2026 Commencement Archives - 91短视频 News /now/news/tag/2026-commencement/ News from the 91短视频 community. Mon, 18 May 2026 14:56:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 91短视频 at Lancaster celebrates resilience of its graduates at Commencement /now/news/2026/emu-at-lancaster-celebrates-resilience-of-its-graduates-at-commencement/ /now/news/2026/emu-at-lancaster-celebrates-resilience-of-its-graduates-at-commencement/#respond Mon, 18 May 2026 14:16:04 +0000 /now/news/?p=61648 As Angelita Perez told her fellow graduates, each of them has a moment when they chose to keep going, even when it felt impossible.

For her, that moment came during the traumatic birth of her youngest child two years ago. Perez, a graduate of 91短视频 at Lancaster鈥檚 Leadership and Organizational Management (LOM) program, shared that she failed out of her studies during that experience. But rather than quit, she pushed forward and kept fighting. She came back stronger, enrolling in the next cohort and earning Dean鈥檚 List honors throughout her time in the program. The road didn鈥檛 become easier, she said, but her resilience grew stronger.

That same resilience, she told the Class of 2026 graduates, lies in every single one of them. Many of them, who are nontraditional adult learners, balanced their coursework with jobs, families, and other responsibilities. 鈥淲e showed up tired, we showed up overwhelmed and stretched thin, and sometimes we showed up broken,鈥 she said. 鈥淩egardless, we still showed up.鈥

When her mother was hospitalized and passed away in January, Perez said her classmates, who had become a support system, showed up for her. 鈥淚n one of my hardest seasons,鈥 she said, 鈥渋t was this community that reminded me I wasn鈥檛 alone.鈥


Graduates recess following the Commencement ceremony.

Angelita Perez (left) was one of three graduates who shared their perspectives at Commencement. Dr. Jamie Mak (right), assistant vice president of academic and program growth for 91短视频 at Lancaster, opens the ceremony. 


Perez was one of 21 graduates of 91短视频 at Lancaster鈥檚 degree and graduate certificate programs who walked across the stage and were joyfully sent off into the world during the annual Commencement ceremony at Forest Hills Mennonite Church on Friday, May 8. This year, 91短视频 at Lancaster awarded 21 undergraduate degrees, 13 graduate degrees, and 13 graduate certificates.

Dr. Jamie Mak, assistant vice president of academic and program growth for 91短视频 at Lancaster, welcomed the family members, friends, and guests gathered in celebration and commended the courage and commitment shown by the graduates.

鈥淎s you leave today, you carry more than just credentials,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou carry the values that define this community: peacebuilding, social justice, service, and compassion. You are entering a world that needs those values more than ever.鈥


91短视频 at Lancaster awarded 21 undergraduate degrees, 13 graduate degrees, and 13 graduate certificates.

Graduates Will Stover (left) and Alejandro Ulloa (right) share their perspectives.


In addition to Perez, graduates Will Stover and Alejandro Ulloa shared their reflections.

Stover, a graduate of the aviation program, highlighted his cohort鈥檚 accomplishments鈥攁ccumulating over 7,000 hours of flight time in their four years together鈥攁nd shared some of the lessons they learned in the program. He encouraged graduates to 鈥渢ake the first step鈥 when presented with challenges and opportunities, continue supporting one another and 鈥渒eep 鈥檈m flying,鈥 and find the positive in times of adversity. Echoing the mantra of the U.S. Navy Blue Angels flight squadron, he called on graduates to embrace being 鈥済lad to be here.鈥

鈥淭here are days that are difficult, when we feel defeated, lost, and unsure of what鈥檚 next,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are also days that feel easy, motivating, and full of hope. The phrase 鈥楪lad to be here鈥 is a reminder that, regardless of the day, resiliency ultimately wins.鈥

When Ulloa was growing up, he often heard his mother say, 鈥渃ada cabeza un mundo entero.鈥 That phrase, he said, translates to 鈥渆ach head is a whole world.鈥

鈥淢y mom鈥檚 words are a consistent reminder that God created each of us with uniqueness and complexity and finds each of us worthy of love,鈥 said Ulloa, who graduated with an MA in education with a concentration in Trauma and Resilience in Educational Environments (TREE).

After teaching at Lancaster Mennonite High School for 11 years, he said God called him to a different setting about four years ago. That鈥檚 when he applied to the program at 91短视频 at Lancaster to 鈥渟tay in touch with these faith-infused tenets of education and daily practice.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 so thankful for this program and its professors, who encouraged us to view our students in their entirety, to approach them with care and empathy first and foremost, and to remember that there鈥檚 an entire world in their heads,鈥 he said. Ulloa added that he leaves the program 鈥渕ore committed than ever鈥 to meet his students where they are, get to know them, and support them however he can.


91短视频 at Lancaster鈥檚 Class of 2026 graduates celebrate after walking across the stage.

Lancaster Mayor Jaime Arroyo (left) delivers the Commencement address. Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus (right) offers welcome remarks during the ceremony.


Lancaster Mayor Jaime Arroyo delivered the Commencement address. A first-generation college graduate and avid runner who became the first Latino mayor in the city鈥檚 history, he spoke about the process of training for a marathon and connected it to broader lessons in life.

Preparation, he told the graduates, is both a choice and an ongoing process. 鈥淪ometimes that means taking a step back and readjusting your training plan,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ometimes it鈥檚 just a check-in with yourself that brings you back to the basics. It鈥檚 about questioning your choices and making sure you鈥檙e on the right path.鈥

鈥淭hink deeply about your choices, find a way to quiet the noise, listen to what truly matters, and make sure the commitments you make are for the greater good,鈥 Arroyo added.

In her remarks to the graduates, Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus expressed appreciation for the ways they have shown up for one another and for the 91短视频 community. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e wrestled with hard questions, you鈥檝e listened across differences, and you鈥檝e continued to pursue rigorous learning in a way that reflects both care and conviction,鈥 she said.

Kirk Shisler 鈥81, vice president for advancement, welcomed the graduates as new members of the 91短视频 Alumni Association. 鈥淵ou join some 21,000 fellow alumni who distinguish themselves as people who serve and lead with distinction locally, regionally, nationally, and around the world,鈥 he said.


Dr. Tynisha Willingham, provost and vice president of academic affairs, presented and commissioned the graduates. Dr. Dycus conferred the degrees and offered the closing blessing. Jess King 鈥96, an 91短视频 parent and member of the 91短视频 Board of Trustees, led the opening invocation. Derek Kline, director of the aviation program, and Dr. Mak recognized the graduates.

