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CMU Honours Artist, Curator Ray Dirks

September 30, 2011 – Canadian Mennonite University honours Ray Dirks as its 2011 CMU Blazer Distinguished Community Service Award winner.

Established in 2010, this award recognizes distinguished achievement and service within the broader community or church, through business, leadership, artistic, political, or volunteer contributions. 

“We are delighted to recognize the dedication, achievements, and community service of artist, curator, photographer, and writer Ray Dirks,” says CMU President Gerald Gerbrandt. “He is a highly deserving recipient of this award.  His images, writing, and exhibitions are known, admired, and loved by people around the world. I have been especially impressed with how he has worked with Winnipeg students using art as a way of teaching peacemaking.  Through this award, we offer a gesture of appreciation for his artistry, his vision, and his commitment to bridging cultural divides and fostering respect, for all people, in all that he does.”

Dirks grew up in Abbotsford, British Columbia, graduated from Mennonite Educational institute in 1973, then studied commercial art and design at Vancouver Community College. He married Winnipegger Katie Reimer in 1977. The following year, the couple spent several months in Latin America, confirming Dirks’ interests in working across cultures. 

In 1982, he and Katie accepted an assignment with Mennonite Brethren Missions and Services in the Democratic Republic of Congo where he worked primarily as an illustrator. “This resulted in a passion for ordinary folk and a lifelong pursuit, through my art and the art of others I promote, to reveal the decency and dignity of marginalized, stereotyped, misunderstood, forgotten people from around the world,” he says. “Honouring the fact we are all created in God’s image is central to my work. “

They returned to Canada in 1985, settling in Winnipeg. Dirks began doing freelance design work for ChristianWeek and MEDA. In 1990, wanting to counter stereotypes of Africa,  he created an exhibition from four countries called Africa: Art of the People,  sponsored by CIDA, Canadian Foodgrains Bank, MCC, and Canadian Lutheran World Relief, among others. The exhibit toured in the United States and Canada.

“Its success led to my bringing together Rise with the sun: women and Africa in 1995,” says Dirks. Sponsored by CIDA and its partners, including MCC, the exhibition featured 44 artists from 12 sub-Saharan countries.  It toured across Canada, including to the Museum of Civilization, for three years, with Dirks giving presentations in schools across the country.

In 1998, the Mennonite Heritage Centre in Winnipeg became a fulltime gallery with Dirks as its curator.

Dirks says that his wish and prayer was twofold:  that the gallery be a place that heralds artists from Mennonite churches as God gifted and that those gifts should be used and respected in the church; that the gallery be a place where all artists and people of goodwill could meet and get to know one another in a respectful environment, recognizing that Canada is an increasingly multi-cultural and multi-faith society.

In 2000, Dirks began bringing together the In God’s Image: A Global Anabaptist Family project. As with the gallery, he raised the budget through donations. The result was an internationally touring exhibition, opening in Zimbabwe to coincide with the Mennonite World Conference assembly in Bulawayo in 2003, and a book distributed around the world by MWC.  In God’s Image featured art and stories and photographs of ordinary people of the church from 17 countries circling the globe. The exhibition toured in Africa, Europe, and North America.

Dirks spent four months in Connecticut in 2002 as artist-in-residence at the Overseas Ministries Study Center and a Research Fellow at the Yale University Divinity School.  “I was invited because of my work as an artist approaching African subjects as people of dignity,” he says. While there, he had a solo exhibition at Yale University.

He was invited in 2006 by Menno Simons College and the Church of Christ in Congo to go to Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo to cover the Congolese elections as a photographer.  “I jumped at this opportunity to stand beside our Congolese Mennonite brothers and sisters,” says Dirks. His images were used in media in North America and Europe and by the United Nations.

Three years later, he served as photographer at the assembly of Mennonite World Conference in Paraguay.

Working as an artist and curator in approximately 30 countries around the world, Dirks has had solo exhibitions in Ethiopia, Cuba, India, the United States, and Canada. He has participated in exhibitions and workshops in Kenya, Sudan, Trinidad, Cuba, and the Netherlands.

Dirks has received recognition from a number of organizations, including in 2008 the Above and Beyond Award for the Arts from the Manitoba Foundation for the Arts, and the TEAL (Teachers of English as an Additional Language) Community Award.

Over the past few years, implementation of a school program called In the Spirit of Humanity, funded through The Winnipeg Foundation, has been a chief commitment.  Hindu artist, Manju Lodha, Muslim artist, Isam Aboud, and Dirks joined in giving presentations to over 2,000 students across Manitoba, from grade one students to adults. A DVD and book are planned for the fall.

