In a world marked by division, disruption, and deep emotional and spiritual fatigue, how do we keep showing up—with purpose, compassion, and hope?
BE WELL is a monthly exploration of trauma healing at the intersections of faith, justice, and education, created by the Trauma Healing Initiative at McCormick Theological Seminary. Each episode gathers theologians, practitioners, educators, and artists to explore how trauma-informed approaches help us teach, learn, lead, and live with greater wholeness.
About this episode:
What does it take to tell the truth about the past so real healing can begin? In this episode of the Be Well Podcast, writer, chaplain, and clinical social worker Kenji Kuramitsu helps us name how historical harms don’t stay “back then”—they live on in our bodies, our families, and our faith communities. From Japanese American incarceration to the wider “wake” of slavery, colonization, and racialized violence, Kenji invites us into truth-telling and theological reckoning not as an exercise in despair, but as a pathway toward repair—and a more just, healed future.
You’ll hear about:
- How inherited history can become “barbed wire” that must be untangled.
- How historical trauma can restrict our emotional range —because expressing rage or grief was once dangerous for survival.
- Why embodied practices like music, dance, worship, and play can help people express big emotions safely and communally.
- What it means to bear witness without being “sterile” or detached — and how the work can “prick” us when we’re close to suffering.
Guest:
Kenji Kuramitsu is a writer, chaplain, clinical social worker, and educator committed to the intersections of faith, healing, and justice. Kenji brings deep insight into the legacies of historical trauma and the theological imperative for truth-telling and repair. He has served in clinical, congregational, and campus ministry settings, and his work often explores themes of race, memory, and resilience. Kenji holds degrees from the University of Chicago, McCormick Theological Seminary, and Loyola University Chicago.
Who this is for:
This episode is for pastors, chaplains, educators, therapists/caregivers, organizers, and anyone trying to hold grief, anger, memory, and hope at the same time—especially if you’re wrestling with the “echoes” of historical harm in your community, your family system, or your own body. It’s also for leaders who want trauma-informed, faith-rooted language and practices that don’t bypass the pain, but help make space for truth-telling, dignity, and repair.
Listen, share, and subscribe—because we believe that we can be well!