Geez! Is the
cheeky alternative Christian magazine of the same
name really leaving Winnipeg?
The answer is yes. Geez
magazine is moving to Detroit this year, where it will be led by a new team
of socially progressive Christians.
Founded in 2005 by Winnipegger Aiden Enns, Geez set out to protest the “unholy
alliance between church, state, market and military” while celebrating the
“spiritual dimensions of biking, energy efficiency and canning pickles.”
Its audience was the “over-churched,
out-churched, un-churched and maybe even the un-churchable.”
For Enns, 57, reasons for the change
include wanting to make space for younger leaders with new ideas and visions,
and also because he’s tired—it’s not easy publishing a magazine these days.
Since Geez
sells no advertising, circulation is the main source of revenue. With only
about 900 subscribers, it wasn’t sustainable without fundraising.
Keeping salaries low helped too, but it
took a toll through staff turnover as people left for better-paying jobs. It was
also tough on Enns himself.
As he looks ahead, Enns doesn’t want to dwell on the challenges—he wants
to remember the successes.
“We published some amazing writers,” he says of the people who wrote
for Geez.
And the magazine tackled many pressing issues such as gender,
decolonization, disability and ableism, privilege, the future of food and
simplicity, he says.
One issue on living life offline—Geez
has always resisted going digital—earned
Enns an invitation to speak at a conference in New York where he shared the
podium with Ralph Nader and well-known environmentalist Bill McKibben.
Another issue that received a lot of attention was titled “30
Sermons You’d Never Hear in Church.” That prompted Geez to create the
“Auto-Sermon-Engagerizer-O-Matic,” a fill-in-the-blanks card where churchgoers
could rate sermons.
But his main satisfaction comes from letters and e-mails received
from many people who were touched by Geez.
The most common sentiment was “’I’m so glad I found you, I feel so alone in
my faith,’” he says.
“So many people are struggling to find hope,” he says. Geez gave them the courage and
inspiration they needed to “take a step in the direction . . . it gave them hope.”
As for regrets, he’s sorry the magazine never reached its
circulation goal; with more money, it could have hired more staff and paid them
better. And he wishes Geez had
prompted more controversy; its goal was “holy mischief,” after all.
The new publishing
team will be led by Detroiter Lydia
Wylie-Kellerman, a long-time Geez contributor
and co-editor of RadicalDiscipleship.net, a
daily online journal of radical Christian faith and social justice activism.
Why does she want to take it on?
“I love Geez,” she says.
“It has been a home for me. I never would have imagined in a million years that
I would one day be stepping into this position.”
As
editor and publisher, she wants to “keep summoning stories” and help people “feel
hope in these truly scary times.”
She
intends to keep Geez’s commitment to
print.
“I
want to help create something that can be read around the kitchen table, that
can be read as you lean against a tree, something that can be held in your
hands, and treasured over time,” she says.
At
the same time, she’s open to doing more online. “I want to leave a small amount of wiggle room for the spirit to take us
a different way.”
As for the move to the U.S., Wylie-Kellerman
is aware it might prompt some Canadians to worry the magazine will be dominated
by American issues.
“I believe that Geez’s roots
in Canada is a tremendous gift to the work and identity of the magazine,” she
says, adding she promises to be “mindful and paying attention to this concern” while
making sure Canadians continue to have opportunities to write.
For Enns, the transition produces mixed feelings. He’s glad the
magazine has found a new home, but he’s also sorry not to be as involved in the
future.
Of his passion for Geez,
Enns says “Jesus saw things people didn’t see. I wanted to see the world
with those same eyes.
“For me, Geez was a way of looking at situations with an eye to resisting
oppression, to seeing things in new ways.”
He expects that vision to continue,
only now from south of the border.
Click here to read a Q & A with Lydia Wylie-Kellerman, new editor of Geez.
From the January 26 Winnipeg Free Press. Photo above from the Winnipeg Free Press.
Click here to read a Q & A with Lydia Wylie-Kellerman, new editor of Geez.
From the January 26 Winnipeg Free Press. Photo above from the Winnipeg Free Press.
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