Helen Nafziger Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/helen-nafziger/ News from the ˛ÝÝ®ÉçÇř community. Mon, 07 Jul 2014 13:50:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 A highlight on Ken J. Nafziger: making music with appreciative Cubans /now/news/2014/a-highlight-on-ken-j-nafziger-making-music-with-appreciative-cubans/ Fri, 07 Mar 2014 14:36:46 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=20709

When President Bill Clinton cracked a window open to Cuba, permitting scholars to apply for education-centered travel permits to Cuba from 1999 to 2003, EMU music professor Ken J. Nafziger seized the opportunity

He brushed off warnings on the U.S. State Department’s website about the possibility of “intense physical and electronic surveillance,” which “may involve detention and interrogation of both Cuban citizens and foreign visitors” and happily made 11 trips to Cuba in just four years, before President George W. Bush closed the window again. (President Obama re-opened it in early 2011.)

Nafziger was indeed “interrogated,” but not by the likes of the secret police, but by talented Cuban musicians eager to collaborate with, teach, and learn from musical artists like Nafziger.

“In my trips to Cuba, when the people sang, played, and listened, I heard an intensity that communicated that they needed singing for the survival of their souls,” recalls Nafziger. He sensed a spiritual depth in Cuba that, ironically, often seems lacking in its far-richer neighbor to the north.

Nafziger’s work in Cuba included major guest conducting appearances with the country’s leading orchestras and choirs, teaching master classes in a variety of musical topics, and participating with musical colleagues in a number of joint projects. In 2001, Nafziger featured Cuban music at his annual In 2003, he led to Cuba the , along with a member of the renowned gospel group “Sweet Honey in the Rock,” Ysaye Maria Barnwell.

Long before his forays to Cuba, it was clear that Nafziger was passionate about four things: music, language, travel, and perhaps most of all . . . matters of the spirit, and how the spirit is fed by music-centered worship that unites diverse peoples.

Nafziger began teaching as a music professor at EMU in the fall of 1977. A graduate of Goshen College in Indiana, Nafziger arrived with a doctorate of music from the University of Oregon.

There was a lot of excitement about the around the time that Ken began teaching at EMU. Nafziger led a group to Poland on his first cross-cultural trip in 1980.

“It was around the time when the Soviet Union was about to collapse and it was a really exciting time to be there,” says Nafziger. “My trips to Poland stand out to me because of the way that the Polish people used art and music. There were so many things that were denied to them—they really enjoyed art and music. It was so significant because they had so little.”

Before teaching at EMU Nafziger had spent time working under a German conductor of music.

“From the years that I lived in Germany, the thing that was most rewarding was being able to converse in German,” recalls Nafziger. As a result, Nafizger-led trips have put much emphasis on learning the language of the host country.

Nafziger led two other cross-cultural trips to Munich, Germany, in 1985 and 1990. “On all of my trips, the students have been very different from each other, but through their experiences they really came together.”

In addition to the designated cross-culturals, Nafziger has conducted choral and orchestral programs in various places, including Canada, Germany, Poland, and the Soviet Union. “All of my trips have been exciting,” says Nafziger, who is married to Helen, MA ’00 (in counseling), retired director of EMU’s career services. “Whether it was language instruction, history, filmmaking, or music, the people were amazing and they really wanted us to experience their culture.”

Asked to articulate the value he places on EMU’s cross-cultural program, he points to the changes he sees in students. “It makes people different and re-creates them in new ways,” he says. “I am astonished the way I am so moved after every trip by what the students have to say when they return. I find myself listening to them with tears running down my face. It truly is an amazing program to be a part of.”

Ken and Helen have three children, Jeremy ’91, Kristen (Parmer) ’93 and Zachary ’01, all of them well-traveled and involved in the arts—doing writing, visual art, graphic design, and/or church music.

—Rachael Keshishian & Bonnie Price Lofton

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Campus Warms Up With ‘Kitz Blitz’ /now/news/2007/campus-warms-up-with-kitz-blitz/ Mon, 19 Feb 2007 05:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=1343 The weather outside was frightful, but inside the Campus Center, the activity was delightful as members of the campus community took part in a “Kitz Blitz” as a practical extension of Mission and Service Days, Feb. 15-16.

