News

From reporter to teacher: Helping prisoners find their voice

It is a Monday at Everglades Correctional Institution, a place few outsiders want to – or ever will – visit.

Grackles flit and chatter beyond the razor-wire fences. Some of the almost 1,800 people housed here trudge along, staying between red lines painted along sidewalks that cross meticulously manicured lawns. 

Why We Wrote This

Prisons isolate. Exchange for Change helps incarcerated writers forge connections – to the outside and to their innermost thoughts.

Inside the prison library on a December morning, the mood is ebullient. There is not a computer screen in sight. Nor a typewriter.

Pens and paper, however, swish on cafeteria tables as about two dozen writers try out for a special event: the graduation ceremony for Exchange for Change, a Miami-based nonprofit that brings writing classes into prison and pairs incarcerated writers with writers on the outside.

These incarcerated writers are part of an innovative rehabilitation program in one of the most progressive prisons in Florida. The state houses the third-highest number of incarcerated people – some 80,000 – in the United States, just behind Texas and California.

For some at least, writing can feel liberating, if not essential.

“I really like being a writer,” says Mike, one of the prisoners. Ready to quit after writing his first poem, Mike, by Dec. 5, 2022, had penned 677, all hand-scrawled in worn notebooks. “It’s a way to work through my past.”

It is a Monday at Everglades Correctional Institution (ECI), a place few outsiders want to – or ever will – visit. 

Incarcerated men line up for a head count against the Brutalist beige backdrop of the state prison west of Miami, not far from the glowing neon of the Miccosukee Tribe casino.

Grackles flit and chatter beyond the razor-wire fences. Some of the almost 1,800 people housed here trudge along, staying between red lines painted along sidewalks that cross meticulously manicured lawns. 

Why We Wrote This

Prisons isolate. Exchange for Change helps incarcerated writers forge connections – to the outside and to their innermost thoughts.

Inside the prison library on a December morning, the mood is ebullient. There is not a computer screen in sight. Nor a typewriter.

Pens and paper, however, swish on cafeteria tables as about two dozen writers try out for a special event: the graduation ceremony for Exchange for Change, a Miami-based nonprofit that brings writing classes into prison and pairs incarcerated writers with writers on the outside.

Previous ArticleNext Article