Noting that much of his work is across cultures and with artists of other faiths, Dirks says his Anabaptist faith and roots remain central to who he is. “I am currently working on the Along the Road to Freedom project which will result in a series of my paintings honouring the faith, love, suffering, and strength of Mennonite mothers who brought their children to Canada as refugees from Stalin’s horrors,” he says.

 “I see my work with my own Mennonite story and the stories, lives, and art of others to be equally important, portraying and honouring all as created in God’s image, fortunate and thankful to God to be living in Manitoba, amongst Mennonites, Catholics, Jews, Hindus, Sikhs, Muslims, First Nations…”

Dirks is the second recipient of the CMU Blazer Distinguished Community Service Award. The inaugural award was made in 2010 to Altona citizen Ted Friesen.

Article Prepared by CMU, Based on Ray Dirks’ Autobiography

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CMU Recognizes Distinguished Alumni

 

September 30, 2011 – Canadian Mennonite University on September 30 recognized four Distinguished Alumni at a special presentation during its Fall Festival 2011.

“We are very proud of our Distinguished Alumni,” says CMU President Gerald Gerbrandt.  “It is gratifying to see how our alumni have been shaped by their education, and how, years later, they continue to demonstrate their understanding, creativity, leadership, and Christian faith in their everyday lives and professions.  Their achievements and contributions are outstanding. We congratulate this year’s CMU Blazer Distinguished Alumni Award winners – Lois Coleman Neufeld, Judith Klassen, David Loewen, and Robert Wedel.”

2011 Blazer Distinguished Alumni Award Winners

Lois Coleman Neufeld (MBBC ’80) 

Lois Coleman Neufeld attended Mennonite Brethren Bible College (MBBC, a founding college of CMU) – which she describes as being “one of only a few Bible schools offering university credit at the time.” She graduated in 1980.

Coleman Neufeld and husband Robert served with Mennonite Brethren Mission/Services in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire). An initial three-year term ended up being a meaningful eleven years learning and serving together with the local churches and partner agencies.

Later, Coleman Neufeld served as Mennonite Central Committee’s Country Representative in Zambia for six years.

After serving in Africa for seventeen years, the family moved back to Canada. For eight years, Coleman Neufeld was the Director of National Programs for Mennonite Central Committee Canada. In her current role as executive director of Mediation Services, she enjoys the opportunity to explore perspectives of how people handle justice issues in the world beyond the church.

A self-proclaimed life-long learner, Coleman Neufeld continued to explore her interests in leadership, organizational change, and gender issues over the years. She recently earned a Master of Arts degree in Leadership from Trinity Western University.

 Coleman Neufeld worships with parishioners of River East MB Church.  Her passion for the church and love for community is also evident in her eight years of service on CMU’s board.  Coleman Neufeld and husband Robert Neufeld met at MBBC. They have three adult children and a granddaughter.

Judith Klassen (CMBC ’97)

The desire to study peace theology while also pursuing musical performance led Judith Klassen to study at Canadian Mennonite Bible College (CMBC, a founding college of CMU). Klassen was impressed with how faculty and staff were “people who cared and took time for students. There was a holistic approach to education.”

Klassen completed a PhD at Memorial University of Newfoundland in 2008, where she was awarded the Governor General’s Gold Medal in Graduate Studies. Her doctoral research explored faithful defiance in the musical practices of Mennonites in northern Mexico; other research interests include music and creative protest in sites of conflict.

An ethnomusicologist and violist, Klassen who recently took the post of Curator, Canadian Music at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Gatineau, QC. She has worked as a freelance musician in chamber ensembles and orchestras across Canada, as a violin instructor in Canada, Mexico, and Paraguay, and as a lecturer in music at CMU and the University of Manitoba. More recently, she collaborated with the Mennonite Heritage Village in Steinbach, MB on the exhibit Singing in Time: Music and Mennonites.

Klassen is active in her community, providing leadership on a number of boards and collaborating with musicians on various projects. One such project includes the folk duo, The Land, which Klassen co-founded with her husband Simon Neufeld. Klassen and Neufeld are members of Covenant Mennonite Church.

David Loewen (MBBC ’61)

Dave Loewen graduated with a Bachelor of Theology from MBBC in 1961. The following summer Loewen began his career in camping ministries at Camp Arnes. With further studies at Manitoba Teachers College and Waterloo Lutheran University (now Wilfrid Laurier University), Loewen juggled school in winter and camp in summer for a number of years.

