Special programs Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/category/campus-community/special-programs/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Tue, 21 Apr 2026 11:49:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Apply by May 8 for Summer Peacebuilding Institute /now/news/2026/apply-by-may-8-for-summer-peacebuilding-institute/ /now/news/2026/apply-by-may-8-for-summer-peacebuilding-institute/#respond Tue, 21 Apr 2026 08:58:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=61349 Each summer, the Summer Peacebuilding Institute (SPI) brings together students, practitioners, and professionals from around the world for a unique learning experience centered on conflict transformation, restorative justice, and peacebuilding.

More than a series of classes, SPI is a place to learn in community. Participants live on campus, share meals, attend lectures, and build connections that last long after the program ends.

This year’s sessions will be held May 18-26, May 28-June 5, and June 8-12.

The application deadline for U.S. participants is May 8. Learn more and apply at .

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Climate scientist Dr. Deborah Lawrence opens ACE Fest with keynote address /now/news/2026/climate-scientist-dr-deborah-lawrence-opens-ace-fest-with-keynote-address/ /now/news/2026/climate-scientist-dr-deborah-lawrence-opens-ace-fest-with-keynote-address/#respond Wed, 15 Apr 2026 21:48:39 +0000 /now/news/?p=61220 It was in the rainforest of Borneo, alone for hours at a time and a day鈥檚 boat ride from the nearest town, that Dr. Deborah Lawrence first felt a deep connection to nature. That connection, forged when she was a 20-year-old college student, has sustained her life鈥檚 work ever since.

As keynote speaker for the 2026 Academic and Creative Excellence (ACE) Festival, Lawrence told a crowd gathered at Lehman Auditorium on Wednesday morning about the year she spent researching plant-animal interactions on the tropical island.

She was tasked with walking a specific route through the forest, starting at dawn, recording every animal she observed and noting what it was doing and eating. She recalled listening to gibbons sing in the mornings, watching macaques leap from tree to tree in the evenings, and seeing her first orangutan in the wild. 

Lawrence, who holds a BA in anthropology from Harvard University and a PhD in botany from Duke University, said she had arrived at college three years earlier 鈥減retending to be a pre-med major so I would have something to say when asked,鈥 but still unsure what she wanted to do. When she returned from that year in Borneo, she discovered a newfound sense of purpose: to save the rainforest. 

鈥淭he rainforest had held me for a year, giving me a place to learn about nature and about myself,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat a gift.鈥

In the years since, she has devoted much of her life to understanding the human connection to nature and the consequences of actions like deforestation. Her research has taken her around the world to forests in Cameroon, Costa Rica, Mexico, and East Africa, as well as North Carolina and Virginia.


It’s a tough time to be a scientist, Dr. Deborah Lawrence told students during a Q&A session following her talk, citing funding cuts. “But it’s a great time to be out there trying to do something about climate change,” she added.

Lawrence spent more than 25 years as a professor of environmental sciences at the University of Virginia, where she focused on global forest systems and climate dynamics.

In addition to her academic career, she served as a science advisor to the U.S. Department of State鈥檚 Office of Global Change, supporting climate policy and international negotiations. She played a key role in establishing SilvaCarbon, a U.S. interagency program dedicated to forest carbon measurement and monitoring.

For the past four years, Lawrence has worked as chief scientist at Calyx Global, a carbon credit rating agency. At the startup, she leads efforts to ensure the scientific integrity of greenhouse gas ratings. She also directs research and analytics for nature-based solutions and engineered carbon dioxide removal.

鈥淚 still do science every day, but my target is different,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think of it as the flip side of academic research. I used to study nature鈥檚 climate solutions鈥攈ow forests and land can alter the climate. Now I study how those solutions get put into action, bundled up, and sold as carbon credits. And my job is to make sure [corporations] are delivering the climate impact that they promise.鈥


Students stroll into Lehman Auditorium during a warm Wednesday morning for the ACE Festival keynote.

In her address, Lawrence spoke about the wonders of photosynthesis鈥斺淚t takes something you cannot see and turns it into something you can touch and eat鈥濃攁nd the glorious splendor of spring. 鈥淟ife is simply bursting out all around us, and it鈥檚 an amazing thing,鈥 she said.

She recognized her feelings of eco-grief, the sadness she feels about the loss of ecosystems and living beings, and the increasing rate of extinction. 鈥淸T]he earth is more than just a place where we live,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a place we love. We would not feel sadness if we felt no love. So I just want you to remember that. If you are feeling sad about what鈥檚 going on in the world, you鈥檙e also feeling love.鈥

Lawrence said she had been encouraged to read Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer six years ago but hadn鈥檛 found the time. Having recently read the book, which is 黑料正能量鈥檚 Common Read for 2025-26, she expressed appreciation for its wisdom. 

鈥淭rying to know something is a way to love it,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I wish for all of you while you鈥檙e here in college. Study something deeply. It will change the way you view the world, including yourself, including nature.鈥

黑料正能量鈥檚 ACE Festival continues Thursday with a full day of student presentations and performances, an authors鈥 reception and award presentation, and the first-ever ACE Fest Career Fair. For a full schedule of events, visit .

Watch a video recording of the address below!

Thanks to the Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, the Daniel B. Suter Endowment, and the Center for Interfaith Engagement for collaborating with ACE Festival and the Provost鈥檚 Office to bring Dr. Lawrence to campus.

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Campus community celebrates Easter at worship service /now/news/2026/campus-community-celebrates-easter-at-worship-service/ /now/news/2026/campus-community-celebrates-easter-at-worship-service/#respond Wed, 08 Apr 2026 21:52:58 +0000 /now/news/?p=61123 黑料正能量 celebrated Easter with a morning of worshipful music, biblical readings, and reflections on the holiday’s significance during a campus worship service at Martin Chapel on Wednesday.

The service was co-sponsored by Eastern Mennonite Seminary and led by graduate students Makinto and Mukarabe Makinto-Inandava. It included musical selections from Makinto, as well as the 黑料正能量 Gospel Choir led by Kay Pettus ’25, and biblical readings from Mukarabe.

Reflections on Easter were shared by English Professor Dr. Kevin Seidel, who teaches and writes about the changing relationship between religion, secularism, and literature. His message, titled 鈥淲omen Explain Things to Me: A Sermon on Luke 24,” focused not so much on Jesus’ bodily resurrection from the dead but on the “slow, difficult coming to terms with the significance of the resurrection by Jesus’ followers as portrayed in Luke 24.”

鈥淚n Luke, the resurrection of Jesus isn鈥檛 a simple, triumphant end of the story, but a kind of difficult beginning that unfolds in the Book of Acts,鈥 Seidel said. 鈥淭he resurrection doesn鈥檛 settle debate among Jesus鈥 followers about who he is. The resurrection proves, I think, profoundly unsettling for them.鈥

After the service, Seidel said he was glad for the chance to reflect on parts of the resurrection story in Luke 24. 鈥淭he service was a good way to mark and celebrate the beginning of the seven-week Easter season in the church calendar,鈥 he said.

University Chaplain Brian Martin Burkholder said Wednesday鈥檚 Easter celebration follows 黑料正能量鈥檚 practice of honoring and observing significant Christian traditions and holidays, including Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.

鈥淭his morning, as we gathered, there was an opportunity for education about Easter,鈥 he said, 鈥渁s well as an invitation to worship in the spirit of Easter through Scripture, singing, and reflection.鈥

Makinto, a frequent worship leader at chapel events, performed Jesus Is Risen, an original song he wrote in 2013, as the opening song for this year鈥檚 Easter worship service. The song tells the Easter story and connects it to our own lives, he said. 