In addition to King, board members Janet Lind, Gloria Diener 鈥76, and Jane Hoober Peifer 鈥74, MDiv 鈥97, attended the ceremony.

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91短视频鈥檚 108th Commencement sends forth 304 graduates /now/news/2026/emus-108th-commencement-sends-forth-304-graduates/ /now/news/2026/emus-108th-commencement-sends-forth-304-graduates/#respond Fri, 08 May 2026 03:57:50 +0000 /now/news/?p=61592 91短视频 awarded 313 degrees during its 108th annual Commencement on Sunday, May 3. The total included 171 undergraduate degrees, 129 graduate degrees, 10 seminary degrees, and three doctor of nursing practice (DNP) degrees. The university鈥檚 304 graduates represented 23 states, Puerto Rico, and 15 countries.


Commencement address

Dr. Angela J. Lederach, assistant professor of peace and justice studies at Chapman University, delivered the Commencement address in Yoder Arena.

The author and anthropologist, whose father, John Paul Lederach, co-founded the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, spoke about the lessons she鈥檚 learned from peacebuilders and CJP alumni around the world.

Undergraduates Dylan Hall and Arelys Martinez Fabian, along with MA in Counseling graduate Yenifer Dottin-Carter 鈥23, presented the graduate perspectives.

This was Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus鈥 first Commencement as interim president.


Celebration of Blessings

The Center for Justice and Peacebuilding sent 17 graduates into the world with words of tribute during its annual Celebration of Blessings on Sunday afternoon, following Commencement. This year marks the 30th anniversary celebration of the CJP. 

Graduates LaToya Fernandez, Jamila Gaskins, Hannah Gilman, and Jacob Sankara offered their perspectives.  


Graduate Celebration and Sending

91短视频 honored members of the Class of 2026 at its Graduate Celebration and Sending service on Saturday evening in Lehman Auditorium.

The event featured a faculty address by Dr. Tara Kishbaugh, senior class salutations from co-presidents Genesis Figueroa and Arelys Martinez Fabian, and the presentation of the senior class gift, along with prayer, music, and poetry from graduates.


Donning of the Kente

Family, friends, faculty, and other supporters gathered in the MainStage Theater on Saturday to honor the perseverance, compassion, and determination of this year鈥檚 graduates at 91短视频鈥檚 11th annual Donning of the Kente Ceremony.

The event recognized 49 graduates celebrating their African and international heritage.


Nurse Pinning

Sixteen 91短视频 nursing graduates marked a major milestone Saturday morning during a pinning and commissioning ceremony in Lehman Auditorium.

Dr. David Rosie, an emergency medicine physician at Sentara RMH Medical Center in Harrisonburg, delivered the keynote address.


Lavender Graduation

91短视频 recognized 11 graduates at its fifth annual Lavender Graduation on Friday evening in the Old Common Grounds space. The ceremony honors LGBTQ+ graduates and alumni while celebrating their unique experiences, achievements, and contributions to the university.

Sarah Peak and Jamila Gaskins delivered the keynote addresses.


91短视频 at Lancaster will award 21 undergraduate degrees, 13 graduate degrees, and 13 graduate certificates at its Commencement ceremony on Friday, May 8, at 7 p.m. at Forest Hills Mennonite Church in Leola, Pennsylvania. Lancaster Mayor Jaime Arroyo will deliver the address.

Stay tuned for a recap of the Lancaster ceremony.

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Celebration of Blessings sends off CJP graduates with joy and love /now/news/2026/celebration-of-blessings-sends-off-cjp-graduates-with-joy-and-love/ /now/news/2026/celebration-of-blessings-sends-off-cjp-graduates-with-joy-and-love/#respond Thu, 07 May 2026 22:32:38 +0000 /now/news/?p=61567 In his welcome remarks at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding鈥檚 annual Celebration of Blessings, Kory Schaeffer MA 鈥24 had one final request, not of the 17 CJP graduates, but of the families, friends, and loved ones seated with them.

鈥淲hen you see them pouring themselves into the work of justice and peace, and you see them giving and giving, remind them to pause, please,鈥 Schaeffer, director of programs at CJP, said. 鈥淩emind them to rest. Remind them to seek out something joyful because this work needs them, but it needs them whole.鈥

The ceremony honored graduates of CJP鈥檚 master鈥檚 degree and graduate certificate programs and was held Sunday afternoon in Martin Chapel following 91短视频鈥檚 108th annual Commencement.

This year marks the 30th anniversary celebration of the CJP, which was co-founded and led by John Paul Lederach. His daughter, Dr. Angela Lederach, delivered the Commencement address earlier Sunday.


Graduates from 91短视频’s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding are embraced and recognized by CJP faculty and staff during the annual Celebration of Blessings in Martin Chapel on Sunday.


In the heartfelt ceremony, CJP faculty and staff members Dr. Gloria Rhodes, Amy Knorr, Dr. Paula Ditzel Facci, and Dr. Joe Cole provided words of tribute for each graduate. The following CJP graduates were recognized:

Master of Arts in Conflict Transformation

Diego Crespo Guido of Mexico City, Mexico

Jamila Gaskins of Los Angeles

Hannah Gilman of Salt Lake City

Chelsea Griffin of Flagstaff, Arizona

Leslie Meja of Nairobi, Kenya

Jacob Sankara of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso

CatiAdele Slater of Upperville, Virginia

Tamera Vaughan-Drozd of Vienna, Virginia

Graduate Certificate in Conflict Transformation

Spike Coleman of Charleston, South Carolina

Devin Withrow of Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Master of Arts in Restorative Justice

Maria Arias of Viedma, Argentina

LaToya Fernandez of West Hartford, Connecticut

Sof铆a Garcia Pini of Buenos Aires, Argentina

Graduate Certificate in Restorative Justice

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

Mallery McShine of Fredericksburg, Virginia

Master of Arts in Transformational Leadership

Josiah Ludwick of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Tyler Stanley of Harrisonburg, Virginia


Dr. Gloria Rhodes 鈥88 (left) and Kory Schaeffer MA 鈥24 (right), co-directors of the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, offer their welcome remarks.


As the graduates go out to create a more just and peaceful world, they also weave a web of connections and build an extended community of learning, Professor Dr. Gloria Rhodes 鈥88, academic director of CJP, said in her remarks.

鈥淲e鈥檙e a small community, and 91短视频 is a very small university,鈥 Rhodes said. 鈥淏ut together, we are enormous.鈥

She said there are more than 23,000 91短视频 graduates around the world, including more than 800 who have earned degrees from CJP鈥檚 master鈥檚 programs.

