Categories
General News News Releases

Talented CMU Choirs on the Road in April

CMU Chamber Choir, CMU Singers Performing on Tour

Choral music lovers in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Ontario, and parts of the United States have an opportunity this April to participate in worship concerts provided by Canadian Mennonite University’s (CMU) talented choir ensembles during year-end performance tours.

During its April 2011 tour, the 18-voice CMU Chamber Choir, under the direction of CMU Assistant Professor of Music Janet Brenneman, will visit churches and schools in North Dakota, Minnesota, Ontario, and Manitoba.  CMU’s Cheryl Pauls, Associate Professor of Music, will accompany the tour as a guest speaker.

The CMU Singers, a 37-voice choir under the direction of CMU Associate Professor of Music Rudy Schellenberg, will visit schools and churches in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. Guest speaker, CMU Vice-President (External) Terry Schellenberg, is travelling with the Singers.

“Martin Luther’s statement, that ‘next to theology there is no art which is the equal of music,’ frames the discipline and art of music-making at CMU,” says CMU Dean of Music Dietrich Bartel. “It is with great delight that we are able to send two of our choirs on the road, giving us an opportunity to share some aspects of CMU’s art of music-making with the broader community.”

Bartel notes that approximately a quarter of CMU students, though coming from a wide variety of disciplines and degree programs, are involved in one or another form of musical activity at CMU: singing in one of CMU’s five choirs, playing in instrumental ensembles, participating in music dramas, being involved in worship bands, or taking individual applied lessons.

The CMU Choirs are auditioned, mixed ensembles whose members are selected for their high levels of vocal proficiency.  Each year, CMU choirs study and perform a challenging body of choral repertoire chosen from a variety of genres and styles, providing opportunity for advanced students to strengthen and increase their musicianship. CMU choirs perform regularly in concert and in worship throughout Manitoba and on yearly tours across Canada and Northern U.S.A.

In addition to tour performances, CMU choirs collaborate and perform with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra at its internationally recognized New Music Festival, most recently performing the Canadian premiere of The Seven Gates of Jerusalem by the contemporary Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki.

Chamber Choir Conductor Janet Brenneman, a native of Ontario, holds a Ph.D. in Music Education from Michigan State University.  Brenneman has conducted choirs at all levels in Ontario, Michigan, and in Manitoba, and is also a conductor for Pembina Trails Voices, where she works extensively with boys’ choirs.

CMU Singers Conductor Rudy Schellenberg teaches in the areas of choral music, conducting, and church music.  In addition to choral and orchestral study and conducting at Nordwestdeutsche Musikakademie, Detmold, Germany, Schellenberg did his doctoral studies in Choral Conducting at the University of Cincinnati.  He also co-conducts the 100-voice Mennonite Festival Chorus that performs regularly with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra.

Since opening in 2000, CMU has continued to build on the venerable musical legacy of two of its founding colleges, Concord College (MBBC) and Canadian Mennonite Bible College. In addition to continuing those strong programs in choral music, music performance, and music ministry, CMU’s music education program is attracting an ever increasing number of students, as is the unique CMU Music Therapy program. Through all of these activities and programs, lives of students are being transformed through and with music, as they are being nurtured to transform the lives of others through this gift of God.

Chamber Choir Tour

Monday, April 18 | 7 PM
Lakeview Mennonite Church
4635 78th St • Wolford, ND

Tuesday, April 19 | 7 PM
Strawberry Lake Mennonite Church
33068 County Highway 34 • Ogema, MN

Wednesday, April 20 | 7 PM
Rainy River Evangelical Covenant Church
303 Broadway Ave • Rainy River, ON

Thursday, April 21 | 7 PM
Maundy Thursday Service
First United Church
23 Van Horne Ave • Dryden, ON

Friday, April 22 | 7 PM
Red Lake Mennonite Church
100 Hammell Rd. • Red Lake, ON

Saturday, April 23 | 7 PM
Grace Mennonite Church
430 Third St  • Steinbach, MB

Sunday, April 24 | 10:30 AM
River East MB Church
755 McLeod Ave  • Winnipeg, MB

CMU Singers Tour

Monday, April 18 | 7 PM
Brandon, MB
Grace Mennonite Church

Tuesday, April 19 | 7:30 PM
Joint concert with Rosthern Junior College
Osler, SK
Osler Mennonite Church