Working rapidly in an assembly line arrangement, students put together health kits, each containing one toothbrush, one squeeze-tube toothpaste, one wrapped bar soap, one fingernail clipper and one dark color hand towel.

When the final kits were tied and placed in containers for shipment, the total number assembled stood at 616, reported Helen Nafziger, director of .

Help for Victims

The kits will be sent to Mennonite Central Committee, Akron, Pa., for distribution to persons living in disaster sites, refugee camps and war zones.

While some persons contributed items for the kits, others gave money toward the contents. Each kit could be assembled for $5.

Activities began a day later than planned because of an ice storm that closed the campus Wednesday, Feb. 14.

“To be honest, it just feels good to help with this project,” said a freshman nursing major.

“Knowing that needy persons around the world will receive these items and feeling their happiness makes me happy.”

Service Assignments

Representatives of eight church-related agencies had displays set up around the perimeter of the Campus Center Greeting Hall and talked with persons about possible service assignments with their organizations.

Agencies included Mennonite Mission Network, Mennonite Central Committee, Virginia Mennonite Board of Missions, Washington (DC) Community Scholars Center, Pittsburgh (PA) Mennonite Urban Corps, In His Mansions, Hillsborough, N.H., and Eastern Mennonite Seminary.

“The Kitz Blitz and mission recruitment combines opportunites to be of service on campus as well as other domestic and international opportunities,” Nafziger said.

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EMU Sets Mission and Service Days /now/news/2007/emu-sets-mission-and-service-days/ Tue, 06 Feb 2007 05:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=1331 ˛ÝÝ®ÉçÇř will hold its spring “Mission and Service Days” Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 14-15.

Representatives from at least 10 church-related agencies will have displays in the Campus Center Greeting Hall through 4 p.m. Thursday and will be available to talk with students and area residents about possible service openings with their organizations.

Participating agencies will include Eastern Mennonite Missions, Salunga, Pa.; Mennonite Central Committee, Akron, Pa.; Mennonite Mission Network; Peace Corps; Washington (DC) Community Scholars Program; His Mansion Ministries and Virginia Mennonite Board of Missions

A special missions project, the “Kitz Blitz,” will run concurrently on campus with a goal of assembling 1,000 health kits to be sent to Mennonite Central Committee, Akron, Pa., for distribution to refugee camps.

An assembly line will be operating 9 a.m-4 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the Campus Center Greeting Hall.

For more information or to schedule an appointment with a service representative, call Helen Nafziger in the office at 540-432-4131.

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Mission-Service Days Coming Soon /now/news/2005/mission-service-days-coming-soon/ Thu, 10 Feb 2005 05:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=818 ˛ÝÝ®ÉçÇř is holding its spring mission and service days Monday through Wednesday, Feb. 14-16.

Representatives of 10 service organizations will have displays set up in the Campus Center Greeting Hall through noon Wednesday and are available to talk with students and area residents about openings with their programs.

Programs represented will include:

  • , Akron, Pa.
  • , Elkhart, Ind.
  • , Salunga, Pa.
  • Innisfree, Crozet, Va., a community for persons with disabilities
  • , home repair among disadvantaged people
  • Metro Youth for Christ, Maryland

The event is coordinated by EMU

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EMU Sets Fall Mission/Service Event /now/news/2004/emu-sets-fall-missionservice-event/ Wed, 06 Oct 2004 04:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=727 EMU is holding its fall mission and service days Monday through Wednesday, Oct. 11-13.

Representatives of seven service organizations will have displays set up in the Campus Center Greeting Hall through noon Wednesday and are available to talk with students and area residents about openings with their programs.

Programs represented will include Mennonite Central Committee, Akron, Pa.; Mennonite Mission Network, Elkhart, Ind.; Eastern Mennonite Missions, Salunga, Pa.; LARCHE, a facility for persons with emotional disabilities; and Menno Corp-Pittsburgh, Pa., and Menno Corp-Louisville, Ky., a service work program.

The event is coordinated by EMU

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