in touch with many of my Camp Men-O-Lan friends, but my mother made it very clear that I was going to the local school where the rest of my family had attended. “If it was good enough for them,” she told me, “then it’s good enough for you.” She was right. I graduated the top boy of my senior class.

In 1961, at 21 years of age, I was ready to leave Coatesville. I tagged along with a friend of mine who was heading to New York City to be a 1-W, which was the legal status given to conscientious objectors of war. In exchange for enlisting in the military, we were required to complete a certain number of hours of community service work.

So that’s how I found myself in Harlem. And, boy, was I scared. Of course I had seen Black people in Black communities; but not at this level. Harlem was tougher and rougher than Coatesville. My small apartment was right next door to the Seventh Avenue Mennonite Church. Thankfully, at the time, the pastor, and the person in charge of placing the new 1-Ws, was none other than John Kraybill, my counselor and good friend from Camp Men-O-Lan!

Soon after, I became a member of the church, and served as their Youth Leader. In 1966, when Kraybill left New York City, I became the lead pastor. The church began a youth center and I was the coach of a community basketball team. I was known as the “Hoodlum Priest,” because many of our youth had intimidating reputations.

One of our players, Jack, a flashy 17-year-old, often visited the center. I knew he was dealing drugs, and tried to warn him about his lifestyle. “I can make more money in a week than you make in a year,” he told me one day. He was probably right. I had quit my job to become a teacher in one of the most notorious junior high schools in Harlem. Still, I was worried that I couldn’t give Jack what he needed most to survive the streets.

And then late one night, there was a knock on my door. The basketball team spilled the horrible news, “Jack is dead; they killed him.” His flashy lifestyle was a threat to the wrong people. As devastating as the news was, it fueled my passion to work with youth even more. I vowed there would be no more “Jacks.” Not if I could help it.

In 1968, soon after the assassination of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the Mennonite Minority Council was established. The purpose of the council was to diminish the large disparity between money given abroad, and money given to the local community. Around the same time, there were also talks within the Mennonite churches of purchasing a campsite near New York City. As I visited various locations with other Mennonite pastors, I kept Jack in mind. I was looking for a place where the youth of my community could know God, peace, brotherhood, and love. It had to be a safe place, a place to rescue our youth from the dangers of Harlem’s streets. “No more Jacks,” I told myself.

It Had Become our Nest 1
Counselor Richard Pannell helps little brother and
camper Shawn with his banquet night tie.

We finally settled on Camp Deerpark. With funds from the Mennonite Minority Council and young adults from the Mennonite Voluntary Service Center, we had plenty of helping hands at our Youth Center in Harlem and at Camp Deerpark during the summer. Every spring we would help fill out paperwork and set up doctors’ appointments for about 30 of our youth to be able to spend time at Camp Deerpark.

It was a dream come true to see my youth run through the grass, and walk through the woods, and enjoy nature as much as I did. Even my own biological children, all six of them, grew up in the safety of Camp Deerpark. It had become our nest, nature’s sanctuary to us.

The nest is empty now. My children, Anita, Richard, Melody, Robert, Shawn, and Kiesha, are all independent adults now. Surely, Camp Deerpark was vital in all of them establishing their faith, growing and maturing spiritually, and finding God’s will for their lives. The Harlem youth and basketball teams are all grown up and leading their own lives now too. All I ever wanted was for them to see the world as God sees it. They have all learned to fly. They are all miracles. Camp Deerpark helped me do that.

Written by Celmali Jaime Okonji, program director in 2006–7, attended Evangelical Garifuna Church and King of Glory Tabernacle, both in the Bronx.

Richard “Dick” Pannell is a retired podiatrist and lives in New York. He is the former pastor of Seventh Avenue Mennonite Church in Harlem.

Related Entries

Share:
Pain and Need Aren’t Partisan 2

Pain and Need Aren’t Partisan

By Ben Cheek | December 5, 2024

This is Session 3 of the Prince of Peace: Jesus and Peacebuilding from the Election to the Holidays webinar series. (Click here to sign up for session invites.) Sometimes people seem so different from us, we automatically assume we can’t connect. Or, we tried to connect on some level, but it quickly became way too…

What is A Mission Statement? 3

What is A Mission Statement?

By Ben Cheek | December 4, 2024

On the LMC NYC District call this month, Dr. Tiffany shared critical information on what is and what is not a mission statement. This is critical as we think about moving the congregations in our district forward towards mission, optimize the mission already underway, and align together on the LMC mission as district churches. In…

Advent Calendar 4

Advent Calendar

By Ben Cheek | November 30, 2024

Count Down the Days to Christmas with Camp! Jesus is the center of our Camp community. Let’s celebrate together the coming of the One who brings peace and salvation and life everlasting to humanity. We’ll be posting each day to Facebook and Instagram stories, but you can get our daily post in your email inbox!…

A Spirit-filled Christmas: The Joy in Judgement 5

A Spirit-filled Christmas: The Joy in Judgement

By Ben Cheek | November 25, 2024

The end of this week (Black Friday) marks the beginning of the Christmas season for many. (Though the big-box retailers had stuff out before Halloween, can you believe it!?!) For our culture, this season is a time of Joy. We gather for feasting and presents and the delighting of children. And despite the growing chill…

From Inner Peace to the Holiday Table 6

From Inner Peace to the Holiday Table

By Ben Cheek | November 10, 2024

This is Session 2 of the Prince of Peace: Jesus and Peacebuilding from the Election to the Holidays webinar series. (Click here to sign up for session invites.) This session is about what we do when the people around us challenge our peace. It requires us to draw on something deeper in order to continue…

Releasing and Loving “The Other Side” 7

Releasing and Loving “The Other Side”

By Ben Cheek | October 22, 2024

This is Session 1 of the Prince of Peace: Jesus and Peacebuilding from the Election to the Holidays webinar series. (Click here to sign up for session invites.) This session is about what we do with those in our lives who see things differently — even very differently. We do this using a paradigm from…

Story of A Tree 8

Story of A Tree

By Ben Cheek | October 18, 2024

A fresh tree stump is like a magnet to me. I have to look at the rings to read the tree’s story. It’s at once humbling to look inside a living thing that is much longer-lived than yourself, but also encouraging to see how it weathered the ups and downs of life, the good times…

Camp's Political Endorsement 9

Camp’s Political Endorsement

By Ben Cheek | October 15, 2024

I’ve been eligible to vote for 30 years, but – like many in my generation – I’ve never felt like a politician or party truly represented me. They may win me at one point, but they’ll loose me in the next. When I have voted, it always seemed I was going to the polls holding…

Prince of Peace 10

Prince of Peace

By Ben Cheek | October 14, 2024

Camp’s mission statement says we offer people the opportunity to fellowship in “serenity”. Serenity literally means “clear skies” — a state of refuge from the storms of the World. Right now, our World does feel pretty stormy with a divided country going into an election and numerous disasters and conflicts abroad and at home. Because…

Mapping Spiritual Journey with NYC Leaders 11

Mapping Spiritual Journey with NYC Leaders

By Ben Cheek | October 1, 2024

In order to know where you’re going, it’s a good idea to know where you are. One of the best ways to know where you are is a good map. The NYC LMC District is seeing growth in many of our churches right now, and opportunities for re-inventing and re-launching in others. But these are…