Class of 2025 graduates from the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding were recognized at a Celebration of Blessings on Sunday, May 4.

Celebration of Blessings features reflections from CJP grads

The Center for Justice and Peacebuilding (CJP) at 91短视频 sent 13 graduates off into the world with words of affirmation and reflection at its annual Celebration of Blessings on Sunday, May 4, in Martin Chapel.

In the heartfelt ceremony, CJP faculty and staff members Dr. Gloria Rhodes, Amy Knorr, Dr. Joe Cole, and Dr. Catherine Barnes provided words of tribute for each graduate, expressing their feelings of love, pride, and honor. The following CJP Class of 2025 graduates were recognized:

Master of Arts in Conflict Transformation

R茅ka Bord谩s-Simon, Ny铆regyh谩za, Hungary

Jess Cochran, Charlottesville, Virginia

Susan Hochstedler, Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania

Dorothy Maru, Eldoret, Kenya

Maybree Spilsbury, Mesa, Arizona

Getachew Temare, Harrisonburg, Virginia

Graduate Certificate in Conflict Transformation

Megan Carnice, Quantico, Virginia

Karen Chamblee, Weyers Cave, Virginia

Master of Arts in Restorative Justice

Ann Dye, Blacksburg, Virginia

Graduate Certificate in Restorative Justice

Sydney Butler, Baltimore

Jim Cole, Lebanon, Ohio

Abigail Stockman, Craftsbury Common, Vermont

Master of Arts in Transformational Leadership

Tyler Carnahan, Broadway, Virginia

Three graduates shared how their time and experiences at CJP transformed them.

Ann Dye 鈥25 said that being at CJP has been a life-changing experience. She recounted joining a conflict transformation course鈥攈er first college class in nearly 30 years鈥攁nd feeling fear, anxiety, and discomfort. 鈥淏ut all throughout that first semester, I was held in patient kindness by professors who taught in a way I had never experienced before,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey engaged with curiosity, compassion, and presence, sitting with my own鈥攁nd maybe a few others鈥欌攆ear and confusion. They actually demonstrated the peacebuilding skills they were teaching, engaging all of us with dignity, creativity, and adaptability.鈥 

When she began to explore the field of restorative justice, based on a professor鈥檚 recommendation, she said 鈥渋t felt like finding the half of my life that had been missing.鈥

Susan Hochstedler 鈥25 began taking electives at CJP for her seminary degree program. At the time, she said, she was exhausted. She had been leading a church community through the COVID-19 pandemic and also felt weighed down by family issues and the increasing division in society. 鈥淚 came to CJP because I wasn鈥檛 sure what else to do,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I stayed because of the knowledge and the passion, the brokenness and the authenticity, and the exquisite beauty of this peacebuilding community.鈥

When Dorothy Maru 鈥25 lost her grandmother three months after arriving at 91短视频, her entire world crumbled and she spent several months trying to make sense of it all. It wasn鈥檛 until she took a class with CJP Professor Dr. Paula Ditzel Facci that she began to see that, in the midst of her grief, there was tremendous growth. Her grandmother was 鈥渁 woman of delusional faith,鈥 Maru said, who believed in things that didn’t make much sense, 鈥渂ut because of how she believed in me, I had no choice but to believe in myself, too.鈥

鈥淭o the Class of 2025, let us go out into the world with a conviction that we are capable of creating a better world,鈥 Maru said. 鈥淟et us apply what John Paul Lederach calls The Moral Imagination, to imagine that which doesn鈥檛 yet exist, to be delusional enough to believe that it is possible. It鈥檚 possible to demand justice, to choose peace, to create space for every voice.鈥

The ceremony featured a graduate slideshow created by CJP student Hannah Gilman. Katie Mansfield, CJP affiliate faculty member, opened the event with drumming. Maybree Spilsbury 鈥25 performed 鈥淭he Swan鈥 on cello, accompanied by Julie Spilsbury on piano. Kory Schaeffer, director of programs at CJP, delivered welcome remarks. CJP students Tabitha Roberts and Josiah Ludwick delivered the student blessings, and CJP affiliate faculty member Dr. Catherine Barnes concluded the celebration with a graduate sending.