鈥淪o, as he is risen, we as well can rise above all the challenges we have, above the pains we have, above the solitude we have, and also conquer death and situate ourselves squarely in life with our community around us,鈥 Makinto said.

Makinto and his wife, Mukarabe, moved from California to pursue degrees at Eastern Mennonite Seminary and the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, respectively. They are the directors of , an organization that connects people at the local and global levels for the purpose of development, unification, and spiritual and physical well-being.


University Chaplain Brian Martin Burkholder speaks during a campus worship service on Wednesday in Martin Chapel.

Mukarabe Makinto-Inandava reads a selection from Luke 24 (left). Members of the 黑料正能量 Gospel Choir (right) sing during Wednesday’s campus worship service.


黑料正能量 Campus Worship

Campus Worship is an invitational space for gathered worship in Christian traditions and a variety of styles. Services are held in Martin Chapel of the Seminary Building on Wednesday mornings every other week.聽

Campus worship continues with a final service of the academic year on April 22 recognizing 黑料正能量鈥檚 senior student chaplains: Emily Suarez Nunez, Dia Mekonnen, Sara Kennel, and Miranda Beidler. The event will be livestreamed on .

Watch a video recording of the service below!

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黑料正能量 hosts consultation on Judaism, the Bible, and Anabaptism /now/news/2026/emu-hosts-consultation-on-judaism-the-bible-and-anabaptism/ /now/news/2026/emu-hosts-consultation-on-judaism-the-bible-and-anabaptism/#respond Tue, 31 Mar 2026 13:38:57 +0000 /now/news/?p=61007 This article originally appeared in the March 26 issue of The Weather Vane. To read more articles like it, visit .

On Monday, March 23, Anabaptist and Jewish scholars and religious leaders gathered in the Strite Conference Room of 黑料正能量鈥檚 Campus Center for a consultation on Judaism, the Bible, and Anabaptism. The invite-only event was planned by Peter Dula, professor of religion and culture at 黑料正能量, and Trina Trotter Nussbaum, director of the Center for Interfaith Engagement (CIE), and included all-day discussions centering around the work of Matthew Thiessen and Daniel Weiss.

According to Dula, Thiessen, a Mennonite New Testament professor at McMaster University, is 鈥渙ne of the most influential voices in the 鈥楶aul within Judaism鈥 school of New Testament studies.鈥 The discussion of Thiessen鈥檚 work at the consultation centered around four articles of his.

Weiss, according to Dula, is a Jewish professor of Jewish studies and the philosophy of religion at the University of Cambridge, 鈥渨hose work at the intersection of early rabbinic literature and early Christian literature has significant resonances with traditional Anabaptist understandings of violence and the state and critiques of Constantinianism.鈥 Weiss also had four articles discussed.

The morning began with a presentation by Thiessen titled, 鈥淲hat Mennonites Need to Know 黑料正能量 Judaism,鈥 which introduced the work of Weiss. Weiss then responded, and there was time for some questions from the audience. Following a break, a panel engaged with some of Weiss鈥檚 research, including articles on Christians and Levites, and the possibility that early Christians did not baptize their children, instead letting them be born into salvation.

After a lunch break, Weiss took a turn introducing Thiessen鈥檚 work in a section called, 鈥淩eading the New Testament within Judaism.鈥 Thiessen then responded. A panel then engaged in Thiessen鈥檚 work, including reflections on how to read Paul with an awareness of Judaism, and whether Jesus meant to start a new religion.

Dula was the guiding force in bringing the two scholars together to have the event. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got a Jewish scholar writing really perceptively about Anabaptist themes, and you have this Mennonite scholar writing really perceptively about Judaism,鈥 Dula said. 鈥淪o, I thought we should get them together.鈥

Nussbaum reflected on the efficacy of the dialogue, and how it was in large part also due to the highlighted speakers. 鈥淚t worked because the two scholars we were highlighting shared the spotlight so well,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ow many times did we hear, 鈥榓nd now I want to open it up to you all?鈥欌

Miranda Beidler, an 黑料正能量 senior who helped coordinate the event in her role as a student chaplain with the CIE, praised the event and guests for creating 鈥渋nherent dialogue.鈥 She said, 鈥淸The speakers] were so willing and open to talk about their beliefs, their theology, in ways that were open and curious about the others鈥 theology and beliefs, but without imposing their beliefs on somebody else.鈥

Sara Kennel, another senior student chaplain at 黑料正能量, was struck by the openness and intellectualism of the event participants, saying, 鈥淚t felt like a gathering of a lot of people that care about understanding differences, but also are deeply intellectual. … I don鈥檛 think that I鈥檝e encountered that many spaces at 黑料正能量 that are that level of scholarship.鈥

Nussbaum was struck by the impact of cross-religious dialogue, saying, 鈥淚t鈥檚 something pretty amazing that we can see ourselves in another faith. … It was a spiritual love-fest.鈥 Beidler, similarly, connected the event to CIE鈥檚鈥攁nd 黑料正能量鈥檚鈥攇oals of interfaith work, saying, 鈥淚t鈥檚 us putting into action when we say we care about learning from other people and from other cultures.鈥

Anabaptist and Jewish scholars and religious leaders gather to listen to a lecture on Daniel Weiss by Breanna Nickel. (Photo by Alex Belisle)
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Students talk campus organizing at Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship Conference 2026 /now/news/2026/students-talk-campus-organizing-at-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship-conference-2026/ /now/news/2026/students-talk-campus-organizing-at-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship-conference-2026/#respond Thu, 26 Mar 2026 11:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=60909 Participants from across U.S. gather at 黑料正能量 to connect, learn, and grow in solidarity

The Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship (ICPF) Conference returned to 黑料正能量 on March 13-15 for another year of examining issues of peace and justice. The student-led conference invites students and faculty from historic peace colleges across the U.S., including Mennonite, Brethren, and Quaker colleges, to connect, learn, and grow in solidarity together.

It was the second consecutive year 黑料正能量 has hosted the once-annual conference. The university previously hosted the ICPF in 2020 before it was indefinitely put on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The purpose of the conference was to create a space where students from different campuses could come together, connect, and share the work they鈥檙e doing in their own communities, said Shawna Hurst, a sophomore elementary education major at 黑料正能量 and member of the ICPF 2026 Planning Committee.

鈥淚 wanted people to leave feeling energized, supported, and equipped with new relationships and resources to continue work moving forward,鈥 Hurst said.

鈥淚 think the conference was a success because I saw a real shift in people over the course of the weekend,鈥 she added. 鈥淢any attendees arrived feeling defeated and discouraged by the state of the world, and while those feelings didn鈥檛 completely disappear, people left feeling less alone. There was a stronger sense of community, and many felt encouraged and re-energized by both the connections they made and the messages shared by our keynote speakers.鈥

Third-year 黑料正能量 peacebuilding and development major Ciela Acosta, a member of the ICPF 2026 Planning Committee, provides an introduction to attendees at Suter Science Center 106 on March 14.

This year鈥檚 conference centered around the theme, 鈥淪olidarity, Community, and Resistance in This Political Moment,鈥 with a focus on practical campus organizing. 鈥淚n a time of extreme political division, rising fascism, and anti-intellectualism, what does campus organizing look like?鈥 reads a description of the theme. 鈥淗ow can we leverage our unique heritages and cultures to better serve the broader culture and nation?鈥

Hurst said it was challenging to narrow down a theme because “it felt like there was so much we wanted to talk about and focus on.”