As a CJP alumnus, Schaeffer said he shared the graduates鈥 joy and quiet solidarity, as well as their sense of how much they had cared, questioned, and transformed throughout their time at CJP.

鈥淭his work was never just the books you read or the papers you wrote,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was also the gray hairs, the tears, the tightness in your body, and the moments you questioned everything. It was the weight, literal or metaphorical, that comes with doing work that is both deeply personal and profoundly collective.鈥


LaToya Fernandez, an MA in restorative justice graduate, shares the journey that led her to CJP.

Conflict transformation graduates Hannah Gilman (left) and Jamila Gaskins (right) reflect on their experiences in the program.


Graduates LaToya Fernandez, Jamila Gaskins, Hannah Gilman, and Jacob Sankara shared their perspectives.  

Fernandez recalled visiting Ghana a couple of years ago and experiencing something there that changed her life. 鈥淚 grieved there, I left my burdens there, I cried for my ancestors,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 learned things about myself that I didn鈥檛 know.鈥

She left Africa with a mission to bring that sense of healing to her communities and to the United States. She had applied to another school鈥檚 restorative justice program, which offered her a full scholarship, when a friend encouraged her to learn more about CJP. 鈥淵ou want to go to a place that鈥檚 going to value you and all your decolonizing institution ways,鈥 Fernandez recalled her friend telling her. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 exactly what happened. I came to 91短视频 and I fell in love.鈥

Gaskins, who spoke at 91短视频鈥檚 Lavender Graduation two days prior, asked the crowd when they last breathed. 鈥淣ot a shallow breath, the kind most of us live on, tight chest, shoulders up near our ears, but a full breath. One that goes all the way down, opens up the belly, and reminds you that you are here, present, alive.鈥

鈥淪o many of us are chest breathers, and I say this with love and a little humor, because chest breathing is a perfectly functional way to stay alive, but it cuts us off,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t blocks access to the richness of our emotional experience, the very experience this work demands we stay connected to. We cannot feel our way into someone else鈥檚 suffering if we are numb to our own.鈥

Gilman said their past two years in the program have involved real sacrifice, balancing work, family, stressful logistics, and a dream. There have been many hard moments and even some tears, but also triumphs, laughter, and joy. There were moments of fear, and they showed up anyway.

鈥淲hat a unique experience it has been to do this in a place like CJP,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ith faculty and staff who knew us, challenged us, believed in us, and who, bless them, gave us extensions. I鈥檓 so grateful to share this era of growth with you, this particular season of becoming, of stretching, of learning what we are made of and made for.鈥


Mukarabe Inandava-Makinto (right), a CJP student, her husband, Makinto GC 鈥26 (left), and their son, Jo毛l Friebe-Makinto, perform the musical prelude

CJP students Virginia Maina and Kensly Cassy offer student blessings (left). Amy Knorr (right), CJP’s peacebuilding practice director, provides the graduate sending. 鈥淭his is actually my favorite day of the entire year, even more than Christmas,” Knorr said. “And it鈥檚 not because summer break begins tomorrow, but because we are sending forth so many graduates who will go on to change and transform the world.鈥


Sankara shared that he felt two emotions when he received his acceptance to the CJP program: excitement and intimidation. 鈥淪ome of my colleagues at [Mennonite Central Committee], when I was working there, had gone through the program, and they spoke about it with a kind of reverence,鈥 he said.

Along with those emotions came real anxiety. How would Sankara, an international student from Burkina Faso, find the money to fund his studies? He said his family鈥檚 visa situation was also uncertain. 鈥淚 had to make a decision to trust God and move forward, even without having all the answers, and slowly things began to unfold,鈥 he said.

He received a helpful scholarship from CJP and support from friends and family. Eventually, his family was able to come to the United States and was there to celebrate with him on Sunday. Sankara described CJP as more than a program, calling it a community.

鈥淲hen I say community, I don鈥檛 mean a group of people who simply agree with each other,鈥 Sankara said. 鈥淚 mean a space where we celebrate, laugh together, and step on each other鈥檚 feet, not once but repeatedly. But the difference is that we acknowledge it, address it, and grow through it.鈥

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Commencement speaker Dr. Lederach says 91短视频 and CJP alumni taught her to 鈥榮peak the language of justice鈥 /now/news/2026/commencement-speaker-dr-lederach-says-emu-and-cjp-alumni-taught-her-to-speak-the-language-of-justice/ /now/news/2026/commencement-speaker-dr-lederach-says-emu-and-cjp-alumni-taught-her-to-speak-the-language-of-justice/#respond Wed, 06 May 2026 21:54:13 +0000 /now/news/?p=61548 In her address to the 304 graduates gathered at Yoder Arena for 91短视频鈥檚 108th annual Commencement on Sunday afternoon, Dr. Angela J. Lederach quoted the late Kenyan peacebuilder Dekha Ibrahim Abdi, a former student and instructor in 91短视频鈥檚 Summer Peacebuilding Institute.

鈥淧eace is like an egg,鈥 Lederach said. 鈥淚t is delicate and fragile, but in the right conditions, it gives life.鈥

Lederach is an assistant professor of peace and justice studies at Chapman University. She has spent more than a decade working with grassroots peacebuilders in Colombia to transform violent conflict, expand possibilities for environmental justice, and cultivate more just and livable communities. She is the author of Feel the Grass Grow: Ecologies of Slow Peace in Colombia and co-author of When Blood and Bones Cry Out: Journeys Through the Soundscape of Healing and Reconciliation.

Commencement weekend served as a homecoming for Lederach, whose father, John Paul, co-founded 91短视频鈥檚 internationally recognized Center for Justice and Peacebuilding and served as its first director. Her presence at the ceremony coincided with the center鈥檚 30th anniversary celebration.


Graduates of the Class of 2026 attend 91短视频’s 108th annual Commencement on Sunday in Yoder Arena.

Dr. Angela J. Lederach (left) recalled attending 91短视频 commencements as a child and fully immersing herself in the campus fountain鈥檚 鈥渃rystal clear waters鈥 while dressed in her Sunday best. 鈥淚f you want to know the real reason why you are inside today instead of outside, you know where to direct the blame,鈥 she joked with graduates. Kylik Bradshaw (right), a liberal arts graduate, beams during the big day.