Wednesday, April 20 | 7 PM
Coaldale, AB
Coaldale MB Church

Thursday, April 21 | 7 PM
Lethbridge, AB
Lethbridge Mennonite Church

Friday, April 22 | 10 AM
Calgary, AB
Bethany Chapel

Saturday, April 23 | 10 AM
Edmonton, AB
Lendrum MB Church

Saturday, April 23 | 7 PM
Edmonton, AB
First Mennonite Church

Sunday, April 24 | 10:30 AM
Edmonton, AB
Lendrum MB Church

Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) is a Christian university in the Anabaptist tradition, offering undergraduate degrees in arts and science, 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.  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 its Outtatown discipleship program. CMU is a Member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC).

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

Categories
General News News Releases

CMU Holds 3rd Annual Canadian School of Peacebuilding

CSOP Welcomes World Peacemakers in June 2011

In order to foster a dream of a more peaceful world, CMU is hosting some of the world’s foremost peacebuilding practitioners and teachers for its 3rd annual Canadian School of Peacebuilding (CSOP) in Winnipeg from June 6-24.

According to Valerie Smith and Jarem Sawatzky, co-directors of CSOP, it is a natural progression of CMU’s faith-based peace tradition.

“We want to create a space where people from different backgrounds and perspectives can connect in positive and respectful ways—learning together, supporting each other and creating networks of engaged peacebuilders,” says Smith.

Participants of CSOP can take the available courses for personal or professional development or for academic credit.

CSOP will host mediators, teachers, authors, relief workers, and founders of various organizations.

“We are very excited about the lineup of instructors,” says Sawatsky, who is also Associate Professor of Peace and Conflict Transformation Studies at CMU.

March Burch, an author, educator and group facilitator will be instructing on the topic of voluntary simplicity.

Cross-cultural conflict transformation will be the focus of a course by Michelle LeBaron, the Director of the University of British Columbia’s Program on Dispute Resolution. Myla Leguro of Catholic Relief Services, one of the 1000 women nominated collectively for the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize, will be discussing different international methods and experiences.

Other instructors include Paul Dekar, David Dyck, George Lakey, Richard McCutcheon, Stan McKay, Kay Pranis, and Mohammed Ali Shomali.

CSOP is supported by two major collaborating partners, including Mennonite Central Committee Canada, (MCC Canada), which does relief, development and peace work around the world; and Resolution Skills Centre, a training division for Mediation Services Canada.

It provides 50 peacebuilding courses for three levels of government, not for profits, schools, and the private business sector.

CSOP is grateful to the sponsors who provide channels between Canadian School of Peacebuilders and existing networks of peacebuilders.  This year’s sponsors are Africa Peace and Conflict Network; Canadian Centres for Teaching Peace (Peace Café); Canadian Foodgrains Bank; CAUSE Canada; Center for Negotiation and Conflict Resolution; Rutgers University; Centre de resources sur la non-violence; Crisis & Trauma Resource Institute Inc; Conscience Canada; Council of Canadians: Acting for Social Justice; Fellowship of Reconciliation; Hope and Action for Africa; CMU’s Institute for Community Peacebuilding; CMU’s Institute for Theology and the Church; La Maison de l’Amitié Student Residence; Mediation Northern Ireland; Peace Research: The Canadian Journal of Peace and Conflict Studies; Peace and Justice Studies Association, Physicians for Global Survival; Project Peacemakers; The Transitional Foundation for Peace and Future Research; Social Justice Committee; World Peace Prayer Society; and World without Wars and Violence.

CSOP is enriched and its impact broadened through its partnerships with various academic programs, including: The Centre for Peace Studies, McMaster University; The Kansas Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (KIPCOR); The Lion and Lamb Peace Arts Center, Bluffton University; Marquette University Center for Peacemaking; The Martin Luther King Institute for Research and Social Action, the Polytechnic University of Nicaragua (UPOLI); Peace and Conflict Studies, Bluffton University; Peace and Conflict Studies Program, University of Colorado at Boulder; Peace and Justice Studies Program, Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary; The and The Peace Studies Program, University of New England, New South Wales, Australia.