“Despite everything going on, our main goal was to bring the community, and specifically college students, together to learn ways to practice resistance and show solidarity on college campuses,” she said.

Emily Welty (left) and Nadia Dames (right) delivered keynote addresses during the conference.

The conference featured keynotes by Emily Welty and Nadia Dames.

Welty, an author and theatre-maker living in the Rockaway Beach neighborhood of Queens, New York, teaches and directs the peace and justice studies program at Pace University. She is also part of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons team that won the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize. Her keynote was titled, 鈥淎ll We Have is Each Other.鈥

Dames is a local business owner and community advocate in Harrisonburg who believes in the power of community, togetherness, and collective action. She delivered a keynote titled, 鈥淔rom Home in Harrisonburg to Roots in Palestine: Finding Your Why in the Work of Resistance.鈥

Participants share a meal (top photo) and engage in a drum circle (above right) at ICPF 2026. Alicia Maldonado-Zahra leads a workshop (above left).

Workshops were held throughout the day on March 14 in various locations around the 黑料正能量 Seminary Building. Topics ranged from the epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous people in North America to the colonization of Puerto Rico as rooted in Indigenous genocide. Other sessions offered information on careers in peacebuilding and explored how Anabaptist understandings of peace have evolved over the past several generations.

The conference also included a prayer vigil in response to the war in Iran and genocide in Gaza, an Amahoro Drumming for Peace circle led by Seminary student Makinto, and a potluck with Harrisonburg-area organizations.

“One of my favorite highlights was the Saturday lunch potluck,” Hurst said. “It was such a meaningful moment to see community members continually show up, bringing crockpots full of food to share. It created a tangible sense of care and connection that felt really special.”

Student-musicians sing at Martin Chapel for Eli Stoll’s music and peacebuilding senior capstone presentation on protest music and power during ICPF 2026.

Hurst said that one moment that stuck with her happened on Saturday evening when an attendee told her this was their first experience with Mennonites. “They shared how meaningful it was to see people who care about both Jesus and justice at the same time,” she said. “Hearing that was incredibly encouraging.”

The ICPF 2026 Planning Committee included students from 黑料正能量, Goshen College, and Bluffton University: Ben Koop, Ciela Acosta, Ellie Shemenski, Logan Daugherty, Mackenzie Miller, Monica Ehrenfels, Micah Wenger, Shawna Hurst, and Dr. Timothy Seidel.

Thanks to everyone who supported and volunteered to assist with the conference, including Eastern Mennonite Seminary, the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, the Orie O. Miller Center at 黑料正能量, Mennonite Mission Network, and the Mennonite Church USA鈥檚 Church Peace Tax Fund for significant monetary support.

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Students planning Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship conference at 黑料正能量 https://anabaptistworld.org/students-planning-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship-conference-at-emu/ Thu, 05 Feb 2026 18:26:10 +0000 /now/news/?post_type=in-the-news&p=60556 Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship will host its annual conference March 13-15 at 黑料正能量 with the theme 鈥淪olidarity, Community and Resistance in this Political Moment.鈥

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MLK Day 2026: 鈥楨nvironmental justice is a civil rights issue鈥 /now/news/2026/mlk-day-2026-environmental-justice-is-a-civil-rights-issue/ /now/news/2026/mlk-day-2026-environmental-justice-is-a-civil-rights-issue/#respond Tue, 20 Jan 2026 19:39:43 +0000 /now/news/?p=60393 黑料正能量 celebrates Martin Luther King Jr. Day with focus on sustainability

黑料正能量 hosted its ninth annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration on Monday, Jan. 19, featuring a series of events honoring the life and legacy of the late civil rights leader.

The theme of this year鈥檚 celebration was 鈥淏eyond the Dream: Social Justice and Ecological Consciousness,鈥 and it focused on the message of Dr. King鈥檚 1967 Christmas sermon, in which he preached about all life on Earth being interconnected. 鈥淲hatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly,鈥 he said.


Students carry signs around the indoor track during Monday morning鈥檚 unity march.

Monday鈥檚 events began at 9:45 a.m. with a unity march inside the University Commons. 黑料正能量 two dozen students, faculty, and staff members held signs calling for peace and justice as they completed three laps around the indoor track. Each year, the unity march pays tribute to the many nonviolent marches led by Dr. King and others during the civil rights movement. 


The group of marchers proceeded to Lehman Auditorium, where members of the Black Student Alliance (BSA) and other students shared quotes from Dr. King and reflected on his legacy during Speak Out. One quote that resonated deeply was: 鈥淚njustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.鈥

Celeste Thomas, director of Multicultural Student Services at 黑料正能量 and chair of the committee planning the MLK Jr. celebration, said Dr. King imagined a world with community instead of chaos, love instead of hate, and no one going hungry. He imagined a world where families are not separated, where there are no food deserts and everyone has clean water, and where countries don鈥檛 bully one another for resources, she added. 鈥淏eloved community is sustainability for all mankind,鈥 she said.

Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed, director of alumni engagement and community connections at 黑料正能量, spoke about the theme of the day. 鈥淕oing beyond the dream means understanding justice is not passive,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t requires participation, it requires responsibility, and that鈥檚 where you come in, 黑料正能量 students. You鈥檙e not on the sidelines of this work. You are already shaping the future of communities like Harrisonburg through the choices you make, the careers you pursue, the voices you raise, and the values you carry forward. Don鈥檛 just remember him, carry his dream forward.鈥

Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus spoke about Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old who was arrested in 1955 for refusing to give up her seat on a segregated bus in Montgomery, Alabama, nine months before Rosa Parks did the same. Dycus, who noted that Colvin passed away on Jan. 13, 2026, said the young activist had inspired her for many years. 鈥淏oth King and Colvin teach us what justice and power look like in necessary ways,鈥 Dycus said. 鈥淲e gather not out of tradition, not because the calendar tells us to, but because we are committed to taking seriously the work of building equitable, compassionate, and just communities. This is who we are, not just what we do.鈥


Author and philosophy professor Ol煤f岷固乵i O. T谩铆w貌 leads Monday鈥檚 convocation.

Ol煤f岷固乵i O. T谩铆w貌, an associate professor of philosophy at Georgetown University and a fellow at the Climate and Community Institute, served as the featured speaker for the Martin Luther King Jr. Day Convocation. He is the author of Elite Capture and Reconsidering Reparations, a contributor to Greta Thunberg鈥檚 The Climate Book, and a past recipient of a Marguerite Casey Freedom Scholar fellowship. His presentation was titled 鈥淏ecoming Firefighters: Climate Justice and the Fight for a Free World.鈥

He examined recent actions taken by the federal administration to seize oil assets in Venezuela and spoke about the political and economic power of fossil fuel companies. 鈥淭he control those people and their allies have over our entire lives depends on the political power they wield and defend with the money they get destroying our air and water,鈥 he said. 


A ceremony on Monday rededicated the 黑料正能量 Peace Pole.

Following the convocation, a ceremony on Thomas Plaza rededicated the 黑料正能量 Peace Pole with a vision for peace, justice, and shalom on Earth, including all living things (represented by a new plaque featuring animal prints). The Peace Pole was recently resealed and painted and has newly installed 鈥淢ay Peace Prevail on Earth鈥 plaques. 


Simone McKelvey of Simone & Tuesday (pictured on right) guides students in crafting their own handmade soap. She has been making her own soap since 2013 and sells her soap at the Staunton Farmers鈥 Market.