With over twenty years of service, Loewen is well known for his leadership at Camp Arnes. During this period at Arnes, Loewen served terms as president of the Manitoba Camping Association, president of Christian Camping International/Canada, and secretary of Christian Camping International/Worldwide. In these undertakings, Loewen learned to know many leaders in the field with whom he shared and from whom he gleaned insights in camping ministry.

Loewen founded Kingdom Ventures Inc. in 1990 and has served as director for more than 20 years. Kingdom Ventures is a faith-based organization focused on training Christian youth camp leaders in the former Soviet Union. In addition, Kingdom Ventures manages the Christian Camping International initiatives in Russia, Ukraine, and Georgia.

Loewen is married to Elfrieda (Epp). They have three children and six grandchildren. Loewen and Elfrieda are members at The Church at Pine Ridge.

Robert John Wedel (CMBC ’69)

Robert Wedel completed a degree at CMBC in 1969. From here, he went on to the University of Calgary to study medicine. After completing a two-year residency in Family Practice at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Wedel settled in Taber, Alberta.

A family physician for over 35 years, Wedel is past-president of the National College of Family Physicians of Canada, the recipient of the 2010 Alberta Rural Physician Award of Distinction, and the recipient of the 2010 W. Victor Johnson Award. Some recent involvements for Wedel include Medical Director for the Chinook Palliative Care Program, Associate Clinical Professor in the Departments of Family Medicine at the Universities of Calgary and Alberta, and Chair of the National Advisory Committee on Family Practice with the College of Family Physicians of Canada.

Wedel has appreciated the opportunity, afforded by his profession, “to advance quality improvement initiatives within my practice as a family physician and as a palliative physician, “ he says, “as well as system-wide across the country.”

 Wedel met his wife Marilynn Harder while they studied at CMBC; they have two adult children: music teacher Gina Wedel (CMBC ’97) and Registered Nurse Nic Wedel (CMBC 1996-1997) and three grandchildren.  Robert and Marilynn Wedel are members at Coaldale Mennonite Church.

Also receiving an award on September 30 was artist and curator Ray Dirks (see news release of September 30, 2011). Dirks is the recipient of the 2011 CMU Blazer Distinguished Community Service Award.

Following the presentation of awards, the Festival program included a faculty lecture, “It’s not only about you:  Theology and human Rights,” by Dr. Paul Doerksen, with a response by Dr. John Derksen. Music from Quartet from the End of Time by Olivier Messiaen was woven into the presentation.

 As well, CMU sports fans had the opportunity on September 30 to enjoy exhibition volleyball games in CMU’s Loewen Athletic Centre.

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CMU Press Author Hedy Martens Book Signing

CMU Press and the Mennonite Heritage Village in Steinbach present Hedy Martens, author of Favoured among Women, for a reading and signing on Sunday, September 18, 3:00 pm. Steinbach Mennonite Heritage Village Multi-Purpose Room (Village Centre).  Brief reception to follow. 

This vibrant and unusual re-creation of one woman’s life is the result of years of painstaking research and interviews. Favoured among Women combines biography, personal reflection, poetry, historical commentary, and (above all) vivid storytelling. We meet Greta Enns as a curious, observant, and compassionate child born in peaceful times which are soon torn asunder. Her life becomes one of hardship and the utter confusion of war, but one also marked by profound religious hope, as well as love and joy.

This is a novel both epic and intimate, dramatically presenting daily life in Leninist and Stalinist Russia in the first decades of the twentieth century. This is Volume One of The Story of Greta Enns.

“A detailed and touching portrait of a Mennonite woman during the harsh early years of Soviet Russia… Martens’ passion for her subject is obvious.”

The Winnipeg Free Press

“Martens’ voice is not an intrusive, distracting one, but rather one that belongs to and enriches the narrative…I can hardly wait for Volume Two to appear.”

The Mennonite Historian

Hedy Leonora Martens is a marriage and family therapist living in Winnipeg. A child of immigrant parents, she grew up roaming the hills of Saskatchewan spinning fantasies which she shared with her younger siblings and now shares with her grandchildren. As an adult, she has continued writing stories, poems, articles, and dramas, including the federal government report An Eco-Systemic Approach to Family Violence and Related Recidivism; a children’s story, No One To Talk To; and a series of talks, Myths We Live and Die By.

For more information about this event, please contact Annalee at cmupress@cmu.ca or Marigold at the Mennonite Heritage Village: marigoldp@mhv.ca

For directions to the Mennonite Heritage Village, click here: http://www.mennoniteheritagevillage.com/location.html

To order Favoured among Women, please contact the CMU Bookstore at cmubookstore@cmu.ca or visit MennoMedia’s online store: http://store.mpn.net

For information about CMU Press, please visit www.cmu.ca/cmupress

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Sports Camp Kicks Off Summer Programs

The fun is officially under way this week as CMU Sports Camps kicked off their summer programming.

