30 Years Later, Staffer Returns to Life-Changing Summer Camp
It almost takes a map and compass to find Thomas Walkers office in The Hub. Enter through the front doors, climb the back stairs, take a right, then a left, then another left.
But ask Walker, who leads the 91心頭s department of Inclusion and Equity Education (IEE), how he got here and the path seems pretty straightforward.
I get asked, How did you get into this field? says Walker, who has Well, there was this summer camp.
The year was 1989 and Walker was just a kid, 16 years old, looking for something to do with his summer. When the St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church in his hometown of Birmingham, Alabama, offered to send him away for a week, Walker didnt think twice. He certainly didnt think it would change his life.
The National Conference of Christians and Jews (known since 1999 as the ) created Anytown camps in the 1950s. They included some of the traditional summer activities like canoeing and crafts, but the focus fell squarely on social justice. After a week of camp, the NCCJ hoped its diverse groups of campers (known as delegates) would emerge as respectful, understanding and inclusive community leaders.
By the late 80s, the camp had spread to Birmingham. Walker who, by his own admission, knew few non-whites was one of the inaugural delegates. With his limited exposure to diversity, and as a gay man who had not yet come out, he quickly realized it would be a transformational summer.
It was a really powerful experience, he says. Having grown up in white Birmingham, I was taught in school that we solved all that [racial conflict] in the 60s. The [other delegates] experiences in Birmingham were incredibly different from mine. My world was not the world. It was just my take on it.
Face-to-face conversations with his peers changed that. Each day, the camp facilitated discussions about difference and diversity, power and privilege. Each evening, the delegates delivered presentations about their religions and cultures.
This was one of the best experiences of your life, Walker wrote at the time, in a letter to his future self. Dont forget the joy and pain and the friends you made. Work to end the same pain, to spread that joy and to make more friends.


