Damned Whiteness Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/damned-whiteness/ News from the ˛ÝÝŽÉçÇř community. Fri, 23 Jan 2026 19:33:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 3 ways to spend your snow days indoors /now/news/2026/3-ways-to-spend-your-snow-days-indoors/ /now/news/2026/3-ways-to-spend-your-snow-days-indoors/#respond Fri, 23 Jan 2026 20:30:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=60459 While the weather outside is expected to get downright frightful—with calling for 8 to 16 inches of snow in the Shenandoah Valley—staying inside can be insightful. Check out these three ways to spend the upcoming snow days indoors while broadening your worldview.

Watch Professor Pathania’s star turn in Origin

EMU Professor Gaurav Pathania (left) with filmmaker Ava DuVernay.

See the 2023 feature-length film that Variety called “a masterpiece.” Dr. Gaurav J. Pathania, assistant professor of sociology and peacebuilding at EMU, portrays Indian scholar and social reformer Dr. B.R. Ambedkar in this film (available to stream on Hulu) about historical caste systems. 

Read our story about how he landed the role, and watch the trailer below.


Warm up your winter with a cafeteria favorite

Yum, yum!

Just because you can’t make it to the caf doesn’t mean its tasty, comforting dishes can’t come to you! Try making your own tomato basil pie, a favorite among faculty, staff, and students alike, at home using this recipe lovingly provided by Darren Campbell, food service director for Pioneer College Caterers.

Tomato Basil Pie
Recipe for a 9-by-13-inch casserole dish

1) In a 9-by-13-inch dish, cover the bottom of the dish with a single layer of raw cobbler crust or your own homemade cobbler dough.

2) First layer will be tomatoes. If sliced, shingle the tomatoes so that the middle of the bottom intersects the top of the top tomato (think of a figure-eight pattern). If diced, make sure to drain. Around 3 cups of tomatoes total.

3) Second layer: Spread finely chopped basil across the tomatoes. About ½ pound of fresh basil. Set aside about 3 tablespoons basil for garnish.

4) The third layer is shredded cheddar (3 cups) mixed with 2½ tablespoons of heavy mayonnaise. Mix well and spread across the top of the dish.

5) Cover with foil and bake at 325°F for 20 minutes. Uncover and bake for another 5–6 minutes.

6) Garnish with the set-aside basil before serving.

Need a little extra pick-me-up? Here’s a Common Grounds-inspired drink recipe from Tyler Goss, director for student engagement and leadership development.

Snow Day Honey Cinnamon Latte

Brew a cup of strong drip or instant coffee, then warm milk in the microwave with a little honey and cinnamon. Stir it all together for a cozy, café-style drink that’s perfect for curling up indoors. No espresso machine required.

You’ll need
• 1 cup strong hot coffee (drip or instant both work)
• ½ cup milk (any kind, dairy or non-dairy)
• 1-2 tsp honey (maple syrup or sugar works too)
• ¼ tsp ground cinnamon
• A tiny splash of vanilla extract (optional but lovely)

How to make it
1) Brew your coffee a little stronger than usual.
2) In a microwave-safe mug or jar, heat the milk for about 45–60 seconds, until hot but not boiling.
3) Stir the honey, cinnamon, and vanilla (if using) into the milk.
4) Pour the hot coffee into the milk and stir well.

Looking to zhuzh it up?
Snow-day upgrade: Sprinkle cinnamon on top or add whipped cream
Mocha version: Stir 1 tsp cocoa powder into the milk before heating
Tea option: Swap coffee for a chai or black tea bag
Extra cozy: Add a pinch of nutmeg or pumpkin spice

Read Professor Evans’ new book

The book, published by The University of North Carolina Press, released in October 2025.

The latest book from Dr. David Evans, professor of history and intercultural studies and associate dean of Eastern Mennonite Seminary, Damned Whiteness offers an unflinching look at the efforts by religious white progressives in the fight for Black freedom. Grab a physical copy of the page-turner at Parentheses Books (76 W Gay St., Harrisonburg) or download one online as an .

Seeking something a little more fantastical? Check out the series from Liesl West ’18 and by Christine Benner Dixon ’04.

Share your favorite indoor snow day activities in the comments below!

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Seminary professor’s new book examines the disconnect between Black freedom fighters and their white allies /now/news/2025/seminary-professors-new-book-examines-the-disconnect-between-black-freedom-fighters-and-their-white-allies/ /now/news/2025/seminary-professors-new-book-examines-the-disconnect-between-black-freedom-fighters-and-their-white-allies/#comments Wed, 01 Oct 2025 11:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=59790 ‘Damned Whiteness’ by David Evans publishes on Oct. 28

When Eastern Mennonite Seminary Professor David Evans set out to write his book about religious white progressives in the fight for Black freedom, he didn’t expect that his main thesis would flip by nearly 180 degrees.

“I thought I was going to be writing about white allies who could be exemplars for other white people in predominantly white institutions,” said Evans, professor of history and intercultural studies and associate dean of the seminary. “And then I stumbled onto some problems and thought, Maybe we should spend some time talking about where we’re going wrong.”

After seven years of research and writing, Damned Whiteness: How White Christian Allies Failed the Black Freedom Movement is just weeks away from publication. The book, published by The University of North Carolina Press and due out on Oct. 28, offers an unflinching history of white allies—namely Clarence Jordan, Dorothy Day, and Ralph Templin—and the fracturing relationships that followed when their strategies and philosophies didn’t align with Black leaders and communities.

“That’s what my book is trying to figure out: if both groups were willing to put in all this energy and risk their lives to end Jim Crow segregation, why couldn’t they work together?” Evans said. “I’m suggesting that part of it is a kind of arrogance, a haughtiness, that white folks believe they know better than Black people about what needs to be done.”

Damned Whiteness explores the work of three white allies: Jordan, founder of Koinonia Farm, an interracial Christian community in Americus, Georgia, and spiritual father of Habitat for Humanity; Day, co-founder of the Catholic Worker Movement; and Templin, a Christian missionary who studied nonviolence in Gandhi’s India. The 302-page book serves as both a warning and call to action, but also as a lament, reflecting on what went wrong and what could have been.

Rather than confronting the systems and economic structures that reinforced racial inequality, these white allies focused more narrowly on creating spaces to cultivate interracial friendships, Evans said. “Had they been able to come together with Black folks to really hear what they were saying, see what they were doing, and join in solidarity with them around freedom instead of just trying to be friends, I’m curious to see what could have happened.” 

Evans is set to present his book at George Mason University in November and has also been invited to appear on several podcasts to discuss it. 

Rev. Dr. Sarah Bixler, dean of the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences division, said the book is expected to make a splash after its release. “This book represents the kind of critical historical scholarship that we value at EMU,” she said. “Thanks to our expert faculty’s commitment to researching and writing with integrity, Dr. Evans’ book will drive important conversations in religion and society deeper, and open new opportunities for our students to engage with this level of work.”

About the professor

Evans is 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.

He holds a master’s degree from Wesley Theological Seminary, in the history of Christianity, a second master’s from Drew University in historical studies, and a doctorate degree in historical studies from Drew University Graduate Division of Religion. In concert with his teaching and scholarship, Evans practices a local “eco-lutionary” lifestyle that promotes a sustainable future for the diverse people of the Shenandoah Valley Watershed.

In addition to the publisher’s website, the book is available to preorder at online booksellers including , , and .

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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.

EMU’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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