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.  CMU has over 1,700 students at its two Winnipeg campuses and enrolled through its Outtatown discipleship program. CMU is a member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada.

Visit www.cmu.ca/csop

For CSOP information, contact:
CSOP Co-director Valerie Smith
vsmith@cmu.ca; Tel. 204.487.3300 Ext. 315

Canadian School of Peacebuilding at CMU     500 Shaftesbury Blvd.  Winnipeg, MB  R3P 2N2

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

Categories
General News

Student Athletes Honoured for Scholastic Achievements

Fr. row, l-r.: Scholar-Athletes Bethany Abrahamson, Nina Schroeder, Jaime Semchuk, Josh Ewert; back row l.-r., Jacob Miller, Holly Goossen, David Epp, Josh Krueger, Graeme Leaver. Missing Justin Rempel & Erin Sawatsky.

72% of Athletes Earn “Scholar –Athlete” Title
Members of the CMU varsity athletics teams recently gathered to celebrate the accomplishments of 2010-2011 – a year that saw the Blazers achieve some new personal bests. At a banquet held March 20 to recognize annual athletic achievements, most worthy of note was the academic performance of the current team of CMU athletes.

“We were pleasantly surprised to see our current group of student-athletes achieve an even higher academic performance than last year,” raved CMU Director of Athletics Russell Willms. “In 2010, we recognized 69% of our team members for achieving the title of “Scholar-Athlete” as instituted by the MCAC for student-athletes that achieve a grade point average of 3.0 or higher. We led the conference last year with that total, and I would hasten to guess that we will do the same in 2011.”

This year, 54 of 75 CMU student athletes achieved Scholar-Athlete recognition, improving to 72%. “This statistic is very worthy of recognition,” said Willms, who informed guests that the national average of scholar athletes recognized by colleges and universities across Canada is approximately 24%. “This shows that CMU student-athletes are applying themselves whole-heartedly to their studies and finding success in the classroom. It is something that we are truly proud of.”

The Blazers formally recognized 11 student-athletes that achieved a GPA of 4.0 or higher – a true standard of academic excellence.

Other major award winners were Evelyn Kampen and Todd Reimer, who were recognized as the female and male Athletes of the Year for their outstanding performances on the CMU volleyball teams.

Carrera Lamoureux and Wyatt Anders were honoured as female and male Rookies of the Year, for their contributions to the CMU basketball teams in their first seasons. Nina Schroeder of the women’s basketball teams was recognized for a second-consecutive year with the Trailblazer Award, recognizing excellence in team leadership and community service.

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 www.cmu.ca/blazers

For Blazer information, contact:

Athletics Director Russell Willms – rwillms@cmu.ca

For CMU information and photographs, contact:
Communications and Marketing Director Nadine Kampen – nkampen@cmu.ca

Categories
General News News Releases

MSC students recognized for Making a Difference

Two Menno Simons College (MSC) students have been recognized for their part in making the world a better place. During International Development Week, which had as its theme “I am Making a Difference,” the Manitoba Council for International Cooperation (MCIC) named eight youth as Young Global Citizens, including MSC’s Tyler Morden of Morden, MB and Zoe Gross from Barisford, MB.

“We’re very pleased to see these students being recognized for their efforts by MCIC for giving their time and energy in ways that promote international cooperation,” says MSC Dean Richard McCutcheon.

In recognizing these students, MCIC conducted video interviews in which Morden and Gross reflected on how they are contributing in positive ways in their communities and abroad.

Tyler Morden
Tyler Morden

Morden, who works for the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization of Manitoba (IRCOM), believes that international work is important, even if it is in one’s own city and country.

“I am making a difference through the work I do supporting newcomer children and youth with their settlement in Winnipeg,” says Morden in his video interview. “There are a lot of challenges and barriers that face [the children and youth that I work with]; anything from language barriers to learning our laws and customs, and the work that I do is to help children and youth learn these things so they can be active members of our community.”

For Gross, spending eight months in Kenya working with a national women’s organization helped her learn that women’s concerns in Kenya are similar to concerns of women in Canada.

“We need to work together and support one another in these endeavours,” says Gross.