Throughout the day, the conference room inside the Student Life Suite transformed into an aromatherapy space, filled with the scents of soap and essential oils. Simone McKelvey, owner of the Simone & Tuesday skincare brand, led two interactive demonstrations, teaching students, faculty, and staff how to create their own soap from scratch using natural ingredients. 鈥淵our skin is your largest organ,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd a lot of the time, we don鈥檛 pay attention to what we put on it.鈥

Participants worked in pairs at eight slow cookers, melting coconut, sunflower, and castor oils, adding lye to distilled water, and mixing the concoction with a stick blender and essential oils to create bars of soap. 鈥淲hen you go to the store and visit the soap aisle, some of them are soap, but some of them aren鈥檛,鈥 McKelvey said. 鈥淪ome are detergents made with synthetic chemicals. True soap is what you鈥檙e making today.鈥


A student participating in a fire cider demonstration on Monday fills a glass jar with ingredients submerged in apple cider vinegar.

The sound of knives chopping onions, horseradish, garlic, hot peppers, ginger, and other vegetables reverberated through the Old Common Grounds space on Monday as participants in two interactive workshops sliced and diced fresh, locally sourced, organic ingredients to create their own jars of fire cider. The apple cider vinegar-based tonic supports immunity and digestion and is packed with  antioxidants, antibacterials, and antimicrobials, making it an ideal remedy for the colder months. In about four weeks, the jars can be strained and used to enhance everything from seltzer water and salad dressing to collard greens, pickles, and hot toddies.

The demonstrations were led by the sister-owners of Kinfolk Farm, a Black women-led farm in rural West Virginia dedicated to nourishing the brilliance, creativity, and legacy of Black and Indigenous people of the Global Majority.


Scroll through a photo album of the day below!

Thanks to Multicultural Student Services, Student Life, and the office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for planning the series of meaningful and educational events to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

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黑料正能量 hosts MLK celebration with full lineup of events /now/news/2026/emu-hosts-mlk-celebration-with-full-lineup-of-events/ /now/news/2026/emu-hosts-mlk-celebration-with-full-lineup-of-events/#respond Wed, 14 Jan 2026 16:42:48 +0000 /now/news/?p=60373 黑料正能量 will host its ninth annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration on Monday, Jan. 19.

This year鈥檚 lineup of events includes a convocation with author and philosophy professor Ol煤f岷固乵i O. T谩铆w貌, two workshops teaching participants how to create their own handmade soap, and two sessions demonstrating the use and benefits of a spicy, vinegar-based tonic known as 鈥渇ire cider.鈥 All events are open to the public.

The celebration is themed 鈥淏eyond the Dream: Social Justice and Ecological Consciousness鈥 and centers around the words of Dr. King鈥檚 鈥淎 Christmas Sermon on Peace鈥 speech from 1967:

It really boils down to this: that all life is interrelated. We are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied into a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects on directly, affects all indirectly.

The chosen theme closely aligns with the university theme of sustainability for the 2025-26 academic year. 鈥淭hat was intentional,鈥 said Celeste Thomas, director of multicultural student services at 黑料正能量 and chair of the committee planning the celebration. 鈥淭his is a good time in our country to remember that not everyone is equally privileged and that we should really pay attention to Dr. King鈥檚 quote. We are all interconnected, and it鈥檚 a great time to practice self-care and self-awareness, recognizing that everyone鈥檚 journey is different.鈥

Monday鈥檚 events start at 9:45 a.m. in University Commons with a Unity March around the indoor track. The march will proceed to Lehman Auditorium, where an open forum-style Speak Out event will be held at 10 a.m.

Convocation

Convocation at 10:15 a.m. in Lehman Auditorium will be led by , an associate professor of philosophy at Georgetown University and a fellow at the Climate and Community Institute. T谩铆w貌 is the author of Elite Capture and Reconsidering Reparations, a contributor to Greta Thunberg鈥檚 The Climate Book, and a past recipient of a Marguerite Casey Freedom Scholar fellowship. His presentation will be livestreamed on and uploaded to the 黑料正能量 .

鈥淎 lot of his work is around social justice reparations and how it connects to sustainability, which we鈥檒l hear in his speech,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淗e really fits what we want to do and the message we want to convey.鈥

Following his convocation, a soul food lunch will be served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Northlawn Cafeteria. From 1:30 to 2:30 p.m., T谩铆w貌 will lead a Q&A session at the MainStage Theater (University Commons 170). 

Soapmaking

In the afternoon, two 鈥淪kin Sabbath鈥 soapmaking sessions led by Simone McKelvey of Simone & Tuesday will be held in University Commons 211/212. The first session will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the second session will be from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. Limited space is available for participation and advance is required. Seats will be available for unregistered participants who can watch the demonstrations.

Simone & Tuesday is a natural skincare solutions company founded on the belief that healthier skin should be natural, affordable, and for everyone. Through her soapmaking sessions, McKelvey teaches small groups how to make their own all-natural, personal care products.

“We held an event called ‘Hairitage’ last February with BSA during Black History Month, where students made their own hair products, and it was packed,” Thomas said. 鈥淭hat helped me realize that this generation of students responds well to hands-on activities. They enjoy the opportunity to take something home with them when they leave.鈥

Fire cider

A pair of fire cider workshops led by Kinfolk Farm will be held at the Old Common Grounds space (University Commons 177) from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. Limited space is also available for participation in this event and so advance is required.聽Seats will be available for unregistered participants who can watch the demonstrations.

The Black woman-led farm in rural West Virginia is dedicated to nourishing the brilliance, creativity, and legacy of Black, indigenous people of the Global Majority. At Kinfolk Farm, food sovereignty, land liberation, and healing justice are daily practices woven into the way they plant, harvest, cook, and gather in community.

Participants in these two interactive sessions will learn the history of fire cider along with its traditional wellness practices. They’ll also be invited to try a sample! The spicy, tangy folk remedy is often used to support the immune system and is typically made by infusing apple cider vinegar with ingredients such as horseradish, ginger, garlic, onion, hot peppers, and honey. 

Climate simulation

A world climate simulation facilitated by Levi Clymer 鈥25, 黑料正能量 event operations coordinator, will be held from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. at the University Commons Student Union. Participants in this interactive exercise will act out the roles of international delegates at a United Nations summit and negotiate a global agreement to prevent the worst impacts of climate change. is also needed to participate in this event.

In case of changes to events due to inclement weather, visit for updates.

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鈥楢 great community treasure鈥 /now/news/2025/a-great-community-treasure/ /now/news/2025/a-great-community-treasure/#respond Wed, 20 Aug 2025 11:45:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=59506 Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival ushers in new era of independence

黑料正能量鈥檚 Lehman Auditorium has surely seen its share of historic firsts over the years, though last week might have marked the first time a memorandum of understanding has ever been signed on its stage. 

Representatives from 黑料正能量 and the Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival (SVBF) advisory board, along with supporters of the festival, gathered on the auditorium stage on Thursday, Aug. 14, to celebrate the SVBF鈥檚 status as an independent 501(c)(3) organization. The event included a ceremonial signing of documents and drew more than two-dozen people.聽

黑料正能量 financially sustained the annual summer festival since its start in 1993 until last year. The agreement signed last week outlines the transfer of ownership from the university to Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival Inc., which was granted tax-exempt nonprofit status in January 2025 and officially became independent from 黑料正能量 on July 1. Signers included Dr. Tynisha Willingham, provost and vice president of academic affairs at 黑料正能量, and members of the SVBF executive committee: Christine Fairfield, chair; Angela Showalter, vice chair; Cara Modisett, secretary; and Fred Kniss, treasurer.聽

Thursday鈥檚 ceremony provided an opportunity for donors, staff, and stakeholders to mark the momentous occasion and reflect on the history of the 33-year-old festival.

