peace & justice Archives - 91Ƶ News /now/news/tag/peace-justice/ News from the 91Ƶ community. Wed, 25 Mar 2026 16:37:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 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 91Ƶ to connect, learn, and grow in solidarity

The Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship (ICPF) Conference returned to 91Ƶ 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 91Ƶ 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’re doing in their own communities, said Shawna Hurst, a sophomore elementary education major at 91Ƶ and member of the ICPF 2026 Planning Committee.

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

“I think the conference was a success because I saw a real shift in people over the course of the weekend,” she added. “Many attendees arrived feeling defeated and discouraged by the state of the world, and while those feelings didn’t 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.”

Third-year 91Ƶ 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’s conference centered around the theme, “Solidarity, Community, and Resistance in This Political Moment,” with a focus on practical campus organizing. “In a time of extreme political division, rising fascism, and anti-intellectualism, what does campus organizing look like?” reads a description of the theme. “How can we leverage our unique heritages and cultures to better serve the broader culture and nation?”

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, “All We Have is Each Other.”

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, “From Home in Harrisonburg to Roots in Palestine: Finding Your Why in the Work of Resistance.”

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 91Ƶ 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 91Ƶ, 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 91Ƶ, Mennonite Mission Network, and the Mennonite Church USA’s Church Peace Tax Fund for significant monetary support.

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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 91Ƶ

Lars Åkerson ’08 used a familiar Mennonite symbol, that of a quilt, to discuss the importance of belonging. “We 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,” he said. Åkerson, 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. 

The conference, held from Friday, Feb. 21, to Sunday, Feb. 23, in the 91Ƶ Seminary building, centered around the theme “Building Solidarity: from Turtle Island to Palestine.” 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 91Ƶ graduate who served on the conference planning committee, said he was excited by the energy that students brought to the event. “We far surpassed my goals for the conference with the number of people involved and the variety of institutions represented,” Yoder said.

Adam Ramer, left, and Nick Martin, organizers of Mennonite Action, speak at a keynote address during the 2025 ICPF at 91Ƶ 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 “where all God’s children are free.” For the next 45 minutes, they opened the floor to questions. “How do you build empathy for a cause like a cease-fire?” one attendee asked. Ramer and Martin then discussed the importance of reaching people’s 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.

91Ƶ sophomore Micah Mast speaks at a workshop.

91Ƶ last hosted the ICPF in February 2020, before it was indefinitely put on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Renae Benner, an 91Ƶ junior who helped plan the 2025 conference, said she felt that people learned a lot and built stronger relationships between colleges. “I’m optimistic that we successfully restarted the annual ICPF,” she said. As Åkerson said in his address, “The way things are is not the way they must be.” 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. 

91Ƶ 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. “I was glad the energy we created this year resulted in the continuation of the annual conference,” 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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Seminary professor introduces forthcoming book at Convocation /now/news/2025/seminary-professor-introduces-forthcoming-book-at-convocation/ Thu, 20 Feb 2025 18:05:54 +0000 /now/news/?p=58220 Historical research has a funny way of changing your writing plans, says Dr. David Evans, professor of history and intercultural studies at Eastern Mennonite Seminary.

What began as a book that aimed to celebrate the contributions of white allies in the fight for Black freedom, he said, morphed into a research project that questioned the effectiveness of those allies and their movements toward racial justice.

That book, Damned Whiteness: How White Christian Allies Failed the Black Freedom Movement, will publish in November by The University of North Carolina Press. Evans, who has worked on the book for the past seven years, introduced the book and shared some passages at Convocation on Wednesday in Lehman Auditorium.


Watch the full livestream of his talk .


Evans said work on his book began as a response to an invitation from scholars like Beverly Tatum, author of Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? And Other Conversations about Race, to narrate the stories of white individuals and groups who have resisted racism.

“A number of books on abolitionists and a small number of texts on white allies have become available,” Evans said. “They told the stories of people like Mary White Ovington, a white socialist woman who helped W.E.B. Du Bois start the NAACP. They narrated biographies of people like Judge J. Waties Waring, who grew up in a segregationist household, but later in life became an advocate for racial justice.

“These stories of segregationists to anti-segregationists, from racist to anti-racist, from enemy of black folks to allies, are important stories, maybe even necessary stories. But what’s interesting about these texts that I mentioned is the things that they didn’t do.”

Damned Whiteness explores the work of “three of the most celebrated white Christian allies of the Black freedom era”: Dorothy Day, founder of the Catholic Worker Movement; Clarence Jordan, founder of Koinonia Farm; and Ralph Templin, who was an American missionary in India. Each of these allies either created or led movements that launched them into similar trajectories with Black freedom organizations that opposed racial segregation, Evans said.

“But because the visions of these movements were disconnected from the Black communities they aimed to help, they failed to meet them on their path to liberation,” he said.

Evans is the co-editor of Between the World of Ta-Nehisi Coates and Christianity (Cascade, 2018). His teaching and research focus on the braided identity categories of race, religion, and nation.

91Ƶ’s students, faculty and staff, rooted in the value of active faith, practice compassion, mutual love, and appreciation for the diversity of religious and cultural expressions represented in their community.

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