education

Alumni Spotlight: Marq Loza

Name and pronouns: Marq Loza (he/him/his)

Cohort year: 2015-2016 and 2016-2017 

Where are you living now: Des Moines, Iowa  

What I’m doing now: Career Planner and Adult Educator 

How has Life Together impacted your life?

Life Together opened some amazing opportunities for me. My fellowship years were on the South Coast of Massachusetts. The work through my site placement focused on worker’s rights, but this experience made me aware of my love of learning. I learned about the living history of manufacturing and immigration in America, as well as the struggles faced by communities that see their jobs disappear. Our program on the South Coast encouraged us to engage with the community outside our placement, so on my free time I became involved with Portuguese United for Education, a non-profit language school that celebrates the history of Portuguese-speaking peoples and the multicultural roots of the South Coast. With them, I learned to speak the Portuguese language and they reviewed my application for a Master’s Program at the University of Coimbra, in Portugal.

At the end of my two-year experience with Life Together I packed up and moved to the other side of the Atlantic, where I was successful in completing the Master’s program entirely in Portuguese. Of course, this was in large part thanks to my experience in Life Together and the South Coast community that prepared me for the adventure. Although I had the opportunity to stay in Portugal, I decided that after my master’s it was time to return to the United States. I wanted to start a career and hoped to find something true to what I learned about myself during my years in Life Together: I wanted service and learning at the core of my career. 

I moved to Des Moines, Iowa in the fall of 2019 and took a job teaching a High School Equivalency curriculum to adult learners. The community college I work for was starting a new group for Spanish-speaking adults pursuing their High School Diploma, and they asked if I would help develop and teach the curriculum. I was fascinated to find a job that had would demand so much service and learning, so this became my focus for two years. Once the program was in place and it required less hours I continued teaching but started another job through the State of Iowa, as a career planner. In this role I assist people from all social and cultural backgrounds transition to new careers. On a daily basis I meet people who are curious or excited to start something new, but I also meet those who are experiencing very difficult moments, trying to figure out what comes next for themselves and for their families. 

It is an honor to serve. I am thankful for the many experiences that exposed me and equipped me to meet people of diverse backgrounds and recognize all as my neighbors. Although my time in Life Together seems distant at times, I don’t forget that building community happens intentionally, and I plan on continuing to learn, to serve and to walk with others, whether the connection feels evident or perhaps non-existent.

Alumni Profile: Patrick Kangrga

Name and pronouns:  Patrick Christopher Kangrga (he/him)

Cohort year: 2013-2014

Where are you living now? Jackson, Mississippi

What are you doing now? Lay Ministry; Director of Youth Ministries at St. James' Episcopal Church in Jackson, MS. 

How has Life Together impacted your Life?

I participated in two years of Episcopal Service Corps programs. My first year was in Maryland with the Gileads. Life Together followed. If my experience with the Gileads was like opening a door, then my experience with Life Together was like turning on the light switch in the room to which that door led. The Gilead's gave me opportunities and possibilities that, if I am honest, I thought would always be out of my reach. Life Together helped me to discern one of those possibilities as a life calling.  

Before going to Maryland, I had these two wonderings that I had put into the back of my mind, "What would it be like to be a priest or pastor?" and "What would it look like for me to have more meaningful involvement with children or youth in church?" I did not address these questions all that much at the time for two reasons. First, I had attempted a college degree and had failed at it. Second, I could not imagine that someone like myself would ever be acceptable or worthy of being a minister in the eyes of others or God. 

The benefit of my Life Together year was that it gave me more chances to gain experience. I learned from others and I learned about myself. I could try things and fail even miserably, knowing grace was abundant. Ultimately, this gift of failing with an abundance of grace was the true blessing I received from Life Together and the entirety of my ESC experience. I suspect a world without Life Together and ESC would have been far less gracious to me. And I think the old me, the person I was before Life Together and ESC, would have had little grace too. But the person I am today and the person I believe I continue to grow into sees the beauty of the story God was writing. How the chapters that came before gave birth to the chapters that followed and the one I am living now.  

Anything else you'd like to share?

There is no doubt in my mind that my experience in the Episcopal Service Corps and with Life Together has allowed me to live my best life. I have a career that I see as a calling. I love what I do to earn a living. I have been able to become more involved in the wider Episcopal Church. I have been a part of Forma, A Ministry of ECF, the Network for Christian Formation for the Episcopal Church and beyond for some time now. I joined Forma's leadership and recently became the Interim Chair. 

Also, I have been able to do things that I always wanted to do because of my career. I walked the Camino in Spain with some youth. Because I make a decent salary and am given vacation, I have gone to some of my top dream destinations like Florence and Rome, Italy. I learned to scuba dive in the Great Barrier Reef. 

I have even been able to revive one of my earliest passions. I am a published author. Not a book yet but I have several devotionals, meditations and essays published related to my church work and faith life.