Following a piano performance of Bach鈥檚 Prelude in E major, BWV 854, from The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 1, from Dr. David Berry, director of the music program at 黑料正能量 and artistic director of the SVBF, Professor Emeritus Dr. Kenneth J. Nafziger offered a historical perspective on the founding of the festival. 

Nafziger, a member of 黑料正能量鈥檚 music faculty for 39 years before he retired in 2017 and founding conductor and artistic director of the SVBF, shared stories from the festival鈥檚 earliest days.

In 1992, near the start of the fall semester, he was having a dinner with several 黑料正能量 friends when they began asking him about his experiences conducting the Lake Chelan Bach Fest in north-central Washington that summer. 鈥淚 noticed that Joe (former 黑料正能量 President Joseph Lapp) was taking notes,鈥 Nafziger shared. 鈥淲hen the note-taking stopped, he said, 鈥榃hat would it take to get something like that going here?鈥 We took him at his word鈥nd in January of 1993, we were given the go-ahead to do a festival in June. With expert help from Helen (Nafziger), Scott Hosfeld, and Marcia Kauffman, we made the first one happen, and it included vanilla ice cream and hot raspberry sauce at intermission.鈥

鈥淭he beginnings of rehearsals from the second season forward resembled a family reunion,鈥 he continued. 鈥淟ocal orchestral players, including JMU friends, local singers and relatives from east of the Mississippi and Canada, we grew.鈥

Willingham spoke about the relationship between 黑料正能量 and the SVBF. 鈥淵ou are still a part of the 黑料正能量 family and the fabric of 黑料正能量,鈥 she said. 鈥満诹险芰 has three core values鈥攁cademic excellence, peace and justice, and active faith鈥攁nd the Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival exemplifies those core values.鈥

鈥淲e know that in our public schools, the arts have been the first things that have been cut,鈥 she said, crediting the festival鈥檚 鈥減ay-what-you-can鈥 ticket pricing with allowing everyone to experience music, regardless of economic status. 鈥淭he Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival is a gift. It鈥檚 been a gift to 黑料正能量 for over 30 years, it鈥檚 been a gift to our community for over 30 years, and it鈥檚 been a gift to everyone who has stood on this stage.鈥 

Included in the memorandum of understanding is an agreement that Lehman Auditorium and Martin Chapel will continue to serve as venues for SVBF performances for at least the next three years, said Les Helmuth, interim executive director of the festival.

鈥淲hat I discovered in this past year of talking with donors, businesses, and people behind the festival is that the breadth and depth of support is this wide,鈥 he said, stretching out his arms. 鈥淚t comes from all walks of life, and it鈥檚 fabulous. It really is. It鈥檚 a great community treasure, and we desperately need to keep it going.鈥

The Rev. Dr. Sarah Ann Bixler, dean for the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences at 黑料正能量, delivered the blessing for the event. Other 黑料正能量 representatives in attendance included Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus and Kirk Shisler, vice president for advancement.

The 34th annual Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival will be held from June 8-13, 2026. Find out more at .

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黑料正能量 Theatre presents original musical about WWII-era nun and martyr /now/news/2025/emu-theatre-presents-original-musical-about-wwii-era-nun-and-martyr/ /now/news/2025/emu-theatre-presents-original-musical-about-wwii-era-nun-and-martyr/#comments Mon, 24 Mar 2025 18:55:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=58515 鈥淥n the Breath of God: The Life of Maria Skobtsova鈥 opens at MainStage Theater this Friday

An original musical premiering at 黑料正能量鈥檚 MainStage Theater this week brings audiences the captivating, never-before-seen story of a Russian poet, nun and saint who saved countless lives during World War II and was killed for it. Created by 黑料正能量 professors Jerry Holsopple and Justin Poole, 鈥淥n the Breath of God: The Life of Maria Skobtsova鈥 runs from Friday-Saturday, March 28-29 @ 7 p.m.; Thursday-Saturday, April 3-5 @ 7 p.m.; and on Sunday, March 30 @ 2 p.m.

Born in present-day Riga, Latvia, Maria Skobtsova was a poet, nun and martyr whose courage saved countless lives during World War II.

The sweeping drama traces the remarkable life of Skobtsova, played by 黑料正能量 senior Reah Clymer, from impetuous teen to chain-smoking nun who sheltered refugees and helped many Jews escape Nazi-occupied Paris. Known as 鈥淢other Maria,鈥 she was arrested and sent to the Ravensbr眉ck concentration camp, where she was executed.

鈥淵ou really see the arc to Maria鈥檚 life,鈥 Poole said. 鈥淏y the end of the play, you鈥檙e completely invested in who she is, and you see this dramatic transformation she goes through.鈥

The musical features a chorus of four women mystics, played by students Elie Hoover and Erin Batten and alumnae Caitlin Holsapple 鈥16 and Elizabeth Eby 鈥22, singing Celtic folk melodies.
Musicians Perry Blosser 鈥18 (violin), Benjamin Brantley (guitar), and Dirk Holsopple 鈥10 (Uilleann pipes) perform on stage.

The fourth collaboration between Holsopple and Poole, 鈥淥n the Breath of God鈥 brings together a multigenerational cast and crew of 黑料正能量 students, alumni, faculty/staff and community members. The musical features a chorus of four women mystics from history, singing lyrics taken directly from their texts to Celtic folk melodies, performed by musicians Perry Blosser 鈥18 (violin), Benjamin Brantley (guitar), and Dirk Holsopple 鈥10 (Uilleann pipes). These mystics, played by students Elie Hoover and Erin Batten and alumnae Caitlin Holsapple 鈥16 and Elizabeth Eby 鈥22, surround Skobtsova during pivotal moments in her life. Though invisible to her, they influence her decisions through their words.

鈥淐eltic music is able to hold trauma and hope together,鈥 Holsopple said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what this story is. It鈥檚 the story of a woman who endured all kinds of trauma and never lost the ability to have hope and keep doing what she believed was right, up until the very end.鈥

黑料正能量 senior Reah Clymer, a music and peacebuilding major, portrays Maria Skobtsova.
Reah Clymer, foreground, as Maria Skobtsova and Elie Hoover as Therese of Lisieux/Hildegard of Bingen.

Clymer delivers a masterful performance as Skobtsova, pouring her soul into the multifaceted character, capturing her playfulness, fierceness and suffering. 鈥淢other Maria lived a tough life,鈥 Clymer said. 鈥淪he lost two daughters, went through two divorces, lived through war and displacement and deportation, and was thrown in jail multiple times. I鈥檝e had to go there, emotionally, in every rehearsal.鈥

The set design is minimalist yet imaginative. Backlit stained glass panels form the backdrop, paired with an animated collage of photos projected onto two screens. While most characters in the play wear neutral-toned, period-specific clothing, with Skobtsova dressed in a Russian Orthodox nun鈥檚 habit, the mystics don flowing robes accented with pops of color. Frequent 黑料正能量 Theatre collaborator Rachel Herrick returns as costume designer. Rounding out the crew are Shannon Dove (technical director and set design), Robert Weaver (light designer), Tom Carr (sound technician), and Sarah Peak (stage manager), among others.

