‘We Made It!’ EMU confers 540 degrees and first honorary doctorate at 100th Commencement

James Ramsey III, a graduate of 草莓社区鈥檚 Adult Degree Completion Program, captured the range of ages represented among the graduates at 草莓社区鈥檚 Commencement ceremony on Sunday, reminding all present that the empowerment of education spans a lifetime.

鈥淭oday, we celebrate whether we are 22, 42 or 62,鈥 he said.

From the traditional undergraduate to the students that Ramsey characterized as 鈥減aper-writing weekend warriors鈥 juggling family and work obligations, the three-hour ceremony under the massive white tent on EMU鈥檚 front lawn symbolized both an end and a beginning.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a long journey,鈥 said one Master of Science in Nursing graduate who arrived early, her apricot-lined silken hood folded neatly on her lap as she waited patiently in Lehman Auditorium for the processional to begin.

Leymah Gbowee is congratulated after receiving her honorary doctorate. (Photo by Andrew Strack)

On the occasion of its 100th Commencement, the university conferred 386 undergraduate degrees and 154 graduate degrees, including its first honorary doctorate to alumna and Nobel Laureate Leymah Gbowee MA 鈥07.

鈥淚n one hundred years of EMU鈥檚 existence, who would have told anyone that a girl from West Africa, a tiny village, a tiny country, who came here to validate and to justify her inclusion in peacebuilding work at the community level would come back several years later as the first honorary degree-awardee?鈥 Gbowee asked.

Read the 2018 Commencement address.

In a Commencement address titled 鈥淯rgently Needed! Defenders of Peace and Justice,鈥 Gbowee offered statistics about the rising numbers of global conflicts, armed and insurgent groups, drug cartels, terror attacks and deaths. 鈥淏eyond these numbers, when we look around our world, especially in places people never think about, you have issues of housing crisis, you have rape and exploitation of women in different parts of the world, the threat to the environment and many other vices.鈥

The 鈥渂urning鈥 question, she said, is 鈥淲ho is going to fix our world? Who is going to give hope or the hopeless? Who is going solve the problems of the world?鈥

鈥淪tep out,鈥 she urged. 鈥淲hatever your calling may be, defend peace and justice with your actions, your interactions and your attitude. Most especially, when issues are not longer trending and the hashtags are no longer hashing, and the lights and the cameras are off, defend peace, defend justice. You can never go wrong.鈥

Graduates’ perspectives

Harrison Horst (Photo by Andrew Strack)

Five student speakers representing various undergraduate and graduate programs preceded the main address:

  • Undergraduates and Cords of Distinction awardees Harrison Horst, a sociology major from Landisville, Pennsylvania, and Keyri Lopez-Godoy, a liberal arts major with PreK-6 licensure, from Charlottesville, Virginia;
  • James Ramsey III, a leadership and organizational management major with the Adult Degree Completion Program;
  • Sabrina Burress, who earned a master鈥檚 degree in counseling; and
  • Sarah Bailey, who earned a Master鈥檚 of Divinity from Eastern Mennonite Seminary.

Harrison Horst urged his classmates to be aware of complacency, 鈥渁 system in which we all take part.鈥

鈥淭he thing about complacency,鈥 he said, 鈥渋s you can鈥檛 just announce its arrival and ask for a showdown in the wrestling ring, you have to set out on your own and begin the match yourself. That鈥檚 how systems work and that鈥檚 why they鈥檙e so scary. They鈥檙e sneaky and quiet and subtle.鈥

Horst urged his classmates to find ways to open themselves to a world beyond 鈥渢he comfortable cocoon.鈥

Keyri Lopez-Godoy. (Photo by Andrew Strack)

鈥淢y challenge and prayer for all of us that we may remember to keep 鈥楾he Dream鈥 in front of us as we move forward, even if that dream doesn鈥檛 always fit our expectations or aspirations, even if it seems silly sometimes or out of reach always, even if our friends and family tell us to take it down off the wall. Let鈥檚 not be afraid to be radically authentic. Instead let鈥檚 be radically vulnerable in our search for authenticity. And finally, let us always be courageous in our very human search for meaning and our eternal struggle against complacency.鈥

Keyri Lopez-Godoy shared memories of those who supported, encouraged and inspired her while at EMU, including her hard-working family members and the first-grader in her student-teaching classroom who begged her to stay 鈥渇orever.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檝e been given two precious gifts,鈥 said Keyri Lopez-Godoy, who came the United States from El Salvador when she was eight. 鈥淥ne is to build relationships with others; the second is to see with our hearts.鈥

Enabled by people who impact and change us, she said, 鈥渨e are indeed powerful beyond measure, and our light has the power to liberate others.鈥

James Ramsey III spoke on behalf of those students who returned to complete their college education after walking 鈥渄ifferent paths:鈥 starting families and careers, taking care of sick family members, or recovering from illnesses. Desiring to 鈥渓earn more, to do more and to be more,鈥 this particular group of students sustained each other as they traveled. 鈥淲e have been empowered with tools to create connection, effect change, and leave the world better than when we found it,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are proof that the biggest challenges have the greatest rewards.鈥

Sabrina Burress spoke of her growth as a leader, a role that has sometimes been a frightening prospect: 鈥淭o be a great leader, you have to be responsible. To be a great, responsible leader, you have to be able to cultivate new, responsible great leaders. To be a great leader, you must first know yourself.鈥

Graduates celebrate after the ceremony. (Photo by Jon Styer)

Her two years at EMU, filled with 鈥渋ntimate, important conversations鈥 with counseling professors and others,鈥 have helped her to learn more about who she is.

鈥淏e a kind and gentle leader,鈥 she said. 鈥淩emember sometimes you will stand and sometimes you will stand aside. You must always lead from a place of knowing there is something stronger and more powerful there to support you. You will surely set your own pace, but remember, don鈥檛 lose your footing, and don鈥檛 ever be afraid to challenge.鈥

The degree is a receipt, 鈥渁 symbol of the exchange that has happened for us here,鈥 said seminary graduate Sarah Bailey. 鈥淏ecause over these past years in seminary, we have been trading things in and today is the culmination of that. We鈥檙e trading in all the bucketfuls of coffee that we鈥檝e lived on for some spiritual awakening. We鈥檙e trading in our insecurity for new confidence. We鈥檙e trading in our original questions for some new and better ones. We鈥檙e trading in our biases for some compassion. We鈥檙e trading in our desires to change the world for some skills to actually do it 鈥 We鈥檙e trading in who we thought we were for who God made us to be.鈥

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Staff writer Christopher Clymer Kurtz contributed to this article.