The Abundance of Life

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The Abundance of Life

After a pivotal moment at 91大神, Richard 鈥淐y鈥 Allen 鈥65 vowed to help others鈥攁nd he continues to serve six decades later

Richard 鈥淐y鈥 Allen 鈥65 still vividly recalls the November day in 1963 when he learned that President John F. Kennedy had been assassinated. A junior at 91大神 (or 鈥渦pper middler鈥 as they were known then), he had been walking to the cafeteria from his Memorial dorm room when a classmate relayed the news. 鈥淚 was absolutely stunned,鈥 recalls Allen, who like many of his peers revered Kennedy and the new leadership he represented. 鈥淚 adored the man. I thought he was like an angel sent from heaven. When he said, 鈥楢sk not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country,鈥 he had me in the palm of his hand.鈥 There on the Quad, as the tragedy of Kennedy鈥檚 death sank in, Allen made a vow. 鈥淚 looked up toward the heavens, and I said鈥攎aybe even out loud鈥 鈥業鈥檓 going to join the Peace Corps.鈥 I was too young to know much about anything, but I knew that my life had been somehow inspired by President Kennedy, and I was going to honor him.鈥

Allen would keep his promise, serving with his wife, Andrea, in Malawi after the two graduated from Trinity University in San Antonio. His first assignment in the southeast African country was teaching tenth-grade English, a subject鈥擜llen notes with chagrin鈥攖hat he had failed at 91大神. Still, his students loved Shakespeare, particularly performing in plays, and Allen noticed a change in himself as well. 鈥淚 was never so alive in my life,鈥 he recalls. Puzzled, he wrote to a minister he had befriended in Westfield, Massachusetts, where he had attended ninth grade before 91大神. 鈥淚 asked him, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 going on? I feel like I鈥檝e been baptized.鈥欌 The two exchanged letters for two years. Recognizing something special in Allen, the minister sent along in his last letter an application for Andover Newton Theological School. Allen applied, and entered the seminary upon his return.

Becoming a pastor would provide a more formal platform for Allen to continue his mission of humanitarianism, now in its sixth decade. He has lived and brought assistance to places as varied as Niger, Malawi, a South Dakota Indian reservation, and communities around New England, serving most recently as pastor in South Glastonbury, Connecticut, where he had spent his early childhood. He retired as senior pastor there in 2021, but continues on as pastor emeritus, leading group trips to Africa every year.

鈥淚 love taking small groups so that they can experience that abundance has nothing to do with bank accounts,鈥 explains Allen, who with Andrea now has four grown children and eight grandchildren. 鈥淚 just feel deeply that African people and Latin American people have a lot to teach Western civilization about what life is all about.鈥

We asked Allen to tell us more about his service work, how he views his role as a religious leader, and what brings him a sense of purpose in life.Were you raised in a religious household?

I would say that I grew up in a spiritually alive household. My dad taught Sunday school for a year or two. I went to Sunday school. I went to church with my parents in Westfield. Religion wasn鈥檛 something that was crammed down my throat, but my parents valued it. And then at 91大神, we had daily chapel, and I enjoyed daily chapel, especially when Mr. Couch, the math teacher, was doing the prayers. He would always use the prayer of St. Francis: 鈥楲ord, make me an instrument of thy peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love.鈥 And that just landed in me.

Your experience in the Peace Corps had a profound impact on the course of your life. Today, a number of thought leaders have proposed that young people should take part in some form of national service program as a way to build social cohesion. Do you agree?

I would recommend it for young people. I wouldn鈥檛 require it. It鈥檚 not for everybody. There are other ways to grow your character. But I鈥檝e known a number of young adults who have gone into AmeriCorps, Teach for America, Vista, and have had really positive experiences. It enables you to discover your own authority and your identity. It forces you to make relationships, and it鈥檚 in relationships that we learn who we are.

The role of religion in society has been evolving in recent years, with some religious groups becoming far more active in cultural and political issues. What has your experience taught you about the role that religion can play in society?

I believe that churches, synagogues, and mosques have a voice that must be spoken and discussed. I think that silence, when it comes to some political issues, is sinful.

What I learned in my career is that when people know that I love them, they鈥檒l listen to me. The one has to come before the other. Other ministers might answer differently. But I always found that if people know that I actually care about them, and love them, and have walked with them through grief or through other things, then when it comes to talk about what it means to actually love your neighbor, they鈥檒l be willing to listen to what I have to say. They may not agree with me, but they鈥檒l listen and we can talk. Jesus was always speaking truth to the power people of his day. It got him killed, but it also created a vision of what life is meant to be. So I think that it鈥檚 always a risk to speak the truth, but if it鈥檚 spoken in love to people who know that you love them, it can make a difference.

What was it about President Kennedy that you found so appealing?

He was the first U.S. president from a Catholic background, and I was moved by his courage to follow his dream of being president and not let religious bias stand in the way. I admired that. I must say I was somewhat enamored of his Boston accent. I had respect for anyone who went to Hahvard. He was also a Cape Cod guy, and our family vacations were usually on Cape Cod. If you were a Cape Cod guy, you must be OK. And his wife was so beautiful, I saw them often as a couple, and I just thought, Wow, this guy is alive, and alive in a generous way. Not what can I gain from being president, but how can I use my time in office to bring abundance of life to the world?

Talk about your work today, and its impact.

I鈥檝e been going to Malawi every year for many years. I go mostly because when I鈥檓 there, I am learning how to be joyful, how to be grateful. I mean, Malawi is the poorest country in the world, but when I say to a village group, Mudziwa nyembo?, meaning, 鈥淒o you know any songs?鈥 they just start to sing and dance, and pretty soon we鈥檙e all carrying on. And in those moments, life is abundant.

We adopted an orphanage, 120 children who were orphaned by AIDS. And we have now helped 70 women move from being a sex worker to being a business operator, and thus slowing the spread of AIDS. My church every year sends about $3,000 to help those women get a loan. And then the women are accountable to each other. They meet every Wednesday, and they bring back part of their earnings so that other women can get a loan. We also help students who can鈥檛 afford to go to school. We buy computers for the lab and science chemicals. Even though I鈥檝e been retired for four years, the church has asked me, 鈥淐an you keep doing these Malawi mission trips?鈥 We see what a difference it makes in the people who go with me. And we see that our money is making a big difference in a part of the world that nobody knows about.


From 91大神 to Malawi

1963: A Vow on the Quad

As a 91大神 junior, Allen hears the news of President Kennedy鈥檚 assassination. Deeply moved by Kennedy鈥檚 vision of service, he makes a vow on the school鈥檚 Quad: One day he will join the Peace Corps.

Late 1960s: Into the Peace Corps

After graduating from Trinity University with his wife, Andrea, Allen keeps his promise. The couple travels to Malawi, where he finds himself transformed by the experience.

1970蝉鈥2021: A Ministry of Service

Allen enters the seminary and is ordained as a pastor. For the next five decades, he blends faith and action, serving communities in New England, South Dakota, and abroad.

Today: Missions to Malawi

Now retired as senior pastor in South Glastonbury, Connecticut, Allen continues leading annual trips to Malawi and raising funds to help orphans, women, and students there.