Despite the play鈥檚 early- to mid-20th century setting, Clymer said its themes are just as relevant today. 鈥淭his story is so timely,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about immigration. It鈥檚 about refugees. It鈥檚 about war and political turmoil.鈥

Tickets are $20 for adults, $18 for seniors, $10 for children 18 and under, and $6 for university students. For tickets, visit:

Reah Clymer and Joe Seitz during a rehearsal of On the Breath of God.


Read a preview of the play from the Daily News-Record .


Cast

Liz “Maria” Skobtsova 鈥 Reah Clymer
Sophia 鈥 Melody Wilson
Jura/Sailor 鈥 Ross Haun
Alexander Blok/Captain/Father Dimitri 鈥 Adam Hoover
Dmitri/Daniil/Peters 鈥 Joe Seitz
Father/Metropolitan 鈥 Shannon Dove
Evgenia/Klara 鈥 Kay Pettus 
Ana/Ida 鈥 Alexis Lewis
Gardener/Father Kern/SS Officer 鈥 Nathanael Eby
Lyuba/Nun at Lourmel House/Inna 鈥 Cassidy Walker
Nun/Irena 鈥 Emilee White
Therese of Lisieux/Hildegard of Bingen 鈥 Elie Hoover
Hadewijch of Flanders 鈥 Elizabeth Eby
Mechthild of Magdeburg 鈥 Caitlyn Holsapple 
Julian of Norwich/Theresa of Avila 鈥 Erin Batten
Young Liz/Giana 鈥 Vienna Poole
Young Giana/Nastia 鈥 Felicity Poole

Crew

Co-creator 鈥 Justin Poole
Co-creator 鈥 Jerry Holsopple
Costume designer 鈥 Rachel Herrick
Technical Director/Set Design 鈥 Shannon Dove
Light Designer 鈥 Robert Weaver 
Sound Technician 鈥 Tom Carr
Stage Manager 鈥 Sarah Peak
Assistant Stage Manager 鈥 Jordyn Thompson 
Video Production Assistant 鈥 Zack Furr
Video Production Assistant 鈥 Oslyn Mejia Gomez
Cast and Crew Photographer/Video Production Assistant 鈥 Cassidy Walker
Video Production Assistant 鈥 Willem Hedrick 
Video Production Assistant 鈥 Allie Watkins

Musicians

Violin 鈥 Perry Blosser
Guitar 鈥 Benjamin Brantley
Irish Pipes 鈥 Dirk Holsopple

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黑料正能量 celebrates its phenomenal women leaders /now/news/2025/emu-celebrates-its-phenomenal-women-leaders/ /now/news/2025/emu-celebrates-its-phenomenal-women-leaders/#comments Thu, 20 Mar 2025 15:59:27 +0000 /now/news/?p=58517 Special 鈥楳ornings with the Mayor鈥 Convocation pays tribute to President Huxman and other women shaping our campus

There鈥檚 a new morning talk show host in town, and she鈥檚 here to celebrate.

As a special Mornings with the Mayor edition of Convocation on Wednesday, Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed, director of alumni engagement and community connections at 黑料正能量, stepped into the role of host as she interviewed several trailblazing women leaders making their mark on campus. The one-of-a-kind program, held at the Student Union, celebrated Women鈥檚 History Month and paid tribute to departing 黑料正能量 President Dr. Susan Schultz Huxman.

Reed steered the show with her trademark candor and panache, holding court over the 鈥渓ive studio audience鈥濃攐ne student could be seen regularly holding up an 鈥淎pplause鈥 sign鈥攚hile she posed fascinating questions to 黑料正能量 students, staff, and alumnae. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the show where we bring you big energy, great conversations, and way too much coffee,鈥 quipped Reed.

Arelys Martinez Fabian, left, and Ray Ray Taylor MS 鈥24 answer questions from Deanna Reed at the Mornings with the Mayor event.

The first guests to grace the stage were a pair of 黑料正能量 students, Arelys Martinez Fabian and Meredith Lehman, and a recent alumna, Ray Ray Taylor MS 鈥24. Fabian, co-president of Student Government Association, highlighted the increased representation of women in campus leadership roles. Taylor, a lab instructor who was a track and field team, called for erasing negative stereotypes and for supporting women in sports. When asked about which woman in history she would share a meal with, Lehman, a Rhodes Scholar studying at Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center, answered that she had recently heard about Zheng Yi Sao, a pirate leader active in the South China Sea from 1801 to 1810. 鈥淪he was one of the most successful pirates in a time where you don’t really hear about female pirates,鈥 Lehman said. 鈥淚 would ask her where she pulls from to gain confidence and belief in herself鈥

From left: Carrie Bert, Dr. Shannon Dycus, and Dr. Tynisha Willingham answer questions at the Student Union.

Another panel discussion featured three powerhouse administrative leaders who are 鈥渃hanging the game in education and beyond鈥: Carrie Bert, Dr. Shannon Dycus, and Dr. Tynisha Willingham. Asked to provide her younger self advice, Bert, 黑料正能量 athletic director, said she would鈥檝e told her to pause and breathe to appreciate the moment. Dycus, vice president for Student Affairs, Equity and Belonging, shared some tough conversations she had when starting in her role about fighting hard to be heard. Willingham spoke about unique challenges she鈥檚 faced as a woman provost. “I think we often still see that even when women are in leadership roles, they are expected to be nurturing and can’t be as direct,鈥 she said.

黑料正能量 President Dr. Susan Schultz Huxman riffs on influential civil rights leader Ida B. Wells.

Clad in her signature royal blue pantsuit, Huxman, the featured headliner for Reed鈥檚 morning show, bounded down the aisle and shined in the spotlight. Huxman is 黑料正能量鈥檚 ninth president, the first woman to lead in the role, and is retiring this summer after nine years of service. She joked about some unexpected lessons learned over those years. 鈥淚 started with a closet that had five blue outfits,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t’s half my closet now, skirts and outfits like this, and even shoes.鈥

She also spoke about forming closer connections between the university and city, colloquially known as the 鈥渢own and gown relationship,鈥 during her time at 黑料正能量. Early on, she said, she had visited with elected officials, educators and business leaders who told her they had never stepped foot on 黑料正能量鈥檚 campus. 鈥淚 tried to work, especially in that first year, to get folks to campus,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 brought the delegates and our elected representatives up to my office. And, again, they said, 鈥榃ell, I’ve been an elected representative for 12, 15 years, and I’ve never been in the president’s office.鈥欌

At a time when many colleges across the nation are shuttering their DEI programs, 黑料正能量 is doubling down on its commitment to the initiatives that bolster diversity, equity and inclusion and make all students on campus feel welcome. Huxman spoke about initiatives she鈥檚 witnessed over her two terms, including the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration started by Celeste Thomas during her second year as president, the Black Lives Matter mural鈥攖he only city in Virginia with a BLM street mural, Reed said鈥攖he establishment of the Office of DEI, the start of the Lavender Graduation, and the institutional statement on land acknowledgement. 鈥淚t is 黑料正能量’s time to lean into DEI,鈥 Huxman said. 鈥淚t’s wrapped into our mission, it’s wrapped into our vision and values, it’s wrapped into the Sermon on the Mount. And this is who we are as a faith-based institution.鈥

Asked about which woman she would share a meal with, Huxman answered Ida B. Wells, a journalist and co-founder of the NAACP. 鈥淓very time I reread her biography, I just think, how did somebody walk the earth of this magnitude?鈥 said Huxman, regaling the crowd with tales of Wells鈥 accomplishments. 鈥溾 always think that, in a very real sense, the graduates from our university at 黑料正能量 are well-prepared to be peace and justice advocates like Ida B. Wells.鈥

黑料正能量 senior Meredith Lehman joins the panel discussion on Zoom from the Washington Community Scholars’ Center.