Lederach spoke about how she has learned from peacebuilders and CJP alumni around the world to listen for the sounds of justice. Alumni such as Emmanuel Bombande MA 鈥02 and Leymah Gbowee MA 鈥07, who worked to bring peace to West Africa and Liberia, taught her to speak the language of justice, while Larisa Zehr 鈥11 in Colombia showed her how to walk alongside people pursuing peace in the wake of dehumanizing violence.

鈥淭o speak the language of justice requires courage,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ot the loud bravado that conceals cowardice and blares from the world stage today, but the quiet courage found in the register of everyday life, in the recognition of our shared humanity, in our willingness to stand up and say 鈥榥ever again,鈥 and in our ability and willingness to sacrifice for one another.鈥

That courage emanates from the lives of people like Michael 鈥淢J鈥 Sharp 鈥05, who was killed in 2017 while working as a United Nations expert on armed groups in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

鈥淭he language of justice is rooted in hope,鈥 Lederach said. 鈥溾nd I have to say, Class of 2026, the work of guarding hope is not easy.鈥

鈥淎nd yet, as graduates of this institution have taught me over and over again,鈥 she added, 鈥渋t is precisely by slowing down enough to notice and attend to the lives and possibilities found close to the ground that dreams are protected and held and continue to grow, even amid violence.鈥


Cords of Distinction recipient Irais Barrera Pinzon, a political science and Spanish language & Hispanic studies graduate, smiles wide during Commencement.

Arelys Martinez Fabian (left) and Yenifer Dottin-Carter 鈥23 (right) present the graduate perspectives.


Undergraduates Dylan Hall and Arelys Martinez Fabian, along with MA in Counseling graduate Yenifer Dottin-Carter 鈥23, presented the graduate perspectives.

Hall reflected on the bittersweet emotions many were feeling as they left behind the dorms they once called home, the friends who joined them on their journeys, and the places on campus where memories were made. 鈥淏ut those memories are not leaving us,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey are a part of us. They are who we have become. As we turn this page in our lives, we will be taking a part of 91短视频 into our occupations.鈥

Reading from Matthew 5:13-17, he called on his fellow graduates to act as the 鈥渟alt of the earth鈥 and 鈥渓ight of the world.鈥 He said it鈥檚 easy to go through the motions, to blend in and lay low. 鈥淏ut I encourage you, whatever you do, to go the extra mile. Be a light in people鈥檚 lives. Stand out, work hard, and make an impact.鈥

Martinez Fabian recalled feeling a mix of excitement, fear, and uncertainty when applying to colleges four years ago. She said she didn鈥檛 know where life would take her, but she knew she was stepping into something bigger than she could ever imagine. Like many of her fellow graduates, she wasn鈥檛 just chasing her own dreams but also carrying the hopes of her family.

鈥淭his finish line isn鈥檛 just about my goals, it鈥檚 about my parents鈥 goals,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about their journey, the miles they traveled from their homes, the long years of difficult work, and the challenge of learning a new language and navigating a new culture.鈥

Through it all, the late-night study sessions and Common Grounds conversations, she said, 鈥渨e found our people.鈥 She said she has been fortunate to meet friends who have become her lifeline throughout her time at 91短视频. 鈥淪o I ask you this: How lucky are we that saying goodbye feels this hard? That kind of sadness only exists because of how meaningful those connections are.鈥

Dottin-Carter shared the story of her path to 91短视频, beginning with her family鈥檚 immigration from the Dominican Republic to Cambridge, Massachusetts, and her eventual move to Harrisonburg with her then-boyfriend, now husband, Isaiah MA 鈥22 (restorative justice). She invited graduates to imagine the countless stories lived among them, of triumph, hardship, laughter, and sorrow, that will be carried within them as a collective memory.

She encouraged graduates to find a space where their story is honored, their presence is valued, and their legacy is seen. 鈥淎nd if you cannot find it, build it,鈥 she said. 鈥淔ind your people, find your place, find space where you are loved, understood, and validated.鈥


Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus presides over 91短视频鈥檚 108th annual Commencement.

The ceremony recognized 304 graduates from 23 states, Puerto Rico, and 15 countries.


This marked Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus鈥 first Commencement as interim president. In her opening remarks, she said many of the Class of 2026 graduates began their time at 91短视频 during a season shaped by significant cultural and political change.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e navigated a world marked by tension, rapid shifts, and real questions about identity, belonging, and truth,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n the midst of it all, you stayed grounded in your learning. You stayed grounded with one another. You demonstrated resilience, discernment, and a willingness to engage complexity rather than turn away from it.鈥

The Rev. Gordon Meriwether, a member of the 91短视频 Board of Trustees, led the opening invocation. The 91短视频 Chamber Singers, led by Dr. Benjamin Bergey, performed a musical selection. Divisional deans Rev. Dr. Sarah Bixler and Dr. Michael Horst presented the graduates. Provost Dr. Tynisha Willingham commissioned the graduates. Retiring professors Dr. Doug Graber Neufeld and Deanna Durham delivered the Commencement blessing.

Watch a video recording of Commencement below!

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Graduates 鈥榣ook forward with courage鈥 at 2026 Graduate Celebration and Sending /now/news/2026/graduates-look-forward-with-courage-at-2026-graduate-celebration-and-sending/ /now/news/2026/graduates-look-forward-with-courage-at-2026-graduate-celebration-and-sending/#respond Wed, 06 May 2026 03:01:05 +0000 /now/news/?p=61516 You鈥檙e not alone in this world, you see.
You鈥檒l always have a beloved community.
We’re here to back you up when you fall. 
So go bravely, but please call.
鈥 Makinto, 鈥淕o Bravely, But Please Call鈥

91短视频 honored members of the Class of 2026 at its Graduate Celebration and Sending service on Saturday evening in Lehman Auditorium. The event featured a faculty address by Dr. Tara Kishbaugh, senior class salutations from co-presidents Genesis Figueroa and Arelys Martinez Fabian, and the presentation of the senior class gift, along with prayer, music, and poetry from graduates.

Graduates were joined by family, friends, supporters, and 91短视频 faculty, staff, and administrators to celebrate their accomplishments and the unique gifts they bring to their communities and the world.

Formerly known as Baccalaureate, the annual ceremony offers graduates an opportunity to 鈥渓ook back with pride and look forward with courage,鈥 Dr. Tynisha Willingham, provost and vice president of academic affairs, said in her welcome. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a space to breathe deeply, reflect on all that has brought you to this moment, and prepare your heart and spirit for what lies ahead.鈥


Graduates were joined by family, friends, supporters, and 91短视频 faculty, staff, and administrators.