The bike campers have been ‘spinning their wheels’ at the inaugural Blazer Bike Camp, learning safety and maintenance tips, all while touring the scenic trails of the Assiniboine Forest to such destinations as the Children’s Garden at Assiniboine Park and Fort Whyte Alive. Later in the week, working with Instructor Thomas Epp, the bike campers tested their new skills on CMU’s cyclocross challenge course.

“Afternoon campers have learned new skills and been challenged with a multitude of sports,” says CMU Athletics Director Russell Willms. “Beach volleyball, kick-ball, soccer, basketball, and dodgeball are just some of the sports that have been highlighted.” Of course, the greatest daily challenge has been “Win it in a Minute,” based on the popular television game show and organized by CMU summer camp co-directors Maraleigh Short and Evelyn Kampen.

Next week Junior High Campers will take over the gymnasium to develop their skills and meet new friends at our volleyball and basketball camps. Current CMU athletes Clare Schellenberg and Jacob Miller are two of the talented coaches that will work with these aspiring, young athletes. High Performance Evening Basketball camp for Senior High begins next Monday night. This camp hopes to work more closely with young athletes to refine skills and get plenty of practice with a smaller group that allows for more individual coaching.

Our final week of camp features Senior High Volleyball and Basketball day camps and an evening High Performance Volleyball camp. Day Campers will enjoy the fun of volleyball and basketball, while practicing their skills in a supportive yet competitive environment. Our “Pass It On” camp theme will be a significant part of camp, challenging campers to make a difference in the places they find themselves. High Performance Camps feature two of our CMU Blazers varsity coaches, Andrea Charbonneau and Mark Kliewer.

Spaces are limited, but it is not too late to get in on the fun! Email SportsCamps@cmu.ca to ask about registration or phone 487-3300 for more information.

Competing in the Manitoba Colleges Athletic Conference, CMU plays in a league comprised of nine universities and colleges in Manitoba and Minnesota. CMU is also a member of the Association of Christian College Athletics(ACCA). CMU Blazer teams compete in soccer, volleyball, and basketball from September to March, playing MCAC league games as well as a number of tournaments with universities and colleges in Canada and the US.

Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) is an accredited Christian university offering undergraduate degrees in the arts, music, music therapy, theology, and church ministries, and master degrees in theological studies and Christian ministry. CMU is a member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC) . Located in Winnipeg, Manitoba, CMU has over 1,700 students at its Shaftesbury Campus in Southwest Winnipeg, at Menno Simons College in downtown Winnipeg, and enrolled through Outtatown, CMU’s adventure and discipleship program.
Visit athletics.cmu.ca

For Sports Camp or Blazer Athletics information, contact:

Athletics Director Russell Willms – rwillms@cmu.ca

For CMU information and photographs, contact:
Communications and Marketing Director Nadine Kampen – nkampen@cmu.ca
Tel. 204.487.3300, Toll free 877.231.4570
Canadian Mennonite University
500 Shaftesbury Blvd. Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3P 2N2

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Canadian School of Peacebuilding Welcomes International Students

Diversity enriches classroom, community experience

CSOP Student Olivier Imbabazi

Since it first launched in June 2009, CMU’s Canadian School of Peacebuilding (CSOP) has welcomed a diverse group of students from across Canada and U.S., and such countries as the Philippines, Palestine, Cameroon, Rwanda, Russia, Switzerland, and Australia.

First-time CSOP student Olivier Imbabazi, founder of the Kenya-based non-profit Hope and Action for Africa (HAFA), travelled from Kenya to CMU to take the Non-Violent Action Strategies for Social Change course in June 2011.

CSOP offers a selection of five-day peacebuilding-related courses over three weeks for professional/personal development or academic credit each June. Courses are open to anyone 21 years or older.

“Our vision is to gather peacebuilders from around the world,” says Valerie Smith, CSOP co-director with Wendy Kroeker. “We want to serve existing networks and organizations working at peacebuilding. When we gather a diverse group of students, it enriches conversations and experiences in the classrooms and connections within the CSOP community.”

Imbabazi learned about the school online through his work with HAFA, which is a sponsor of the CSOP.

“Given that Africa has gone through many violent conflicts and wars, it desperately needs change through non-violent strategies to peacebuilding,” says Imbabazi of his reason for taking the course taught by George Lakey, a renowned professor, author, and peace activist. The ultimate goal of the course was to help participants become more skilled and effective in organizing non-violent actions.

