Collections
![James B. Schafer speaking to a crowd at Peace Haven, 1939](/sites/default/files/styles/browse_thumbnail/public/content/collection/covers/ZRR270.jpg?itok=X0g5JowE)
Photographs of the Idle Hour estate as “Peace Haven.”
![Places of Worship Collection](/sites/default/files/styles/browse_thumbnail/public/content/collection/covers/ZRR049.jpg?itok=B-zLambQ)
Photographs of places of worship in Nassau and Suffolk Counties.
![Plainview-Old Bethpage Public Library Local History Photograph Collection](/sites/default/files/styles/browse_thumbnail/public/content/collection/covers/ZRR078.jpg?itok=XfdVXS0P)
Digital copies of the Plainview-Old Bethpage Local History Photograph Collection.
![Prison Theology Newsletter introduction](/sites/default/files/styles/browse_thumbnail/public/content/collection/covers/default%20theology.jpg?itok=n2vZqf4w)
An online newsletter published through Jesus the Liberator’s Prison Theology website.
![Cover of book](/sites/default/files/styles/browse_thumbnail/public/content/collection/covers/Picture3.jpg?itok=vNqXNA_9)
PRISON THEOLOGY is an attempt to build a knowledge base that can offer solutions to “crime and punishment”. This theology was developed among multitudes of incarcerated people in the American empire. People most affected by punishment are