Zoe Gross

Gross believes that international development is important because the world is so interconnected, and many don’t recognize this.
“One of the things that people don’t realize about international development… is that the issues are really intimately connected.  Just because you are working in the inner city of Winnipeg doesn’t mean those issues are any different than the slums or ghettos of Nairobi, for example,” Gross says.

Along with Morden and Gross, MCIV recognized six other Manitobans for the work that they are doing, helping to demonstrate how everyone has the potential to contribute.

To view MCIC videos of MSC students, visit:
http://mcic.ca/makingadifference/video/tyler-morden
http://mcic.ca/makingadifference/video/zoe-gross/

MSC provides education flowing from Anabaptist Mennonite understandings of faith, peace, and justice while engaging other religious traditions and intellectual perspectives. A College of CMU, and affiliated with UWinnipeg, 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 that are unparalleled in Canada. Programs at MSC also include practicum opportunities and supporting scholarships.

CMU is a Christian university in the Anabaptist tradition, offering undergraduate degrees as well as two graduate degree programs. CMU has over 1,700 students at its Shaftesbury campus, MSC campus, and in the Outtatown program.  A member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC), CMU operates a number of schools and institutes, including The School of Writing at CMU and the Canadian School of Peacebuilding.

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

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
www.cmu.ca

Categories
General News News Releases

CMU Blazer Evelyn Kampen Named MCAC Volleyball League MVP

CMU Women’s Volleyball Team Captain Evelyn Kampen has been named two-time MCAC League Most Valuable Player in volleyball regular season play.

A forth-year player with two years’ experience playing with CMU in the Manitoba Colleges Athletic Conference and two years in the CIS league with BC’s Trinity Western University, at age 21 Kampen is a skilled and seasoned player who brings leadership to her team.

“We’re proud of Evelyn’s accomplishments and appreciate the consistent high quality of play that Evelyn brings to the game and to our league,” says CMU Women’s Volleyball Coach Andrea Charbonneau.

Kampen has earned a number of honours in her sport.  Career highlights include gold in 2010 and now silver in 2011 in MCAC league play with CMU; MVP Final 4 title in 2010 and, among pre-CMU highlights, gold with Team Manitoba at Canada’s national championships for women 17&under.  A resident of North Kildonan in Winnipeg, Evelyn played for River East Kodiaks during her high school years.

A Communications & Media major at CMU, Kampen enjoys coaching young athletes. She presently coaches a 14&under girls’ club team and in summer 2010 instructed at CMU’s summer Sports Camp along with CMU setter Kathleen Vitt.  With the CMU volleyball season now over, Kampen looks forward to playing summer beach volleyball.

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.

Categories
General News News Releases

CMU Press Author Dora Dueck Nominated for Two Manitoba Book Awards

CMU Press is pleased to announce that Dora Dueck’s novel, This Hidden Thing, has been nominated for two Manitoba Book Awards: the McNally Robinson Book of the Year award and the Margaret Laurence Award for Fiction. Published in 2010 as Dueck’s second novel, This Hidden Thing explores the story of Maria, a Russian Mennonite woman adjusting to life in Winnipeg from the 1920s up to the 1970s.

Sue Sorensen of CMU Press and the CMU Department of English served as the editor for Dueck’s novel, and she had this to say about the news: “I wish I could say I’m surprised by the news of Dora’s nominations. But I knew as soon as I started reading the manuscript for This Hidden Thing that this was a really fine story and that readers would love it. It’s obvious to me that she is a strong contender for these awards.”

Beginning in 1988, the Manitoba Book Awards mark the achievements of Manitoba writers and book publishers in Manitoba. Judging each award is a panel of three professionals in the writing and publishing industry. This year, there are thirteen different award categories offered.

“It’s an honour to be on a shortlist with these other writers,” Dora Dueck comments, “and also wonderful to be associated with both these awards. McNally’s Robinson’s is not just a bookstore but a place that’s so amazingly hospitable to both writers and readers. And, back when writing fiction myself was still just a dream, I was reading and being inspired by Margaret Laurence’s strong female characters, her passion, her use of Manitoba settings. What a pathfinder she was for so many of us!”
…2
The McNally Robinson Book of the Year award is sponsored by McNally Robinson Booksellers and is awarded to a Manitoba author of an adult book written in English that is judged the best written. The prize for this award is $5,000.