A special treat honoring the president was free for those attending the event. Baristas at Common Grounds Coffeehouse whipped up mugs of the 鈥淗ux Deluxe,鈥 a vanilla latte with a little cinnamon sugar on top. 鈥淚 love that it鈥檚 a latte and it has cinnamon on it,鈥 Huxman said. 鈥淪omebody knows I like that.鈥 

The interviews were interspersed with video segments documenting powerful 黑料正能量 alumnae who are shaping the world. These included Khadija O. Ali MA 鈥01, who became the first female state minister of the Somalian government and serves as an ambassador for the country, and Najla El Mangoush MA 鈥15, who was the first female foreign minister of Libya. Another video showcased the legacy of the late Sadie Hartzler, 黑料正能量鈥檚 first full-time librarian whose name graces the library today.

Mukarabe sings to the crowd while her husband, Makinto, plays guitar.

Mukarabe, a student at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding who fled genocide in Burundi in 1993, read from a poem and led the crowd in a moment of silence for women persecuted around the world. She was joined by her husband Makinto, a student at Eastern Mennonite Seminary, as they performed music to cap off the event. Together, they shared 鈥淎mahoro,鈥 a Kirundi cultural expression conveying peace and God鈥檚 blessings, through song.

Braydon Hoover, vice president for enrollment, served as sidekick/announcer for 鈥淢ornings with the Mayor.鈥

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A Royal Tale: Trina Trotter Nussbaum 鈥00, MA 鈥17 found her place at 黑料正能量 /now/news/2025/a-royal-tale-trina-trotter-nussbaum-00-ma-17-found-her-place-at-emu/ Mon, 17 Mar 2025 16:55:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=58425 Editor鈥檚 Note: This profile is the fourth of six stories about students and alumni leading up to Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day on April 2. For more information about the day and how to donate, visit:

Trina Trotter Nussbaum 鈥00, MA 鈥17 will never forget the first time she saw the view from the Campus Center balcony. Standing on the balcony overlooking the Front Lawn and gazing east toward the Blue Ridge Mountains, the then-first-year student recalled telling a friend: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what I鈥檓 going to study, but I know this is where I need to be. This is my place.鈥

鈥淎ll it took was one look at those mountains, and they seemed to tell me, 鈥榊ou belong here,鈥欌 Trotter Nussbaum said.聽

That was nearly 30 years ago. Today, Trotter Nussbaum is the new director of the Center for Interfaith Engagement, a position she鈥檚 held since Jan. 1. She still feels that same sense of belonging at 黑料正能量 and works to ensure others on campus feel it too. Through her role at CIE, she celebrates and supports students, faculty and staff from a wide range of faith traditions and backgrounds.聽

It was a long road that led her to 黑料正能量. After graduating from high school in North Lima, Ohio, Trotter Nussbaum, who was raised Mennonite, moved to Pittsburgh and completed travel agency school. She gradually learned that it wasn鈥檛 the career for her. Returning home to Ohio, she ran into a childhood friend about to graduate from 黑料正能量 who told her, 鈥淵ou should give 黑料正能量 a try.鈥 It was just the push she needed.聽

Trotter Nussbaum arrived on campus in the fall of 1995 as a 22-year-old first-year English major. She was older than the others in her Northlawn dorm, but she saw that as a blessing. 鈥淚t helped me settle down and figure out what I wanted to do.鈥

That turned out to be theater. Trotter Nussbaum credits 黑料正能量鈥檚 theater program with recognizing her strengths as a performer and teaching her invaluable listening and improv skills. During the second semester of her junior year, she added a psychology major. Though it delayed her graduation by another year, she said it ended up being one of the best decisions she ever made. 鈥淚 might not be acting or counseling right now, but I draw on those skills every day,鈥 Trotter Nussbaum said. She graduated in 2000 with bachelor鈥檚 degrees in theater and psychology, along with a minor in justice, peace and conflict studies. She said professors in her justice and theology classes challenged her faith with love and grace, ultimately strengthening it and shaping her into the faith-based peacebuilder she is today.

After a decade spent working at nonprofits and government agencies, Trotter Nussbaum returned to 黑料正能量 in 2013 as associate director of CIE. Fueled by formative experiences during a 1998 intercultural trip to Ireland and Northern Ireland, she began pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in conflict transformation at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding. It took her another five years to complete the two-year program while working at CIE and raising two children. In 2017, she earned her MA.

Ever the lifelong learner, Trotter Nussbaum continues to seek out further education. She鈥檚 working toward earning MDiv equivalency so that she can enroll in the new Doctor of Ministry program at Eastern Mennonite Seminary.聽

Over the years, she鈥檚 received numerous scholarships as a student. She said those scholarships, as well as 黑料正能量鈥檚 tuition benefits for employees, made it possible for her to continue her studies. 鈥淚 love how 黑料正能量 encourages its employees to take the classes they want to take,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he ability to take classes, even one at a time, for almost free is such a blessing.鈥

Trotter Nussbaum and her husband, Brian Nussbaum 鈥00, live in Harrisonburg with their two children. Her brother, Travis Trotter 鈥99, serves as university registrar for 黑料正能量.

Your generous support helps students like Trotter Nussbaum pursue a quality college education without financial barriers. Join us for the 9th annual Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day and contribute to the scholarships that empower future 黑料正能量 students. Together, we can help write 黑料正能量鈥檚 next chapter.


Read the previous profiles in our A Royal Tale series:

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Choral concert celebrates diversity and community through music /now/news/2025/choral-concert-celebrates-diversity-and-community-through-music/ Mon, 10 Mar 2025 18:25:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=58365

Love, Joy & Peace: A Choral Celebration!
Date: Friday, March 14
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: Lehman Auditorium at 黑料正能量, 1191 Park Road, Harrisonburg, VA
Cost: Free, with suggested donation of $10

Three choirs from diverse musical and cultural traditions will join together for a concert held at 黑料正能量 this week.

The event, Love, Joy & Peace: A Choral Celebration!, will be held at Lehman Auditorium on Friday, March 14, at 7 p.m. Admission is free, with a suggested donation of $10.

Dr. David Berry, director of the music program at 黑料正能量, described the event as a big celebration. 鈥淭he idea for this concert was truly born out of a sense of community,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not just bringing together different styles of music, but also we鈥檙e bringing together people from different communities.鈥

The concert will feature performances by:

  • the 黑料正能量 Chamber Singers, the university鈥檚 auditioned touring chamber choir, directed by Professor Benjamin Bergey, singing songs of hope and unity from its recent spring break tour;
  • the 黑料正能量 Gospel Choir, a talented group of students directed by 黑料正能量 senior Kay Pettus, delivering uplifting gospel music; and 
  • the Kush Anglican Choir, a choir from a Sudanese congregation in Harrisonburg, directed by 黑料正能量 senior Rita Toto, performing traditional Sudanese songs in Arabic. 

