ST. JOHN'S ANGLICAN WOLFVILLE, N.S.
  • About
    • Leadership Team
    • Life Events
    • Rentals >
      • Meeting Space
      • Sanctuary Venue
  • Worship
    • Services
    • Bulletin
    • Music >
      • Music Program
      • Choral Scholars
      • Our Recordings
  • Life
    • Parish Life >
      • Current Events
      • Blog
      • Church Use Calendar
      • Musique Royale Concerts
    • Wind Phone
    • Student Life
    • Outreach >
      • Activities & Organisations
      • Community Oven
      • Community Roots Day Camp
    • Prayer Chain
    • Christian Formation >
      • Emmaus Sessions
      • Past Events
    • Parish Communications
    • Parish History
  • Donate

the Wind Phone

Picture

Words on the Wind

​This wind phone is for anyone who has lost someone special in their life. We hope you find comfort in expressing feelings, sharing memories, and saying the goodbyes you never had the opportunity to say.
As you talk with your loved one, let the wind carry your words.

Grief is a natural response to loss and unique to everyone. Give yourself permission to feel whatever you feel, without judgement. 


​
This phone is not connected or monitored.

This wind phone was crafted by Elmer Uzans.
​Project sponsored by St John's Anglican Church and Valley Hospice Foundation.

What is a wind phone?

We all grieve in different ways. When Itaru Sasaki’s cousin died in 2010, Itaru installed an old-fashioned phone booth in his garden so he could “call” his deceased relative and speak the words they’d lost the opportunity to share. The phone was not connected to any network, but Itaru was able to release his words of loss and longing – and the wind carried his words. 

Months later, when the Fukushima earthquake and tsunami hit nearby, Itaru opened the phone booth to his neighbours, who urgently needed a place to express their grief. Word travelled quickly and pilgrims began to visit from across Japan to speak through the “phone of the wind” to those they loved.​
Picture
Picture
Since then, wind phones have been created all around the world. They are usually old rotary phones, which evoke memories of times past and offer the tactile experience of dialing a number, though the phones are not connected. Often, they are in out-of-the way places where people can experience their inner grief while surrounded by nature’s beautiful rhythms of life, death, and regeneration.

In the Easter season of 2025, St. John’s installed a wind phone in the cemetery behind the church. It is available to everyone and can be accessed by way of the roadway at the east end of the church building. The cemetery is open between dawn and dusk. 

We thank Valley Hospice Foundation, Porter’s Custom Trophy and Engraving, Nicole Uzans, and Elmer Uzans for contributing to this project. 
 
If you would like to know more about this movement or locate other wind phones near you, visit www.mywindphone.com

Home

Worship

Contact

Donate

We celebrate diversity in all of God's creation
and welcome people of all sexual orientations and gender identities.
🏳️‍🌈 🏳️‍⚧️ ♿️
This parish is located in Mi'kma'ki, the traditional territory of the Mi'kmaq people. This territory is covered by the "Treaties of Peace and Friendship" which Mi'kmaq and Wolastoqiyik (Maliseet) People first signed with the British Crown in 1775.

We are all Treaty People.
© COPYRIGHT 2024 Parish of Horton
​ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




Picture

​Diocese of N.S. & P.E.I. 

  • About
    • Leadership Team
    • Life Events
    • Rentals >
      • Meeting Space
      • Sanctuary Venue
  • Worship
    • Services
    • Bulletin
    • Music >
      • Music Program
      • Choral Scholars
      • Our Recordings
  • Life
    • Parish Life >
      • Current Events
      • Blog
      • Church Use Calendar
      • Musique Royale Concerts
    • Wind Phone
    • Student Life
    • Outreach >
      • Activities & Organisations
      • Community Oven
      • Community Roots Day Camp
    • Prayer Chain
    • Christian Formation >
      • Emmaus Sessions
      • Past Events
    • Parish Communications
    • Parish History
  • Donate