For Imbabazi, who plans to attend CSOP again, this was his first time not only at CMU, but also in Canada. “My experience was wonderful—wonderful class, classmates, professors, and community,” he shares.

“Students, international or local, often talk about their time at CSOP as a significant experience that changes their lives,” says Smith. “And students who come from other countries to Canada for the first time often share about how their stereotypes of Westerners are broken.”

While CSOP welcomes students worldwide, many international students face significant barriers to attending. For example, this year, CSOP received more than 300 applications—the majority of them international—but many were unable to attend due to issues with finances and visas.

“Because international applicants often face financial challenges or are denied visas, it’s always exciting for us when someone is able to come,” says Smith. Imbabazi applied late and was waiting for visa approval the weekend before Lakey’s course started; he arrived a day late, but was still able to soak in the majority of the course.

Back home, Imbabazi will continue working with HAFA, which serves and works with refugee communities and vulnerable groups in Kenya. He plans to initiate a “Sponsor a Child” program and organize more peacebuilding training, especially in communities affected by conflicts and wars.

“We’ll focus on how changes can be made not with guns, but with non-violent actions,” he says.

For information about the 2012 Canadian School of Peacebuilding, including courses, instructors, and banquet details, visit www.cmu.ca/csop later this summer.

Canadian Mennonite University, through Menno Simons College (CMU’s campus at The University of Winnipeg) and through its south Winnipeg Shaftesbury campus, offers one of the most comprehensive undergraduate programs in peace and conflict studies in the world. Located in Manitoba, CMU has over 1,700 students at its two campuses and enrolled through its Outtatown discipleship program. CMU is a member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada.

Written by Carla Lowe for CMU
Photo:  CMU

For CSOP information, contact:
CSOP Co-director Valerie Smith
csop@cmu.ca; Tel. 204.487.3300 Ext. 316
Canadian School of Peacebuilding at CMU
500 Shaftesbury Blvd.
Winnipeg, MB R3P 2N2
www.cmu.ca/csop

For CMU information, contact:
Nadine Kampen, CMU Communications & Marketing Director
nkampen@cmu.ca; Tel. 204.487.3300 Ext. 621
Canadian Mennonite University
500 Shaftesbury Blvd.
Winnipeg, MB R3P 2N2
www.cmu.ca

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Speaker George Lakey Wraps Up CMU’s Third-Annual Canadian School of Peacebuilding

Lakey shares peacebuilding stories at final banquet

Professor, author, and peace activist George Lakey shared his knowledge, experience, and renowned storytelling with the Canadian School of Peacebuilding’s (CSOP) third and final celebration banquet on June 23 for the 2011 series of courses.

CMU’s Canadian School of Peacebuilding (CSOP) offers a selection of five-day peacebuilding courses for personal and professional development or academic credit each June, this year running June 6-24. Each week during CSOP, members of the public join with students and instructors for a lunch banquet to enjoy local food and inspiring speakers.

“This is a time to gather as a community of peacebuilders, to celebrate with great food and to be inspired by the stories of peacebuilders around the world,” says Valerie Smith, CSOP co-director with Jarem Sawatsky. “We want to create an oasis for people to be reenergized and inspired for the work ahead of them.”

For the past two years, the banquets have been built around the theme “Stories of Great Peacebuilders.” Each week, one instructor is invited to tell stories of people they see as great peacebuilders. George Lakey, instructor for the Non-Violent Action Strategies for Social Change course (June 20-24), concluded this series as this week’s banquet speaker.

“George is an excellent storyteller with a long history of studying, teaching, and living as a peacebuilder,” says Smith. “He has a wealth of experience, wisdom, and stories.”

Lakey is a visiting professor and research fellow at Swarthmore College, author of eight books on peace and social change, a known civil rights activist, a world-renowned workshop leader, and founder of the non-profit peace group Training for Change.

Aboriginal educator Stan McKay was featured as guest speaker for the June 9 banquet and Michelle LeBaron of the University of B.C. law faculty shared during the June 16 banquet.

For information about the 2012 Canadian School of Peacebuilding, including courses, instructors, and banquet details, visit www.cmu.ca/csop later this summer.

Canadian Mennonite University, through Menno Simons College (CMU’s campus at The University of Winnipeg) and through its south Winnipeg Shaftesbury campus, offers one of the most comprehensive undergraduate programs in peace and conflict studies in the world. Located in Manitoba, CMU has over 1,700 students at its two campuses and enrolled through its Outtatown discipleship program. CMU is a member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada.