Senior class co-presidents Arelys Martinez Fabian and Genesis Figueroa deliver the senior class salutations (left). Dr. Tynisha Willingham welcomes the audience in Lehman Auditorium on Saturday evening (right).


In a shared address highlighting their close partnership, Figueroa and Martinez Fabian reflected on their experiences at 91短视频 and encouraged graduates to carry what they鈥檝e learned into every space they enter.

From late-night study sessions at Common Grounds Coffeehouse to 鈥渢hose dreadful group assignments,鈥 campus became not just a place to take classes, but where they discovered who they are, the senior class co-presidents said.

鈥91短视频 has a way of pushing us, not just academically but personally,鈥 they said. 鈥淚t asks us to think critically, engage with people who are different from us, and consider how we want to show up in the world.鈥

鈥91短视频 doesn鈥檛 just prepare us for what鈥檚 next. It challenges us to think about why we do what we do,鈥 they continued. 鈥淭o consider how we can contribute to something bigger than ourselves, whether in our careers, our communities, or the everyday choices we make.鈥

Ethan Neufeld, senior class business manager, and Maria Longenecker, senior class secretary, presented the class gift to Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus. Each year, the senior class selects a meaningful gift that reflects their shared experience and leaves a lasting legacy. This year, the Class of 2026 chose to fund improvements to the 91短视频 Game Room in the University Commons, expanding options for students, faculty, and staff.


Eli Stoll performs the opening song, 鈥淭he Lord Lift You Up鈥 (Voices Together 832).

Dr. Tara Kishbaugh (left) delivers the faculty address. Ethan Neufeld, senior class business manager, presents Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus with the senior class gift (right).


In her address titled 鈥淕o bravely鈥ut please call,鈥 Kishbaugh, dean of faculty and student success, urged graduates to keep a firm belief in themselves and hold onto their optimism. The longtime professor drew from her chemistry curriculum, likening the graduates鈥 situation to molecules in a transition state.

鈥淭his transition state is a normal part of transformation,鈥 she said. 鈥淏utterflies don鈥檛 force it. The struggle is part of the becoming.鈥

She also reminded graduates that they didn鈥檛 arrive at Commencement weekend alone. 鈥淟ook at the love that has brought you here,鈥 she said. 鈥溾ou belong to each other, and you belong to us. You鈥檝e left a mark on 91短视频, and hopefully you will see the imprint of 91短视频 in your future selves as little ripples.鈥

Graduate Celebration and Sending featured gathering music from Naomi Kratzer; an opening blessing from Sarah Prroj; an opening song from Eli Stoll; a performance of Stephen Paulus鈥 鈥淭he Road Home鈥 by senior Chamber Singers members Erin Batten, Lauren Kauffman, Naomi Kratzer, Hollyn Miller, Jacob Nissley, Eli Stoll, Joshua Stucky, and Sean Swartley; poetry readings from Miranda Beidler and Emily Suarez Nunez; a sending blessing from Brian Martin Burkholder; sending music from Makinto; and reflections from senior class advisors Mark Metzler Sawin and Jonathan Swartz, who also handed out 91短视频 pins.

Graduates received pins representing the wisdom they鈥檝e shared and the investment and commitment they鈥檝e made during their time as students. They were encouraged to wear the pins at Commencement and beyond, honoring how 91短视频 has supported them in their learning and growth.


Mark Metzler Sawin and Jonathan Swartz, senior class advisors, offer their reflections.

Miranda Beidler (left) shares original poetry, while Sarah Prroj (right) gives an opening blessing.


During their four years at 91短视频, much has changed, Metzler Sawin told the graduates. Presidents, both nationally and at 91短视频, have changed, as has the power and scope of artificial intelligence. 鈥淏ut most importantly, yourselves,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e grown in many ways during these same four years.鈥

Much has also stayed the same: 鈥淭he significance of human connection, the value of genuine relationships, and the core values that made you the unique and significant person you were when you arrived here and still are today,鈥 he added.

In her opening blessing, Prroj reflected on the moments that have challenged her and the relationships that have shaped her into who she is today. 91短视频 didn鈥檛 just educate her, she said, but also formed her, teaching her how to lead, listen, care, and become part of something bigger than herself. Sharing the words of pastor Rick Warren, she said that when people take their final breath, no one asks for their trophies, achievements, or diplomas.

鈥淭hey asked for the people they love,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ecause in the end, it鈥檚 not what we accomplish that matters most. It鈥檚 who we share our lives with. And that鈥檚 what makes 91短视频 so special. It鈥檚 not just a place of learning, but a place of community where we鈥檙e known, supported, and shaped by one another.鈥

Watch a video recording of the ceremony below!

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鈥榃hat a beautiful space鈥: 91短视频鈥檚 2026 Donning of the Kente Ceremony recognizes graduates鈥 roots /now/news/2026/what-a-beautiful-space-emus-2026-donning-of-the-kente-ceremony-recognizes-graduates-roots/ /now/news/2026/what-a-beautiful-space-emus-2026-donning-of-the-kente-ceremony-recognizes-graduates-roots/#comments Tue, 05 May 2026 15:54:38 +0000 /now/news/?p=61490 Holding back tears and sharing laughter, family, friends, faculty, and the 91短视频 community came together in the MainStage Theater on Saturday to honor the perseverance, compassion, and determination of the Class of 2026 during the 11th annual Donning of the Kente Ceremony. The event recognized 49 graduates.

Hosted by Celeste Thomas, director of multicultural student services and CoachLink coach, and Micah Shristi, director of international student services, the ceremony featured a musical drum performance led by Makinto and his son, Jo毛l Friebe-Makinto.

Since 2016, the ceremony has celebrated graduates who honor their African and international roots. Each receives a handwoven stole of kente cloth, a symbol of prestige in many African societies, or a satin sash featuring the flags of countries they feel connected to.

Sashes at Saturday鈥檚 ceremony bore the flags of Albania, Argentina, Barbados, Burkina Faso, the Cherokee Nation, China, Cuba, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, Honduras, Iceland, Mexico, Nepal, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Oromia, Palestine, Peru, Puerto Rico, Senegal, South Sudan, and Uruguay.


Class of 2026 graduates take part in Saturday鈥檚 Donning of the Kente Ceremony in 91短视频鈥檚 MainStage Theater.

Jo毛l Friebe-Makinto (left) honors his father, Makinto. Celeste Thomas (right) welcomes attendees to the ceremony.


The ceremony celebrates achievement, encourages recipients to continue striving for excellence, and provides an intimate end-of-year experience. Each recipient selected a family member, friend, mentor, administrator, or faculty or staff member to place the stole or sash around their neck and offer remarks, sharing joyful and heartfelt stories and words of praise about each graduate.

Graduates wore the stoles and sashes at Commencement to honor their collective heritage and reflect on shared struggles and successes.

鈥淥ur hope is that they feel the support of their village,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淎dditionally, we hope the ceremony signals the college鈥檚 desire to meet the needs of all its students.鈥


Micah Shristi honors a graduate during the ceremony.

Since 2016, the ceremony has celebrated graduates who honor their African and international roots.


Participants

The following graduates were recognized:

Makinto, a general theological certificate major from Harrisonburg, was donned by Mukarabe Makinto Inandava and Jo毛l Friebe-Makinto.听

鈥淵ou鈥檙e a clear example of how, no matter your age or where you are in life, you can accomplish anything,鈥 Friebe-Makinto told his father. 鈥淵ou are a continuous inspiration for me and someone I can always look to for guidance.鈥

Esdras Burgos, accounting and business administration major from Charlottesville, Virginia, was donned by M. Esther Showalter.

Arelys Martinez Fabian, a Spanish language & Hispanic studies and education (PreK鈥12) licensure from Winchester, Virginia, was donned by M. Esther Showalter.

Zazkia De la Vega, a marketing and business administration major from Cusco, Peru, was donned by M. Esther Showalter

Ankita Adhikari, a computer science major from Pokhara, Nepal, was donned by Micah Shristi.

Donovan Arnason, a digital media, photography, and design major from Stafford, Virginia, was donned by Phyllis Braxton Arnason.

Elili Asefa, a nursing major from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, was donned by Baati Ayana.

Irais Barrera Pinzon, a political science, Spanish language and Hispanic studies major from Richmond, Virginia, was donned by Wendell Shank.

Mimi Bayongwa, a social work major from Riverdale, Maryland, was donned by Dia Mekonnen and Perpetue Kaimba

Lemi Amanuel Bekele, a biochemistry major from Kansas City, Missouri, was donned by Micah Shristi.

Shristi recalled receiving an email from Bekele, who was waiting for his admissions decision in 2019. 鈥淗e sent me the following email, and I quote: 鈥楶lease answer me. To wait for your answer I am in the forest in a tree to get data and it鈥檚 too dark and cold,鈥欌 Shristi read aloud. 鈥淭hat same determination carried Lemi through his years at 91短视频.鈥

Jean Betancourt, a business administration major from Meridian, Mississippi, was donned by Angel Betancourt.

Nia Boyd, an art and writing studies major from Richmond, Virginia, was donned by Lenice Sudds.

Kylik Daquan Bradshaw, a liberal arts major from Crewe, Virginia, was donned by De’Andra Oliver, Te’Ahra Oliver, Theron Oliver, and Kayanna Bradshaw.

鈥淭hrough every season, you have shown resilience, courage, and determination beyond your years,鈥 Bradshaw鈥檚 mother said. 鈥淏ut your greatest gift has always been your heart, your love, your loyalty, and your strength. Even when you were challenged with difficulties, you never let it break you.鈥

Chase Comer, a political science and history major from Timberville, Virginia, was donned by Amy Miller.

Ruach Dhieu Ruach Deng, a computer science major from Bor, South Sudan, was donned by Micah Shristi.

Odesa Elezi, a nursing major from Harrisonburg, was donned by Luis Elezi.

Jasmin Escamilla Ruiz, a digital media, photography, and design major from Bluemont, Virginia, was donned by Irma Ruiz Ramirez

LaToya Fernandez, an MA in restorative justice major from West Hartford, Connecticut, was donned by Lyric Bryant.

Genesis Figueroa, a political science, Spanish language and Hispanic studies major from Millersburg, Ohio, was donned by Mia Figueroa.

Leah Frankenfield, a psychology major from Moraga, California, was donned by Rachel Tusing.

Sofia Garcia Pini, an MA in restorative justice major from Buenos Aires, Argentina, was donned by Joe Cole.



Jamila Gaskins, an MA in conflict transformation major from Los Angeles, was donned by David Evans.

Emily Guin, a nursing major from Lovettsville, Virginia, was donned by Juan Guin.

Jacqueline Jackson, a nursing major from Staunton, Virginia, was donned by Jacqueline Badger-Jackson.

Jayda Lenae Jones, a social work major from Goodview, Virginia, was donned by Kim Jones.

Yohanna Kebede, a computer science major from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, was donned by Haweni Tolosa.

Emae Klompenhouwer, a social work major from Newport News, Virginia, was donned by Remco Klompenhouwer.

Ramata Lam, a biomedicine major from Baltimore, was donned by Kaitlyn Upshaw.

Mallery Salemah McShine, an MA in restorative justice major from Fredericksburg, Virginia, was donned by LaToya Fernandez.

Dia Mekonnen, a social work and political science major from Silver Spring, Maryland, was donned by Deanna Reed.

Abraham Mekonnen, a computer science major from Harrisonburg, was donned by Noel Abeje

Last summer, Mekonnen interned at Morgan Stanley in New York City. This summer, he is headed to Northern California, where he will work for Palo Alto Networks. 鈥淗ow many people can say they鈥檙e hopping from Wall Street to Silicon Valley at 23 years old?鈥 his close friend Abeje said. 鈥淗ere鈥檚 the thing about Abraham: when the rest of us go to a mall, we typically just shop. Abraham asks the storekeepers how much they made that week and whether they鈥檇 recommend entering the industry. He鈥檚 constantly studying the world, ambitious, resilient, and relentlessly curious.鈥

Fadi William Michael, a marketing major from Bethlehem, State of Palestine, was donned by Jim Leaman.

Diego Morales Torres, a computer science major from Ponce, Puerto Rico, was donned by Team Oosthuizen.

Zipola Nayituriki, a social work major from Harrisonburg, was donned by Mary Ann Zehr.

Tasia Ocaranza, an MA in education major from Staunton, Virginia, was donned by Kathy Evans.

Taylor Helenna Parker, a digital media, photography, and design major from Charlottesville, Virginia, was donned by Mikaela Brooks Fauver.

Royale M. Parker, a business administration and psychology major from San Bernardino County, California, was donned by Ruby Parker and Roy Parker.

Jennifer Perera, an MS in biomedicine major from Miami, was donned by Jose Perera.

Robyn Charda茅 Pratt, an MA in education major from Newport News, Virginia, was donned by Sandra Pratt.

Sarah Prroj, a business administration major from Shkoder, Albania, was donned by Micah Shristi.

Sharon Salinas Morales, a restorative justice in education major from Harrisonburg, was donned by Andrew Claassen.

Jacob Sankara, an MA in conflict transformation major from Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, was donned by Gloria Rhodes.

Roumany Sefin, a business administration and medical lab science major from Port Said, Egypt, was donned by Jim Leaman.

Zoe Seifu, a nursing major from Harrisonburg, was donned by Nati Seifu.

Anisa Yousef Sharhabeel, a business administration major from Rockingham, Virginia, was donned by Rita Tutu.

Shayleigh Michelle Sims, a biology and secondary education (6-12) licensure major from Palmyra, Virginia, was donned by Kathy Evans.

Emily Suarez Nunez, a nursing major from McGaheysville, Virginia, was donned by Silvana Nunez.

Guadalupe Tenorio Ramirez, an accounting and business administration major from Hopewell, Virginia, was donned by Lindy Backues.

Cheylan Ury, a psychology major from Staunton, Virginia, was donned by Shaion Ury.


Kathy Evans delivers remarks to a graduate during 91短视频鈥檚 11th annual Donning of the Kente Ceremony.

Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus poses with Class of 2026 graduate Emily Suarez Nunez following the ceremony (left). Alumni returned to campus on Saturday to honor friends at the ceremony (right).


鈥淲e鈥檝e laughed together, we鈥檝e cried together,鈥 Shristi said in his closing remarks. 鈥淲hat a beautiful space.鈥

The Donning of the Kente Ceremony is sponsored by Multicultural Student Services, International Student Services, and the Black Student Alliance.

Watch a video recording of the ceremony below!

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Pinning ceremony honors nursing graduates from Class of 2026 /now/news/2026/pinning-ceremony-honors-nursing-graduates-from-class-of-2026/ /now/news/2026/pinning-ceremony-honors-nursing-graduates-from-class-of-2026/#respond Mon, 04 May 2026 22:26:28 +0000 /now/news/?p=61473 Sixteen 91短视频 nursing graduates marked a major milestone Saturday morning during a pinning and commissioning ceremony at Lehman Auditorium. The annual event symbolizes the completion of their education, their entry into the nursing profession, and their commitment to providing compassionate care.

Gabriella Seal, a 2026 bachelor of science in nursing (BSN) graduate, opened the ceremony by recognizing the graduates鈥 supporters鈥攆aculty, staff, families, friends, partners, and children鈥攚ho carried them through moments when the journey felt overwhelming.

鈥淚f there鈥檚 one thing that defines this class, it鈥檚 that no two of us took the same path to get here,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ome of us dreamed of becoming nurses for years, while others found our way through entirely different experiences and chapters of our lives. Regardless of the path, we all made the same choice: to step into something difficult, meaningful, and deeply demanding.鈥

She recalled times of exhaustion and uncertainty, when the weight of their training felt especially real.

鈥淭hrough it all, we continued to show up for our patients, for our future, and for each other,鈥 she said. 鈥淪omewhere along the way, this stopped being just about passing exams or mastering skills. It became about learning how to stand beside people in some of the hardest moments of their lives.鈥


91短视频 nursing graduates recite 鈥淭he Nurse鈥檚 Pledge,鈥 led by Dr. Laura Yoder during Saturday鈥檚 pinning ceremony.

Gabriella Seal ’26 (left) delivers opening remarks during the ceremony. Dr. David Rosie (right) served as keynote speaker.


Dr. David Rosie, an emergency medicine physician at Sentara RMH Medical Center in Harrisonburg who has worked in medicine for 26 years, delivered the keynote address. He said he is continually impressed by how 91短视频鈥檚 鈥渇antastic nurses鈥 rise to the occasion.

He encouraged the graduates to question orders from doctors and physician assistants that do not seem to make sense, think outside the box, seek unconventional solutions, and trust their instincts.

鈥淚f you have a sense that something isn鈥檛 right, then you should listen to that,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ometimes the treatment isn鈥檛 right. Sometimes it鈥檚 someone being trafficked or abused. Those things don鈥檛 announce themselves.鈥


91短视频鈥檚 nursing graduates received pins and stethoscopes from those who supported them throughout their nursing coursework.


The ceremony recognized the following BSN graduates, each of whom was pinned by a special person in their lives. Samantha Johnston, instructor of nursing, read their dedications and shared their future plans.

Class of 2026 graduates

Leah Beachy will work in the emergency department at Augusta Health.

Madison Bowyer will work on the organ transplant floor at the University of Virginia Health.

Odesa Elezi will work in geriatric nursing at Bridgewater Retirement Community.

Abigail Foltz will work in medical oncology at Sentara RMH Medical Center.

Emily Guin will work in the emergency department at Inova Fairfax Hospital.

Jacqueline Jackson is exploring her future plans.

Meygan Kyger will work as a registered nurse at the UVA Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Reina Landa will work in the emergency department at Virginia Commonwealth University Health.

Caris Lucas will work in medical oncology at Sentara RMH Medical Center. 

Gabriella Seal will work in the emergency department at Augusta Health.

Marianne Short will work in the progressive care unit at Augusta Health.

Elijah Spicher will work in correctional nursing at Middle River Regional Jail.

April Stafford will work in the progressive care unit at Augusta Health.

Joshua Stucky will work in the intensive care unit at Sentara RMH Medical Center.

Emily Suarez Nunez is exploring her future plans.

Kristina Suslaev will work in the emergency department at Sentara RMH Medical Center.

In her closing remarks, Seal told her fellow graduates they will care for people in some of their most vulnerable and meaningful moments. Nurses will be present in times of fear, healing, grief, hope, and heartbreak, she said, and how they show up will matter more than they may ever fully realize.

鈥淟ong after people forget the details of their hospital stay, they will remember how they were treated,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey will remember who made them feel seen, heard, safe, and cared for. That is the kind of nurse each of us now has the opportunity to become.鈥

Watch a video recording of the ceremony below!

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‘Pride, love, and joy’: 91短视频’s 2026 Lavender Graduation celebrates LGBTQ+ graduates /now/news/2026/pride-love-and-joy-emus-2026-lavender-graduation-celebrates-lgbtq-graduates/ /now/news/2026/pride-love-and-joy-emus-2026-lavender-graduation-celebrates-lgbtq-graduates/#comments Mon, 04 May 2026 22:26:18 +0000 /now/news/?p=61457 91短视频 hosted its fifth annual Lavender Graduation on Friday evening in the Old Common Grounds space (University Commons 177). The ceremony is among the first Commencement events of the season and honors LGBTQ+ graduates and alumni while celebrating their unique experiences, achievements, and contributions to the university. This year, the event recognized 11 graduates, each of whom received a rainbow stole to wear at Commencement.