Berry first heard the latter choir perform at a fundraiser last July at A Bowl of Good in Harrisonburg. The supported Pax Dei for Nuba, a nonprofit raising awareness of the humanitarian crisis in Sudan. 鈥淭heir choir sounded incredible, and they perform a variety of music, including songs from their culture and in their native language,鈥 Berry said. 鈥淚 knew we had to invite them to perform on campus.鈥

After each choir performs their own selection of songs, the three vocal ensembles will combine on stage to sing 鈥淟et鈥檚 Come Together,鈥 an original composition written by guest artist Makinto.

Makinto, a talented multi-instrumentalist and African Soul artist studying at Eastern Mennonite Seminary, will also perform solo selections throughout the evening and collaborate with Berry on a piano duet for the final musical number. 

Makinto previously performed as a guest artist at 黑料正能量鈥檚 2023 Music Gala Concert. He and his wife, Mukarabe, co-founded Amahoro International, a mission organization promoting peace and development in East Africa. Learn more about his journey to 黑料正能量 here!

The 黑料正能量 Department of Music partnered with the Center for Interfaith Engagement and Multicultural Student Services to present this concert. It is sponsored by the Music, Peace and Justice grant, in conjunction with the Music & Peacebuilding major.

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Peace & justice take center stage at Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship /now/news/2025/peace-justice-take-center-stage-at-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship/ /now/news/2025/peace-justice-take-center-stage-at-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship/#comments Fri, 28 Feb 2025 15:25:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=58329 After five-year hiatus, formerly annual conference successfully resumes at 黑料正能量

Lars 脜kerson ’08 used a familiar Mennonite symbol, that of a quilt, to discuss the importance of belonging. 鈥淲e need to piece back together the quilt of our belonging, acknowledge the extent of our fragmentation, touch and unfold the edges of our differences, and become stitched together by the colored threads of our grief,鈥 he said. 脜kerson, representing the , served as the first keynote speaker for the 2025 Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship (ICPF) conference. His work with the Coalition involves building Indigenous solidarity, and he discussed collaborations he helped facilitate between Maya and Mennonite farmers.聽

The conference, held from Friday, Feb. 21, to Sunday, Feb. 23, in the 黑料正能量 Seminary building, centered around the theme 鈥淏uilding Solidarity: from Turtle Island to Palestine.鈥 It brought together 110 attendees, some from the Harrisonburg community and area universities, and others from Mennonite, Brethren, and Quaker colleges across the U.S. Aidan Yoder ’24, a recent 黑料正能量 graduate who served on the conference planning committee, said he was excited by the energy that students brought to the event. 鈥淲e far surpassed my goals for the conference with the number of people involved and the variety of institutions represented,鈥 Yoder said.

Adam Ramer, left, and Nick Martin, organizers of Mennonite Action, speak at a keynote address during the 2025 ICPF at 黑料正能量 on Saturday.

Two speakers, Adam Ramer and Nick Martin, shared the second keynote address on , an organization working to build Palestinian solidarity. Ramer and Martin discussed the purpose and mission of their organization for about half an hour, explaining that they stand with the downtrodden and oppressed, particularly those in Palestine, and strive for a world 鈥渨here all God鈥檚 children are free.鈥 For the next 45 minutes, they opened the floor to questions. 鈥淗ow do you build empathy for a cause like a cease-fire?鈥 one attendee asked. Ramer and Martin then discussed the importance of reaching people鈥檚 hearts by going beyond logical arguments and appealing to values and emotions.

Between the keynote addresses on Saturday, attendees chatted over pastries, fruit, and coffee and attended workshops. Some workshops focused on broad topics such as nonviolent action, while others discussed specific justice and peacebuilding endeavors, including Palestine solidarity in Harrisonburg and visual and digital activism in Brazil and Argentina. Yoder said he heard from many attendees who enjoyed the workshops as a place to ask questions and learn more.

黑料正能量 sophomore Micah Mast speaks at a workshop.

黑料正能量 last hosted the ICPF in聽February 2020, before it was indefinitely put on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Renae Benner, an 黑料正能量 junior who helped plan the 2025 conference, said she felt that people learned a lot and built stronger relationships between colleges. 鈥淚鈥檓 optimistic that we successfully restarted the annual ICPF,鈥 she said. As 脜kerson said in his address, 鈥淭he way things are is not the way they must be.鈥 Although he was talking about activism more broadly, his words could also apply to restarting a beloved conference, one that Goshen College first hosted 77 years ago.聽

黑料正能量 alumnus Aidan Yoder ’24 and junior Eli Stoll share a laugh at a workshop during the ICPF.

A highlight from the conference for Yoder came during weekend reflections when the committee announced that two colleges had tentatively agreed to host the ICPF for the next two years. 鈥淚 was glad the energy we created this year resulted in the continuation of the annual conference,鈥 he said.

Those planning the ICPF 2025 conference were Renae Benner, Shawna Hurst, Micaiah Landis, Georgia Metz, Tim Seidel, and Aidan Yoder.

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‘Nightbitch’ author headlines Writers Read on Feb. 28 /now/news/2025/nightbitch-author-headlines-writers-read-on-feb-28/ /now/news/2025/nightbitch-author-headlines-writers-read-on-feb-28/#comments Fri, 21 Feb 2025 14:55:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=58141 Her novel, about a mom who turns canine, is now a feature film starring Amy Adams

Writers Read Author Series with Rachel Yoder
Date: Friday, Feb. 28
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Martin Chapel, 黑料正能量 Seminary Building (1181 Smith Ave., Harrisonburg, VA)
Cost: Free (no registration required)

For Mennonite-raised Nightbitch author Rachel Yoder, what excites her most about speaking at 黑料正能量 is learning how Mennonites will react to her book. 鈥淲ill they be offended? Will they relate? Will they see it as productive or worthless?鈥 鈥 all questions she’s pondered in an email to 黑料正能量 News.

鈥淣ow that I鈥檓 more outside the Mennonite tradition than in, it feels important to me to remain in conversation with the community regardless, not only as a means to understand the tradition better, but as a means to understand my own story, why I make art, why I have to write things that are 鈥榙ark鈥 or 鈥榚vil鈥 or 鈥榰npleasant,鈥欌 said Yoder, who will present at 黑料正能量鈥檚 Writers Read Author Series on Friday, Feb. 28.

Yoder grew up in a Mennonite community in the Appalachian foothills of eastern Ohio before studying English literature as an undergraduate student at Georgetown University. She is a graduate of the Iowa Nonfiction Writing Program and holds an MFA in fiction from the University of Arizona. Currently, she serves as assistant professor of screenwriting and cinema arts at the University of Iowa. 

Her debut novel Nightbitch, published in 2021, is a 鈥渟trange and unforgettable story about a sleep-deprived stay-at-home mother who, after apparently growing extra nipples, sharper canine teeth and a tail, develops an 鈥榚xhilarating and magical鈥 ability to literally become a powerful bitch. ()

鈥淚t became a cult hit, was named one of the best books of the year by Esquire, got shortlisted for a PEN/Hemingway award 鈥 and has now been made into a film starring Amy Adams and directed by Marielle Heller.鈥

黑料正能量 Professor Kevin Seidel said the Language and Literature Department tends to invite authors for its Writers Read series who have some connection to the Mennonite tradition or who can 鈥渉elp us see past the edges of that tradition.鈥 Yoder, he said, meets both of those conditions.

Seidel credited fellow 黑料正能量 English Professor Kirsten Beachy with introducing him to Nightbitch a couple years ago. 

鈥淪he handed me the book with a smile that, looking back, probably meant I dare you to read this,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淭he first paragraph was so brilliant, so affectionately self-deprecating, and so off-kilter funny that I had to read the rest.鈥 

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