The Margaret Laurence Award for Fiction, sponsored by the Manitoba Department of Culture, Heritage, Tourism and Sport, is presented to a Manitoba writer whose book is published in 2010, written in English, and determined the best in adult fiction. The winning author will receive a cash prize of $3,500.

On discussing her inspiration for This Hidden Thing, Dueck says: “I was interested in the idea of secrets—their power both positively and negatively. Somehow this character—Maria—came to me, and her life became an exploration of that theme.

“I think secrets in all their complexity, the quest for integrity between private and public, failure and grace, are ultimately simply aspects of the human story. So for me, being on these shortlists represents an affirmation of that, and a hope that the book continues to find its readers also beyond the Mennonite community.”

The award recipients will be announced on Sunday, April 17, 2011 at the Manitoba Book Awards gala, which is organized by the Manitoba Writers’ Guild.

CMU PRESS is an academic publisher of scholarly, reference, and general interest books at Canadian Mennonite University. Books from CMU Press address and inform interests and issues vital to the university, its constituency, and society. Areas of specialization include Mennonite studies and works that are church-oriented or theologically engaged.

Categories
General News News Releases

Silver Lining to Golden Volleyball Weekend

Blazer Volleyball Teams Take Silver at MCAC Finals – CMU Athletes Named as MCAC All Conference Selections

There was a measure of accomplishment and a measure of disappointment in the weekend’s MCAC Final Four Championships at Red River College for the CMU volleyball teams, held March 4-5, 2011.

After a series of back and forth battles with the CUSB Voyageurs that stretch back several seasons, the CMU men entering as the #2 team made short work of their cross-river rivals from St-Boniface, winning 3-0 (25-21, 25-15, 25-19) to advance to Saturday’s gold medal match. The Blazers were led by Todd Reimer’s 11 kills and 3 digs and Josh Krueger’s 8 kills and 4 digs. It was a major accomplishment to play well under pressure for the CMU men and that confidence allowed Mark Kliewer’s 7-5 team to keep their foot on the pedal in Saturday’s gold medal match.

On the women’s side, CMU was the odds on favourite to comfortably cruise to a third-consecutive title. With a record of 15-1, the Blazers only loss of the season came in a tie-breaking set at Providence College in February. Their first-round opponents were Assiniboine Community College from Brandon. Despite dropping the third set 22-25, the Blazers had little trouble righting the ship in the fourth set to record a 3-1 victory and sail into the Saturday’s gold medal match – a meeting with the only team to tarnish their perfect season, Providence College.

A capacity crowd of more than 600 fans packed Red River College to witness the championship matches on Saturday evening. CMU’s women’s team jumped out to a 25-19 first set win on the back of some consistent serving from League MVP Evelyn Kampen, only to see Providence emerge in the second set with a 25-23 win. The two combatants exchanged wins in the third and fourth set, preparing the way for a monumental tie-break with the Championships hanging in the balance. Providence middle Victoria Ryshytylo, later selected tournament MVP, was the dominant figure in the final set, pushing the #3 ranked Freemen on to victory, while the defending-champions had to settle for silver.  Freemen’s Jessica Hamm and fourth-year Blazer Kirsten Hamm were named players of the game.

The men’s match was equally thrilling and high on confidence, CMU was certainly ready to challenge for gold. The three-time defending champions and undefeated Red River Rebels were a formidable opposition. The teams see-sawed through the first match, exchanging points, serves, and sideouts. The Rebels eventually emerged to take the first set 27-25 and a 1-0 lead. But the Blazers battled back. Great defense from Nick Reimer, Todd Reimer, and all-conference libero Josh Ewert, propelled CMU to a 25-21 win in a match delayed 15 minutes due to an on-court injury suffered by Rebel middle David Glass. Glass collided with a teammate at 17-18 and was not able to return to action until the third set. League MVP Tom Oosterveen provided the muscle for the Rebels down the stretch and despite the incredible defensive plays at the net and in the backrow, CMU was unable to get back on the front-foot. The Rebels took the third set 25-20 and the fourth set 25-15 to win gold on home court.  Rebel Tom Oosterveen and Blazer Todd Reimer were named players of the game.

