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RNS NEWS FEATURE Hospitals revamp chapels into meditation rooms By
JOANNA CORMAN SACRAMENTO Calif. (RNS) —
When Connie Johnstone saw relatives of Muslim patients praying in a
hospital parking lot, or laying out a plastic bag to create a clean
spot on the lobby floor, her visions of a meditation room suddenly got
a lot broader. “I took note of that
and said, ‘Hey, we need to have a place” for them to pray,
said Johnstone, the former manager of spiritual care at Kaiser Permanente
facilities in Sacramento and suburban Roseville, who now holds a similar
position in San Jose. Johnstone wanted to create
a space “that calls up beauty, something that is quiet to still
the spirit” for patients, visitors and staff. She also wanted
to accommodate the region’s diverse religious and cultural rituals. Johnstone created three meditation
rooms, the first of which opened this month (July) in Sacramento. The
other two, in Roseville 30 miles to the northeast, are expected to open
later this year. The rooms will look similar:
Each will have stained glass windows depicting nature scenes, movable
chairs, kneelers for Catholic worshippers, space for Muslim prayer rugs
and literature from a variety of faiths. While Johnstone chose a nature theme, a colleague at a separate Kaiser facility across town chose symbols from nearly a dozen major religious traditions in the Interfaith Meditation Chapel of Hope that’s under construction. The shift to meditation rooms
mirrors a growing trend among hospitals as health care centres try to
make room for people from a wide variety of faiths, as well as those
who have no faith or are “spiritual but not religious.” In a stressful environment,
hospital chapels, meditation rooms or prayer rooms offer employees,
patients and visitors quiet refuge for individual prayer, meditation
or communal worship. Throughout the 19th century,
many hospitals were built by religious groups, particularly Catholic
nuns. As a result, their chapels typically resembled Protestant or Catholic
churches or Jewish synagogues. Today, hospital chapels vary
widely. Some still reflect their founders’ religious roots. Others
have been renovated to accommodate multiple religions, or their religious
symbols have been removed so the rooms resemble waiting rooms or art
galleries. “There was a diversity
for a long time that was Christian diversity,” said Rev. George
Handzo, vice-president of pastoral care leadership and practice at HealthCare
Chaplaincy, based in New York City. Staff and patient populations
at many US hospitals are much more diverse than they once were, and
hospitals know it makes good business sense to accommodate them, Handzo
said. Some hospitals have Jewish
family rooms or Shabbos rooms, which can be stocked with couches, prayer
books, kosher food and kitchen appliances. Located in hospitals or nearby
apartments, they are typically paid for by the local Jewish community. Some prayer rooms are outfitted
for Muslim worship. Five years ago, Boston’s renowned Massachusetts
General Hospital installed a mihrab, or ornately tiled archway, in a
prayer room to help Muslims orient themselves toward Mecca during prayer. Washington, D.C.’s
Georgetown University Hospital added Muslim prayer rugs at the back
wall of its Catholic chapel, and later removed the Stations of the Cross
facing Mecca, said Rev. Brian Conley, the Jesuit hospital’s director
of mission and pastoral care. Wendy Cadge, associate professor
of sociology at Brandeis University near Boston, includes a chapter
on hospital chapels in her forthcoming book, Paging God: Religion in
the Halls of Medicine. She’s visited about
30 chapels nationwide, and she said it’s increasingly common to
find renovated chapels that include images of nature instead of religious
symbols to make them welcoming to a broad range of people. “The question to ask
— which I don’t think anybody really knows the answer to
— is whether these renovations make the space more welcoming and
therefore used by a range of people, or whether they make the space
sort of unfamiliar to a lot of people so nobody knows quite what they’re
for and as a result they don’t get used,” Cadge said. An openness to spirituality reflects two larger changes in health care, experts said. Hospitals are embracing religion because of an increased awareness of a mind-body-spirit connection, and also increased spiritual diversity. Beyond chapel design, hospitals offer kosher meals for Jews and halal meals for Muslims; vegetarian options for Hindus or Buddhists; and food for Muslim employees to break the Ramadan fast. Baltimore’s Johns Hopkins
Hospital, which has a Christian-style chapel and an interfaith meditation
room, is planning to open a non-denominational chapel with a nature
motif. A vertical rod in the floor will allow clergy to attach various
religious emblems. While Johns Hopkins is most
focused on patients’ physical care, administrators also want to
respect their religious, spiritual and cultural needs, said Rev. Uwe
Scharf, who directs the hospital’s pastoral care department. “People will only come to the hospitals where they feel that their whole person is acknowledged and welcome, and that their heritage is actually celebrated,” he said.
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