Pubdate: Thu, 09 Sep 1999 Source: Capital Times, The (WI) Copyright: 1999 The Capital Times Contact: http://www.thecapitaltimes.com/ Author: Margaret Krome Note: Margaret Krome is a Madison resident who writes this column every other week. PRISONS NEED TO SEE THE LIGHT Last week I sat swinging at our land in Grant County, feeling the wind rush by my face, looking up into a beautiful hickory tree. When I'm there, troubles flow by and simple pleasures reassert their importance. But occasionally I find it a little creepy out there alone and half expect to look up and see a gaunt, hollow-eyed fellow staring at me. So I have to admit that I secretly shuddered at the decision to build a Supermax prison at Boscobel, just a few miles from our refuge. That's mostly the way we see prisons, I think. They're where bad people who did horrible things are put, and where you want them kept. Away. Locked up. I talked with a friend who stood in long lines yesterday to visit the Boscobel prison. She described the various forms of solitary confinement in which all inmates will live, including small cells with a toilet, cement beds with chains for the occasional need for restraint, and no glimpses of sky. An exercise yard, used in solitude, will offer more daylight but still never sky, prison visits will be through a TV screen, and of course there are layers of electric and razor wire fence. Aside from the severe environment, my friend felt hopeful about the prison administrators, who appeared to have a genuine commitment to good educational opportunities for inmates. After we talked, I wondered about those long lines to see the prison. Were most people more worried about whether prisoners might escape or, like my friend, prompted by concern for prisoners and an urge to understand their plight? Recently a group from my church visited the federal prison near Oxford. At some point the pathos overwhelmed me. Maybe it was when the pleasant inmate with whom I shared music, who is due for release in 2017, joined in singing ``I'll be home for Christmas.'' Conscious of my utter failure as a cheerful presence, I disguised my crying. But before long, another inmate reached over and asked if I was OK. My singing friend went and got tissues. Later, they and others wanted to talk, not about prison but of God, divine purposes, hope and faith. Regardless of what any of those men had done, I felt a kinship with them. Last year when visiting a low-security prison, I was struck by how much the inmates reminded me of my high school friends. Smart, curious and communicative. Looking at my own errors in judgment, my moments of moral weakness, I shook my head at how easily one can slip onto the wrong side of the law. One foolish possession of drugs, and I'm in jail. One drunken or drug-induced fight, and a killing's done. One gang-pressured robbery, and I'm in prison. Granted that those who joined us in singing religious songs aren't likely to be the hardened prisoners for whom wardens want chains on beds. And such inmates exist. But I'm struck that visitations from Boscobel's inmates are the least of my worries. I should worry about my gargantuan tax bill for their upkeep. About the hardening and alienation of prisoners kept perpetually in solitary confinement and many prisons' lack of constructive programming. About policies that remove inmates' incentives for good behavior, such as truth-in-sentencing laws or the state's plan to export only inmates who aren't disciplinary problems. Most of all, I worry that society's current systems for education and social support are failing more and more people, and that so many whose mistakes put them in prisons are minorities. I cheered when the Wisconsin Catholic Conference recently issued a statement about prison conditions, charging the public with forgetting prisoners and their needs. When they advocated for programs to overcome the deadening idleness in prison, I thought of inmates I'd met who have to struggle against prison bureaucracies to be allowed to garden or enroll in vocational studies. Prisons are a potent metaphor for human failings we hate in ourselves. We want to imagine we can isolate evil and cast it away as if it weren't a part of ourselves with which we must contend. But life is more complicated than that. Current anti-crime hysteria that has bloated our prisons needs the remedy of compassion and practicality. It needs the public to visit prisons to understand the life prisoners lead. In more than one way, our country's prisons need more daylight shining inside. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea