Mukarabe Archives - 91短视频 News /now/news/tag/mukarabe/ News from the 91短视频 community. Wed, 08 Apr 2026 21:53:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 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 91短视频 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 91短视频 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 91短视频鈥檚 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 91短视频 Gospel Choir (right) sing during Wednesday’s campus worship service.


91短视频 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 91短视频鈥檚 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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Mayor Reed reprises role as talk show host for second annual 鈥楳ornings with the Mayor鈥 Convocation /now/news/2026/mayor-reed-reprises-role-as-talk-show-host-for-second-annual-mornings-with-the-mayor-convocation/ /now/news/2026/mayor-reed-reprises-role-as-talk-show-host-for-second-annual-mornings-with-the-mayor-convocation/#respond Tue, 31 Mar 2026 21:25:30 +0000 /now/news/?p=61017 Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed channeled her inner Oprah Winfrey for another installment of Mornings with the Mayor, a special edition of Convocation, on Friday morning at the University Commons Student Union.

This was the second time that Reed, director of alumni engagement and community connections at 91短视频, has hosted the event. Named among the and a member of the , she conceived the idea last year to celebrate March as Women鈥檚 History Month and highlight the trailblazing women leaders guiding the campus forward.

This year鈥檚 event celebrated Women鈥檚 History Month and explored the 鈥渜ueer-affirming, gender-expansive world of nature around us,鈥 Reed said. It featured a conversation and Q&A with P谋nar Ate艧 Sinopoulos-Lloyd, a visionary artist, wildlife tracker, and Indigenous eco-philosopher whose work 鈥渓ives at the intersection of sustainability, science, and deep connections to the natural world.鈥

Sinopoulos-Lloyd (they/them) shared their personal journey, moving from Turkey to the Bay Area of California at age eight. As a neurodivergent child, they spent a year of near silence carefully observing squirrels, pigeons, and other urban wildlife, noticing how these animals adapted to a city not designed for them. 鈥淭hat began and initiated my journey in wildlife observation, wildlife tracking, and pattern recognition as a tracker,鈥 Sinopoulos-Lloyd said.

鈥淚 noticed they didn鈥檛 speak much and were highly observant,鈥 they said. 鈥淚 could relate to them and feel unmasked with them so easily.鈥

The wildlife tracker also spoke about community care. While trailing deer in the Scablands of eastern Washington about three years ago, Sinopoulos-Lloyd came across the leg bone of a beaver at the site of an ancient lake. On closer inspection, they saw that the bone had been broken but had healed. 鈥淭hat meant this being had survived,鈥 they said.

鈥淭he reason I was so amazed was that this was a major fracture,鈥 Sinopoulos-Lloyd said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how it happened, but it鈥檚 a sign of care. They must have been cared for and fed to recover and heal. As someone who鈥檚 disabled and chronically ill, seeing that sign of community care in the natural world touched me in such a profound way.鈥


Students, faculty, and staff fill the University Commons Student Union for the second annual Mornings with the Mayor Convocation hosted by Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed.

P谋nar Ate艧 Sinopoulos-Lloyd (left) shares their experiences with Mayor Deanna Reed. Mukarabe (right), a conflict transformation student at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, performs djembe to close out Friday’s show.


Mornings with the Mayor also included a viewing of the trailer for Bloom, a documentary by filmmaker and Visual and Communication Arts professor Elizabeth Miller-Derstine. The follows four birth workers making reproductive care safer and more accessible in their community. A screening of the film will be held at 8 p.m. on Monday, April 13, in Suter Science Center 106.

The event concluded with a djembe musical performance by Mukarabe, a conflict transformation student at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding. She shared her life story, from escaping the genocide in Burundi and coming to the United States to enrolling at 91短视频. 鈥淣ow I鈥檓 here for my third master鈥檚 degree,鈥 she told the crowd. 鈥淣ot just for the paper. I鈥檓 studying conflict transformation because where I come from, it is needed.鈥

Those attending Mornings with the Mayor were treated to a complimentary drink, the Sunrise Refresher (a dragonfruit, mango, and raspberry lemonade), crafted by the talented baristas at Common Grounds Coffeehouse.

Sinopoulos-Lloyd, one of the seven professionals featured on the Inclusivity in Science Mural inside Suter Science Center, spent the full day on campus. They joined students, faculty, and staff for a lunchtime discussion, then gave a talk and signed their portrait during the mural鈥檚 dedication ceremony later that afternoon.

