
Educating, advocating, and
organizing to uphold just
and integrated communities
north of Chicago, Illinois
The Interfaith Housing Center is proud of its grassroots origins. The organization was founded primarily by local women and clergy in the early 1960s. These little-known local activists and their descendants form the nucleus of north suburban residents who instinctively know that a healthy community is an open community.
Interfaith organizes at a variety of levels:
Wealthy and poor families are living in closer proximity, and the suburbs are beginning to show a new level of creativity in response to the growing number of low- and moderate-income residents who are having difficulty staying put; and of commuters who cannot afford to move in.
That affluent north suburban residents whose own housing is secure are willing to fight for affordable housing in their communities is the most striking aspect of Interfaith and its organizing campaigns. It goes against the usual “self-interest” explanation for why people organize for change.
For example, Wilmette homeowners, renters, and clergy who came together between 2001 and 2004 around the redevelopment of the 17-acre Mallinckrodt College campus had a positive and multifaceted vision for this site. This campaign demonstrated that poverty and its alleviation are not only “inner-city” issues.
Healing society’s ills depends upon residents working together to realize a vision of justice that extends beyond the traditional organizing notion of a “doable win,” and regardless of whether or not they will individually benefit from the result.
The following is just a sampling of Interfaith's organizing campaigns over the last decade:

Jean Cleland, Gail Schechter, and Mimi Ryan accept Golden Trowel Award from Housing Action Illinois for their successful Wilmette campaign, in Springfield, 2003.

RELATE (Religious Leaders Acting Together for Equality) at anti-hate rally in Skokie, 2000.

Standing-room only north suburban housing forum, at St. Francis Xavier Church, Wilmette, 2002.
Northshore Estates tenants discuss the future of their complex, 2007.