The first Lavender Graduation ceremony was held at the University of Michigan in 1995. Dr. Ronni Sanlo began the tradition after being denied the opportunity to attend her children’s graduations because of her sexual orientation. Today, hundreds of colleges and universities offer Lavender Graduation ceremonies for their students. 91短视频 held its first Lavender Graduation in 2022.

Since its inaugural ceremony, 91短视频’s Lavender Graduation has honored 76 graduates and alumni over the past five years, according to Jonathan Swartz, dean of students.

“This time tonight is a declaration that your identities deserve to be celebrated,” he told graduates on Friday, “not just tolerated, not just accepted, but uplifted with pride, love, and joy.”


Jamila Gaskins MA ’26 (conflict transformation), a speaker at Friday’s Lavender Graduation ceremony, receives a rainbow stole from Dr. Kathy Evans, professor of teacher education and director of the undergraduate teacher education program.

Erin Batten ’26 (left) served as emcee for the ceremony, while Sarah Peak ’26 (right) delivered the undergraduate keynote address.


Erin Batten ’26, a liberal arts graduate from Bridgewater, Virginia, performed music and served as emcee for the ceremony. Sarah Peak ’26 and Jamila Gaskins MA ’26 (conflict transformation) delivered the keynote addresses.

Peak, a psychology and peacebuilding graduate from Sanford, North Carolina, recalled her first day at 91短视频. During move-in, a protester stood across from the residence halls holding a sign condemning people in the LGBTQ+ community.

“At that moment, all my fears came true,” she said. “But within minutes, students and faculty assembled with flags and signs supporting the queer community on campus, and Tyler Goss pulled out the queerest playlist possible, which I’m partially convinced he curated specifically for moments like that one.”

Students passed out bottles of water, she said, not only to one another but also to the protester. “It was then that I realized I was in the right place, that I was joining a community that truly cared for everyone, and that I would be cared for, even when others did not agree with that notion.”

Gaskins, a Center for Justice and Peacebuilding alumna from Los Angeles, encouraged graduates to question society鈥檚 binary expectations and challenge existing systems.

鈥淵ou are graduating into a world that will hand you a blueprint about who you should be, what success looks like, what fights are worth having, what compromises are necessary, and which possibilities are realistic,鈥 she said.

The world needs people who can imagine what does not yet exist, she said. 鈥淚t needs people who can say, 鈥業 know this isn鈥檛 how it鈥檚 done, but here鈥檚 how it could be done,鈥 and who can hold the image of a more just world clearly enough to take the next step toward it.鈥


A dance party was held in the Old Common Grounds space following the Lavender Graduation ceremony, continuing the celebration.

Dr. Kathy Evans (left) provides the grounding moment at the start of the ceremony. She presents a stole to a graduate (right).


Lavender Graduation also included a moment of solidarity, silence, and visibility for those who are not out nor will ever be out. Dr. Kathy Evans, professor of teacher education and director of the undergraduate teacher education program, and Dawn Neil, coordinator for the Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, presented the stoles to the graduates.

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Anthropologist and peacebuilder Dr. Angela J. Lederach to deliver 91短视频鈥檚 2026 Commencement address /now/news/2026/anthropologist-and-peace-studies-scholar-practitioner-dr-angela-j-lederach-to-deliver-emus-2026-commencement-address/ /now/news/2026/anthropologist-and-peace-studies-scholar-practitioner-dr-angela-j-lederach-to-deliver-emus-2026-commencement-address/#respond Tue, 21 Apr 2026 09:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=61338 Dr. Angela J. Lederach, assistant professor of peace and justice studies at Chapman University, will deliver the keynote address at 91短视频鈥檚 Commencement ceremony on Sunday, May 3, 2026, at 1 p.m. in Yoder Arena at University Commons.

A scholar-practitioner, Dr. Lederach has engaged in more than a decade of participatory research with grassroots peacebuilders in Colombia as they work to transform violent conflict, deepen possibilities for environmental justice, and cultivate a more just and livable world.

Her research focuses on community-based responses to the interlocking dynamics of political and environmental violence.

She is the author of the award-winning Feel the Grass Grow: Ecologies of Slow Peace in Colombia (Stanford University Press, 2023). Alongside her father, John Paul Lederach, she also co-authored When Blood and Bones Cry Out: Journeys Through the Soundscape of Healing and Reconciliation (Oxford University Press, 2010).

With a dual PhD in cultural anthropology and peace studies from the University of Notre Dame, Dr. Lederach has accompanied peacebuilding, environmental, and restorative justice initiatives in Sierra Leone, the Philippines, Colombia, Bolivia, and the United States.

鈥淚 feel incredibly honored and, quite frankly, humbled to be chosen to speak at 91短视频鈥檚 Commencement,鈥 Dr. Lederach said. 鈥淭he faculty, students, and alumni at 91短视频 have deeply shaped my understanding of justice and peace and inspired me to imagine and work toward more peaceful and dignified futures for collective life on this planet. They form a vital part of the transnational community that has taught me what solidarity means in practice and inspires my everyday work of building peace amid ongoing violence.鈥

鈥淏y combining interdisciplinary scholarship with ethical inquiry, 91短视频 has helped nurture a distinctive community that spans the globe,鈥 she added. 鈥淚 am indebted to this community for my own formation, learning, and sense of grounded hope, and I am honored to be part of this significant milestone for the graduating class.鈥

Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus said Dr. Lederach brings a rare depth of scholarship that bridges lived experience and critical inquiry. Her work explores how 鈥渟low peace鈥 emerges through grassroots communities that reshape and sustain peace over time, while also carrying forward and reimagining a generational legacy in restorative justice and conflict transformation.

鈥淚n her work, she reminds us that peace is not only studied but practiced, offering our graduates a compelling vision of leadership that is thoughtful, courageous, and rooted in the daily work of building a more just and hopeful world,鈥 Dr. Dycus said.

91短视频 91短视频

Rooted in the values of academic excellence, peace and justice, and an active faith shaped by Anabaptist-Mennonite beliefs and practices, 91短视频 offers undergraduate, graduate, and seminary degrees that prepare students to serve and lead in a global context. A leader among faith-based universities, 91短视频 was founded in 1917 in Harrisonburg, Virginia, has a site in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and offers programs in person and online.

To livestream Dr. Lederach鈥檚 Commencement address, visit 91短视频鈥檚 .

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