Written by Carla Lowe for CMU
Photo:  CMU

For CSOP information, contact:
CSOP Co-director Valerie Smith
csop@cmu.ca; Tel. 204.487.3300 Ext. 316
Canadian School of Peacebuilding at CMU
500 Shaftesbury Blvd
Winnipeg, MB R3P 2N2
www.cmu.ca/csop

For CMU information, contact:

Nadine Kampen, CMU Communications & Marketing Director
nkampen@cmu.ca ; Tel. 204.487.3300 Ext. 621
Canadian Mennonite University
500 Shaftesbury Blvd.
Winnipeg, MB R3P 2N2
www.cmu.ca

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CMU Helps Make an Impact for 4th Annual BIKE TO WORK DAY in Winnipeg

Friday June 24 is BIKE TO WORK DAY in Winnipeg and CMU is helping out by serving as one of 20 Winnipeg Pit Stops. As well, CMU cyclists will join in with others to support Winnipeg’s efforts for a cleaner environment by commuting to work on bikes.

“The day is becoming an annual tradition in town,” says CMU Assistant Professor of Biology John Brubacher. “It’s a day to celebrate cycling as a means of transport, and to encourage us to commute on two wheels  – recognizing, of course, that many people cannot do so, for any number of excellent reasons.”

The CMU Pit Stop for cyclers passing through the neighbourhood will be located in front of CMU’s Founders’ Hall at the Shaftesbury North Campus (north of Grant, on the west side of Shaftesbury).

We’ll have coffee, tea, and water available. And smiles. Big smiles. Just to be clear though,” Brubacher notes, “there are many other Pit Stops in town, all offering the refreshments and encouragement.  Cyclists can make any of them their connection point on their way to work.”

“This year is a year to celebrate both the advances in our city’s infrastructure and our event plans,” notes Event Coordinator Andrea Sartison.  She recommends that people take a moment to learn more at www.biketoworkdaywinnipeg.org

RIDE TO WORK DAY – JUNE 24, 2011
Schedule provided by event organizers:

6:30 – 9:00am
Locate a pit stop using the online map. Stop along your commute and receive free snacks and coffee (available on a first come, first serve basis) along with other swag and t-shirts. Find a buddy and share the ride to work! Instead of a pancake breakfast this year, organizers are hosting a BBQ supper.

4:00 – 7:00pm
Manitoba Lotteries BBQ at the Forks. Stop by on your way home for free music and a great party!
Free food for the first 300.


For CMU information, contact:
Nadine Kampen, CMU Communications & Marketing Director
nkampen@cmu.ca ; 204.487.3300 Ext. 621
Canadian Mennonite University
500 Shaftesbury Blvd., Winnipeg, MB  R3P 2N2

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Ongoing Conversation Seeks to Tear Down Walls, Build Relationships

A joint Canadian Mennonite University– Mennonite Central Committee release – Written by Gladys Terichow of MCC Canada

Photo by Gladys Terichow – Iranian scholars Ali Mesbah, Aboulhassan Haghani, and Mohammad Motahari Farimani at the academic conference in Winnipeg which brought together Shi’a Muslim scholars from Iran and Mennonite scholars from Canada and the U.S. to discuss theological issues.

A 10-year-old interfaith dialogue between Mennonite and Muslim scholars held in Canada and Iran over the yearscontinued here in early June.

The dialogue, hosted by Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) and Mennonite Central Committee (MCC), was the fifth of its kind and brought together Shi’a Muslim scholars from the Imam Khomeini Education and Research Institute (IKERI) in Qom, Iran and Mennonite scholars from Canada and the U.S.

These dialogues provide a safe place for academics and theologians to speak frankly about their beliefs without ignoring important differences, said David Shenk, a global consultant with Eastern Mennonite Missions, Salunga, Pa, who has participated in all of the conferences.

The primary goal, he said, is fostering dialogue and improving understanding, not finding consensus or agreement.  “Islam is Islam and the gospel is the gospel, they are not the same,” he said.  “The goal is to understand each other’s faith and to bear witness to our own faith.”

These academic conferences build on MCC’s work in Iran which began with relief efforts following the massive earthquake in the early 1990s. This was followed by peace-building programs, such as a student exchange program and learning tours.

At the Winnipeg conference, seven scholars from Iran and seven scholars from Canada and the U.S. explored issues surrounding the theme of Human Nature and Destiny: Explorations into Theological Anthropology.

“In a global context, these dialogues are significant because it is very unusual for Muslim and Christian scholars to meet together like this in a collegial way,” said Shenk.  “What makes these dialogues even more significant is that they have been happening for almost 10 years and there is interest for these conversations to continue.”

A conference like this is in keeping with CMU’s mission statement which includes a commitment to peace and justice, generous hospitality and radical dialogue, said CMU president Gerald Gerbrandt during the opening ceremony.