Four CMU Athletes Named to All Conference Selections

Saturday’s awards ceremony saw MCAC name four CMU athletes to all conference selections: League MVP Evelyn Kampen (WVB), Clare Schellenberg (WVB), Josh Ewert (MVB), and Shawn Franz (MVB).

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.

Categories
General News News Releases

Creative Nonfiction Course at School of Writing Explores Exciting New Field

Edmonton’s Myrna Kostash invited to teach literary journalism at CMU  

Instruction in one of the exciting fields for writers, the area of literary journalism, is being offered at The School of Writing at CMU 2011, held this year from May 9 to 13.

Those not familiar with the term Creative Nonfiction might be prompted to ask, “But what is it?”

The instructor for the course, Edmonton’s Myrna Kostash, encounters this question quite often. “I’ve found that there is much confusion about what is meant by the term. People often ask me: what could be ‘creative’ about ‘nonfiction’? So in this course we will look at definitions and examples, do classroom exercises, and workshop participants’ writing.”

Creative nonfiction, sometimes called literary journalism or narrative nonfiction, is a growing field of writing in Canada and around the world. The style combines literary techniques with factual narratives, and can encompass political, travel, or historical writing, memoir, biography, and many other fields. As Kostash notes in the 2004 “Banff Declaration” of the Creative Nonfiction Collective: “We believe that nonfiction is the intellectual lifeblood of public imagination and discourse” and that the “vitality of Canadian literary life must be measured by the state of its nonfiction as well as of fiction and poetry.”

Kostash says: “Students begin the course scratching their heads and finish with an enthusiastic commitment to the genre—if not as writers, then as readers. It’s thrilling to see this happen.”

Myrna Kostash has been awarded the Matt Cohen Award: In Celebration of the Writing Life from the Writers’ Trust of Canada. She has also served as chair of The Writers’ Union of Canada. Recently Kostash was named to the City of Edmonton’s Salute to Excellence Arts and Culture Hall of Fame and awarded the Writers Guild of Alberta Golden Pen Award for lifetime achievement.

Prodigal Daughter: A Journey to Byzantium is the title of Myrna Kostash’s most recent book. It is described as a historical, cultural, and spiritual odyssey that begins in Edmonton, ranges around the Balkans, and delivers the author to an unexpected place—the threshold of her childhood church.

Some of Kostash’s other works include All of Baba’s Children, No Kidding: Inside the World of Teenage Girls, Bloodlines: A Journey into Eastern Europe, The Next Canada: In Search of Our Future Canada, and Reading the River: A Traveller’s Companion to the North Saskatchewan

Places are available in the Creative Nonfiction course, and in the Preaching and Fiction courses taught by Allan Rudy-Froese and Marina Endicott. The application deadline for the School of Writing has been extended to March 15.

Tuition for the School of Writing $575, which includes five days of lunches, coffee breaks, and a Friday evening banquet. Financial support is available.

Visit the School of Writing website at www.cmu.ca/schoolofwriting for more information and to download an application form.

Categories
General News News Releases

School of Writing Offers New Workshop: “Writing Out Loud – The Art of the Sermon”

Canadian pastor, preacher, and writer to lead workshop for lay and ordained preachers

Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) welcomes Allan Rudy-Froese to its 2011 School of Writing.  Rudy-Froese, a pastor, preacher, and writer for over 25 years will lead a unique workshop that will combine the written word with an emphasis on the sound of what is written.  Applications are still being accepted for this “art of the sermon” workshop, which takes place from May 9 – 13, 2011 at CMU’s Shaftesbury campus in Winnipeg.

“If you have never heard Allan Rudy-Froese teach or preach, you have been missing something marvellous. He has truly electrifying ideas,” says Sue Sorensen, Director of the School of Writing and Associate Professor of English at CMU. “People who think the word ‘sermon’ equals ‘boredom’ are going to be launched into another realm of existence.”

Using the inspiration of great orators, poets, and musicians such as William Shakespeare, Martin Luther King Jr., the Apostle Paul, Emily Dickinson, Barbara Brown Taylor, Bob Dylan, Fanny Crosby, and others, whose words move beyond the page to settle on the ear of the listener, Rudy-Froese feels this course will be of interest to all preachers, lay or ordained.

