Dan Wessner Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/dan-wessner/ News from the 草莓社区 community. Thu, 18 Sep 2014 14:07:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Laying Down the Law at Harvard /now/news/2011/laying-down-the-law-at-harvard/ Wed, 09 Nov 2011 20:05:59 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=9109 Graduating with a and a minor in from 草莓社区 (EMU)聽in 2010, Karissa Sauder wanted to challenge herself in the legal field but maintain a foundation of peacebuilding and conflict resolution.

She found that unique blend at Harvard.

“Harvard Law School has a growing commitment to public interest work and alternative dispute resolution,” said Sauder, a first-year law student. “I just started working as an intern for the Program on Negotiation where I’ve connected with other people who also care about peacebuilding, restorative justice and conflict resolution.”

A foundation of law…

Sauder was drawn to the pre-law minor at EMU as a freshman because it encouraged her to challenge preconceived assumptions and “look at creative ways the law can build peace and resolve conflicts.”

“I learned to think through multiple sides of issues, appreciate questions and stop seeing the world in black and white,” said Sauder. “I was worried law school would ruin that important transformation but I’ve realized that law is full of ambiguities and recognizing them is critical.”

Dan Wessner, a former history professor at EMU, initiated the pre-law minor in 2005. Sauder credits Wessner with preparing her for the challenges of law school. “As a lawyer, he taught me how to write more concisely and argue thoughtfully and effectively.”

In addition to Wessner’s classes, Sauder appreciated her pre-law capstone class taught by , a who holds an MA from . She believes the time spent discussing multiple sides of a case and reading legal theories helped her mind transition to think “like a lawyer.”

“Our time spent in personal reflection and analysis gave me an opportunity to consider the type of person I want to be in my legal career,” said Sauder. “I have continued to apply what I learned about myself in that class at Harvard.”

In addition to Wessner, Sauder points to , and to colleagues in Sawin’s with influencing her path to Harvard.

“The pre-law classes in peacebuilding, theology, ethics, business and philosophy showed what a unique and well-rounded program EMU has,” said Sauder. “I loved how inter-disciplinary the pre-law minor was鈥t helped me to see the connections and consider the law in both broad and narrow contexts.”

…rooted in peace

Harvard Law groups incoming students into sections where they maintain the same class schedule with other students. Sauder enjoys the camaraderie and small community feel of her section which has softened her transition from a smaller campus.

“I’ve found a number of others who connect with Mennonite values including a student who studied under John Paul Lederach (founding director ofCJP) at Notre Dame,” said Sauder. “I’m excited about the vibrant community here that’s passionate about social change and justice issues.”

As the newness of the semester has worn off, Sauder is looking forward to continued dialogue with her peers on social justice and peacebuilding.

“I’ve really enjoyed sharing about my unique experiences at EMU and the values I developed there.”

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Sweet Lemons – Mennonites and Iranians Relate /now/news/2008/sweet-lemons-mennonites-and-iranians-relate/ Wed, 30 Jan 2008 05:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=1599
Dan Wessner speaking of Iran visitDan Wesser, professor of international and political studies at EMU, gives an overview of the Iran visit, assisted by (l. to r.): Paul Yoder, Rachel Spory, Josh Brubaker and Fatemeh Darabi, a CJP student from Iran. Photos by Jim Bishop

It was Dan Wessner‘s first great surprise.

One of Rachel Spory’s, too.

They had just arrived inI ran – a nation that many in the West view with suspicion and fear – as part of a delegation created by the Mennonite Central Committee. Wessner, a professor, and Spory, a recent graduate, traveled as representatives of 草莓社区.

An Iranian guide handed his visitors a delicacy – a lemon.

Wessner sank his teeth into its rind.

“It was sweet,” he recalled Tuesday afternoon, just two weeks after he returned from the Islamic Republic. “It tasted like a mild, sweet orange.”

These were sweet lemons, unique to Eurasia.

“To me, that became a really important metaphor for all the surprises Iran had in store for us,” Wessner said.

He adapted the name of the fruit as the title of a presentation he delivered Tuesday at EMU’s Seminary.

Wessner, a professor of international and political studies, spoke alongside Spory, who now works for the university, and graduates Paul Yoder and Josh Brubaker, and current graduate student Fatemeh Darabi, an Iranian native.

Yoder and Brubaker also were recent visitors to Iran. They visited in May to present at an international conference in the city Qom.

EMU, Wessner said, is forging personal connections with academic, religious and government leaders in the country.

Those connections could create partnerships that aid the establishment of a new cross-cultural center at the university, the Center for the Study of Abrahamic Traditions. The center would allow members and scholars of the Jewish, Muslim and Christian faiths to collaborate.

“We have to be intentional about relating to each other,” he said. It’s why he, Spory and 10 others from across the United States made the 2 1/2-week journey to Iran.

Cultural Immersion

The delegation departed for Iran two days after Christmas and returned Jan 13. A packed itinerary introduced the group to Islamic theologians, Armenian Christian leaders, a leading ayatollah, or Shi’a cleric, professors and students, human rights scholars, and Persian cultural experts.

“We were part of a cultural immersion,” Wessner said.

Since the early 1990s, the MCC has related with the Iran Red Crescent Society, spawning opportunities for trips like the one the recent delegation took.

EMU, too, has its own connections. For years, the university has participated in an international film program with students in Iran. They met face-to-face when the delegation arrived at the Imam Khomeini Research and Education Institute and Mofid University, both in Qom.

Twice during the trip, the delegation met with Seyed Kazem Sajjadpour, Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, who presented a list of proposals to further connections between the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the delegation members.

The proposals include opportunities for a roundtable on the role of religion in international relations, a peace studies conference, and study-abroad opportunities for students.

“We’re beginning to take very seriously EMU’s role relating not just to Iran but the Islamic traditions,” Wessner said. But, he added, the presentation on this single delegation is just an intermediate step toward something bigger in the future. “It doesn’t stop here.”

We Must Relate

Of all the things that could hinder the connections with Iran, Wessner says it isn’t funding, or faith, or even the logistics of planning. It’s a matter of perspective. He started his presentation with an activity to get at the heart of American perceptions on Iran.

“Give me a phrase, anything that associates in your mind with Iran,” he asked the audience that filled a crowded, standing-room-only auditorium at the seminary. “What does the rhetoric of America say?”

“Terrorism.”

“Axis of evil.”

“Nuclear weapons.”

Those, Wessner said, didn’t fit the complex reality he had seen in Iran.

“It didn’t connect for us as we were experiencing Iran that there could be a threat,” he said.

He showed pictures of the former U.S. Embassy in Tehran, the site of the hostage crisis that began in 1979 during the Carter administration and led to the diplomatic break between the two nations that has as yet been unresolved. The group’s hotel was just across the street.

“It’s a complex country,” Wessner said. The sweet lemon metaphor, he says, repeatedly came to mind.

Spory, the graduate who now works in the university’s development office, said she was surprised by the challenges of wearing the traditional head covering for women, the hijab.

“It’s the most visually different part of the culture, I think,” she said. “I wasn’t prepared for how removed it made me feel. I couldn’t hear for the first couple days.”

The degree of interest Iranians had in the West was also a surprise, the other students added.

“The way they pursued us really exemplified the hospitality we felt,” said Yoder, a 2006 graduate.

“We represented a difference,” added Brubaker, also of the class of 2006. “There’s a pretty significant difference in the way Mennonites have pursued peace.”

Wessner says the faith on each side has been the bond that’s led to the success of these cross-cultural connections.

“We must relate,” he said. “Our faith calls us to. Even when it’s unpopular, and against the wishes of our government, we do it.”

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