Mohammad Ali Shomali, head of the IKERI religious department, said he appreciates these conferences because both Mennonite and Shia scholars “take their faith seriously” and are deeply committed to putting their faith into action.

He is hopeful that the mutual friendships and trust that has developed over the years between participants will lead to a sense of cooperation between faith communities.

“I personally believe that dialogue begins with tolerance and then goes on to respect and understanding,” he said. “The more I understand you, the more I respect you. This should lead to cooperation. I believe there is no limit to dialogue and when it comes to cooperation, it is the same.”

Shomali said it is too early to envisage how Christians and Muslims can work together but he added: “We can do a lot, if we do it together. My dream is to have a joint Muslim and Christian organization that works for peace and justice. We would work together, shoulder to shoulder, to establish peace and justice all over the world. This could happen as a result of these conversations.  It is not impossible.”

Participation in the conference was limited to the scholars presenting papers and a number of invited academics and observers. The observers included nine female students from Iran who also participated in a special course arranged by CMU.

Maryam Esmaeili teaches history of Islam and the interpretation of the Quran at the al-Zahra University, an Islamic university for women in Qom that has 15,000 full-time and correspondence students.

She believes interfaith conversations and interactions can improve relationships between Muslims and Christians.

“If I don’t speak with you, my judgment about you might be wrong,” she said. “When we sit around the table and talk, my judgment about you is correct because I understand you and you understand me.”

Robin Penner Thiessen, a CMU student and observer at the conference, described the conference as kingdom living. “We are building relationships and breaking down walls,” she said. “Apart from everything else that is being accomplished, there is the willingness to be in relationship.”

Trevor Bechtel, an instructor of contemporary theology in Bluffton College, believes one of the long-term contributions of the interfaith dialogue will be the collection of academic papers that are being presented on Mennonite-Anabaptist theology.

The papers, he said, represent the careful thinking, arguments and analysis that are reminiscent of the writings of early leaders in Anabaptist church history.

“We understand ourselves better when we engage in dialogue like this,” he said. “This dialogue with Muslims has pushed us to examine what we believe and to write it down.”

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Menno Simons College Celebrates Accomplishments of 66 CRS and IDS Graduates

On June 9, 2011, Menno Simons College celebrated the achievements of 66 Class of 2011winter and spring graduates in Conflict Resolution Studies (CRS) and International Development Studies (IDS). The Menno Simons College (MSC) celebration was held in UWinnipeg’s Convocation Hall, following the morning convocation services.

MSC 2011 graduate Jared Wheeler, BA 3-Yr, CRS/IDS Double Major, and Dr. Ray Vander Zaag, Assistant Professor and Program Coordinator of International Development Studies

Menno Simons College is the downtown campus of Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) and is located at and affiliated with The University of Winnipeg.

“We gather to acknowledge years of hard work, laughter, and friendship at this celebration of light and hope,” says Dean of Menno Simons College Dr. Richard McCutcheon. “We are proud of our graduates and we want to welcome them into our Menno Simons College alumni group. We look forward to following their careers in peace and justice work, international development, and conflict resolution.”

In the tradition of MSC past graduations, students and families shared a luncheon meal followed by a graduation program. Among the year’s graduates were seven MSC students with majors in CRS or IDS who in total earned nine medals at UWinnipeg’s morning convocation.

The MSC program opened with a heartfelt invocation by Dr. John Derksen, Associate Professor, Conflict Resolution Studies, and opening remarks by CMU President Gerald Gerbrandt, who expressed his confidence in the Class of 2011 having “a passion for issues of justice and mercy, and skills to make a difference in the world.”

Guest speaker Lois Coleman Neufeld, Executive Director, Mediation Services, remarked, “I believe you have learned the basics of leadership through your courses, and have the skills of leaders.” She highlighted having a profound respect “for the other” as being of great importance, along with the qualities of passion and compassion. “Take the best of what you have learned and use it for others,” she advised the graduates.

Sharing student reflections were graduates (Roberta) Bobbie Whiteman, 4-yr. IDS and Human Rights graduate, and medal winner Zoë Gross, 4-yr. CRS graduate, majoring in Women’s Studies.
Whiteman expressed her appreciation for MSC tuition and travel awards that helped the single mom complete her education. Gross commented, “What is special about MSC is that even if you don’t enter with a concern for conflict resolution and justice, you leave with passion and hope for a (better) world.”

Academic Advisor Gina Loewen, Associate VP Ruth Taronno, and Dean McCutcheon. presented the 2011 Graduating Class.