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Four graduate students awarded MC USA scholarships https://www.mennoniteusa.org/news/bipoc-scholarships-2025/ Thu, 16 Oct 2025 04:01:00 +0000 /now/news/?post_type=in-the-news&p=59873 Three Eastern Mennonite Seminary students and one Center for Justice and Peacebuilding student are recipients of Mennonite Church USA鈥檚 Scholarship for BIPOC Students. The scholarship recipients include Shana Green, pursuing a master of divinity; Makinto, pursuing an MA in Christian leadership; Jonny Rashid, pursuing a doctorate in ministry; and Mukarabe Lysaine Makinto-Inandava, pursuing an MA in conflict transformation.

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91短视频 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 91短视频, 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 91短视频 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 91短视频 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 91短视频 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, 91短视频 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.

91短视频 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 91短视频鈥檚 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 91短视频. Early on, she said, she had visited with elected officials, educators and business leaders who told her they had never stepped foot on 91短视频鈥檚 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, 91短视频 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 91短视频’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 91短视频 are well-prepared to be peace and justice advocates like Ida B. Wells.鈥

91短视频 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 91短视频 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, 91短视频鈥檚 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: Multihyphenate musician Makinto finds his second act at 91短视频 /now/news/2025/a-royal-tale-multihyphenate-musician-makinto-finds-his-second-act-at-emu/ Mon, 10 Mar 2025 13:55:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=58339 Editor鈥檚 Note: This profile is the third of six stories about students and alumni leading up to Lov91短视频 Giving Day on April 2. For more information about the day and how to donate, visit:

Makinto has pretty much done it all. The Liberian-German musician, storyteller, educator, worship leader, Mennonite pastor, activist鈥攈onestly, there are too many descriptors for him to name here鈥攈as played piano for Pope John Paul II at the Vatican and for Nelson Mandela in Germany. He鈥檚 traveled the world extensively, performing at venues such as Madison Square Garden in New York, the Sydney Opera House in Australia, and for a crowd of 200,000 at Brazil鈥檚 largest soccer stadium. His humanitarian work in Africa and recognition as an international recording artist earned him the title of Goodwill Ambassador for Peace and Development for an of the United Nations.聽

Just about the only thing he hasn鈥檛 done is attend a four-year college. He simply never had time for it during his four decades as a global performer. Thanks to the flexibility of 91短视频鈥檚 online and hybrid courses as well as the generosity of donors through the seminary scholarship, can now check that item off his list. 

The single-named polymath is a second-semester graduate student at Eastern Mennonite Seminary, pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in Christian leadership. His wife, Mukarabe, first pulled him into the orbit of 91短视频, enrolling at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding at the start of last year. 

鈥淚t would be impossible for us to finance two degrees if it weren鈥檛 for the largesse of the donors through the seminary scholarship,鈥 Makinto said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e very grateful for that.鈥

During the COVID-19 pandemic, he earned a two-year associate鈥檚 degree. Along with his 15 years as a pastor, he had enough equivalent experience to enroll at the seminary. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great that I鈥檓 able to participate in a master鈥檚 program based not just on academic history but also on life history,鈥 he said.

One of his earliest impressions of 91短视频 came during a visit to campus in November 2023 for the annual Music Gala Concert. Makinto, the featured performer of the night, put on a dazzling show as he played the djembe, kalimba, flute and piano. That evening, after touring the campus and meeting a great number of people, Makinto said he and his wife 鈥渞esonated really well with 91短视频.鈥

鈥淲e felt at home here,鈥 said Makinto. 鈥淓veryone felt like family.鈥

The couple, who immigrated to the U.S. in 1999, lead , a nonprofit dedicated to giving hope and restoring dignity to Burundian refugees and equipping them to participate in the transformation of African communities. The word 鈥淎mahoro鈥 comes from the Kirundi (Burundian) expression for peace that conveys blessings, well-being and fullness of life. The organization is a Conference-Related Ministry of Mosaic Mennonite Conference.

Makinto said that he鈥檚 working on bringing an initiative called 鈥淎mahoro Drumming for Peace鈥 to 91短视频. The program would bring people from diverse backgrounds together to make music and reflect on community.

He said that he鈥檚 excited to become part of 91短视频鈥檚 global network of partners and alumni to contribute to and collaborate on peace initiatives. 鈥淲e can build something together,鈥 he said.

Makinto and Mukarabe live in Harrisonburg with their son Jo毛l, the youngest of their six children. Makinto can often be found at Martin Chapel on Tuesday mornings leading worship music with a bright smile and joyful spirit. He will perform as a guest artist at Love, Joy & Peace: A Choral Celebration! on Friday, March 14, at Lehman Auditorium. The concert will bring together three choirs and showcase a piano collaboration between Makinto and Dr. David Berry, director of the music program at 91短视频. 

Your generous support helps students like Makinto pursue a quality college education without financial barriers. Join us for the 9th annual Lov91短视频 Giving Day and contribute to the scholarships that empower future 91短视频 students. Together, we can help write 91短视频鈥檚 next chapter. 


Read the previous profiles in our A Royal Tale series:

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