“A sermon is an event of sound for the listening congregation, but often the preacher writes the sermon in the stone cold silence of the church office,” says Rudy-Froese.  “In this class, we will explore and experiment with writing for the ear, not for the eye.”

Allan Rudy-Froese has been a pastor and preacher for over 25 years in Manitoba and Ontario. He writes a regular column for Canadian Mennonite, “This Preacher Has 22 Minutes,” has published dramas and stories for Sunday school curricula, and is currently completing his PhD dissertation in the art and theology of preaching at the Toronto School of Theology.  His interest in combining writing and the spoken word has led him to be an avid audience member and sometimes actor in local theatre.

Now in its fifth year, The School of Writing at CMU remains committed to providing a nurturing and challenging environment for writers at various levels of expertise and experience. The School of Writing has helped hundreds of writers receive important support and guidance.

In addition to its participatory workshops on writing for sermons, the School also offers sessions on creative nonfiction, fiction writing, and life writing. Authors Myrna Kostash, Marina Endicott, and Joanne Klassen join Allan Rudy-Froese in bringing their experience and passion for writing to The School of Writing at CMU.


Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) is a Christian university in the Anabaptist tradition, offering undergraduate degrees in arts and science, 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. 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 its Outtatown discipleship program. CMU is a
member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC). Visit www.cmu.ca

For further information on The School of Writing at CMU, contact:

Administrator, School of Writing at CMU

schoolofwriting@cmu.ca

Categories
General News News Releases

CMU Seeks New President

 

CMU is launching its presidential search for a successor to current President Gerald Gerbrandt, who completes his term on June 30, 2012. CMU’s presidential search website goes live Friday, February 18 to mark the launch of the search.

Gerbrandt has served as a president at CMU since its inception in 2000.  For the first three years CMU was led by a team of three presidents, each representing one of the founding colleges – Gerbrandt (Canadian Mennonite Bible College), John Unger (Concord College) and George Richert (Menno Simons College).  In 2003 Gerbrandt became the first sole president of CMU.

“Gerald has been a gift to CMU,” says Ron Loeppky, chair of the Presidential Search Committee. “He has brought many administrative, teambuilding, and visionary talents to CMU; as a result, the institution has grown and thrived.”

Under Gerbrandt’s leadership, says Loeppky, CMU has experienced continual expansion in academic programming, educational settings, and enrolment, with CMU now serving about 1,750 students. Gerbrandt has also been involved in CMU’s numerous capital initiatives, was instrumental in shaping a significant visioning initiative and guided the process for CMU’s acceptance as a member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada in 2008.

“On one level, the greatest highlight has been seeing a dream, a vision, gradually become a reality over a 10-year period,” reflects Gerbrandt on his time leading CMU. “On another level, the students are the greatest satisfaction. Students are the reason CMU exists.”

Gerbrandt’s term was slated to end in June 2011; however, he accepted the CMU Board of Governors’ invitation to extend his term for another year.

The Board appointed a Presidential Search Committee, headed by Loeppky, in November 2010.

“The Committee will now begin the process of receiving nominations and applications and then evaluate and interview potential candidates.” says Loeppky.

The new president, under the Board’s direction, will lead CMU according to its mission, vision, and core commitments—based on biblical principles and rooted in Anabaptist-Mennonite and evangelical perspectives—as well as oversee all aspects of CMU, including academics, student life, enrolment and marketing, administration and finance, development, strategic planning, and external relationships.

“As CMU moves into the next phase of its growth and development,” says Loeppky, “the president will fulfill a key leadership role in providing vision, developing new academic programs, campus and faculty development, and constituency relations.”

“My vision for CMU is that it continue to grow and mature in drawing and inspiring students in their commitments of faith, in representing an Anabaptist witness for peace and justice in our society, and in resourcing the church”, adds Gerbrandt.  “CMU has amazing potential; I trust over the coming years this will be realized even more fully.”

A full description of the position, which is anticipated to commence July 1, 2012, is available at http://www.cmu.ca/presidential_search.html.

Canadian Mennonite University is an innovative Christian university, rooted in the Anabaptist faith tradition, moved and transformed by the life and teachings of Jesus Christ. Through teaching, research, and service, CMU inspires and equips women and men for lives of service, leadership, and reconciliation in church and society.