Graduate Jared Wheeler (3-Yr., CRS/IDS Double Major) originally expected to take one course at MSC as an option. Says Wheeler: “I was hooked on the program right from the introductory course. MSC offered such a welcoming environment. And happily, that first course led me on to International Development Studies. It opened to me the thinking that we could change the world. It is possible.”

In addition to MSC’s graduation class of 66 students, CMU earlier this spring graduated 78 students at its southwest Winnipeg Shaftesbury campus, for a total of 114 graduates. An additional 64 Outtatown students completed international programs, returning from sites in South Africa and Guatemala.

Menno Simons College is one of the world’s largest centres for peace and justice studies. The College provides education flowing from Anabaptist Mennonite understandings of faith, peace, and justice while engaging other religious traditions and intellectual perspectives. MSC fosters a learning community that prepares students from diverse backgrounds for participation and leadership in local and global communities. Considered a pioneer in International Development Studies and Conflict Resolution Studies, MSC offers a wide range of courses and experienced faculty in these areas, along with practicum opportunities and supporting scholarships.

Canadian Mennonite University offers undergraduate degree programs and two graduate degree programs. CMU has over 1,700 students at its Shaftesbury campus, downtown MSC campus, and in its Outtatown international program. A member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC) , CMU operates a number of schools and institutes, including the Canadian School of Peacebuilding.

For MSC information, contact:
Ruth Taronno: r.taronno@uwinnipeg.ca ; tel. 204.953.3846
http://mscollege.ca

For information on MSC award-winning students, contact:
Gina Loewen, Academic Advisor: g.loewen@uwnninipeg.ca
Menno Simons College Tel. 204.953.3848

For CMU information, contact:
Nadine Kampen, CMU Communications & Marketing Director
nkampen@cmu.ca ; 204.487.3300 Ext. 621

Categories
General News

CMU Breaks New Ground with On-Campus Community Farm

Urban Farm Collective Launches First Season of Two-year Plan

Spring 2011 marks the first season of CMU’s new on-campus Community Shared Agriculture (CSA) Farm, a two-year collaborative urban farm project of the university and the CMU Farmers’ Collective.

“The farm is a place of learning in which emerging farmers can practice the craft of land stewardship while growing healthy, local food for sharers,” says Kenton Lobe, CMU International Development Studies (IDS) instructor and Farmers’ Collective member. “I am ecstatic with the level of commitment from the farmers working on the project.”

This project is the realization of a dream of Lobe and alumni DeLayne Toews and Megan Klassen-Wiebe, who are members of CMU Farmers’ Collective and who, over several recent summers, worked on several small-scale farms in Manitoba and the East Coast and imagined what an urban, campus farm might look like at CMU, bringing the idea to fruition.  Other members of the Collective committed to farming this season are alumni Karin Coleman Neufeld, Kurt Lemky, Corinne Klassen, and MSC practicum student Jeanette Sivilay.

“The farm provides a real place in which to engage the issues of food security, land stewardship, and project development—all areas that I teach,” Lobe says. “Having a place to experiment and imagine what the work looks like provides a rich context for learning by doing that really supports the academic curriculum of the university.”

For this season, the CMU Farmers’ Collective is selling 25 shares at $450 each, providing each sharer with a weekly box of fresh, seasonal vegetables starting mid-June for a projected 12-week timeframe. The farm is also growing a plot of corn to sell at a corn roast to support the work of Mennonite Central Committee, and will host a fall harvest celebration. Next year’s work will involve clarifying linkages with university courses.

“The CMU Farm holds the potential to link the issues of global hunger with local and small-scale agriculture and to help us explore how the food we eat opens us to God’s creation and connects us with others,” says Lobe.

To read the Winnipeg Free Press July 30, 2011 article on the CMU community garden, click here.

Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) is a Christian university in the Anabaptist tradition, offering undergraduate degrees in arts and science, and such disciplines as business and organizational administration, communications and media, peace and conflict resolution studies, music and music therapy, theology, and church ministries, as well as graduate degrees in Theological Studies and Christian ministry. CMU is a Member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC). Located in Manitoba, CMU has over 1,700 students at its Shaftesbury Campus in Southwest Winnipeg, at Menno Simons College in downtown Winnipeg, and enrolled through Outtatown.

For more information or to reserve your share, contact:
The CMU Farmers’ Collective, cmufarm@gmail.com

For CMU information, contact:
Nadine Kampen, Communications and Marketing Director
nkampen@cmu.ca
Tel. 204.487.3300, Toll free 877.231.4570
Canadian Mennonite University, 500 Shaftesbury Blvd.
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3P 2N2