Mennonite Action Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/mennonite-action/ News from the ˛ÝÝ®ÉçÇř community. Fri, 29 Aug 2025 19:22:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Third-year student Ciela Acosta receives Young Peacemaker award /now/news/2025/third-year-student-ciela-acosta-receives-young-peacemaker-award/ /now/news/2025/third-year-student-ciela-acosta-receives-young-peacemaker-award/#respond Fri, 29 Aug 2025 19:22:05 +0000 /now/news/?p=59575 Ciela Acosta, a third-year EMU peacebuilding and development major from Salem, Oregon, is the recipient of a 2025 Bring the Peace award from Mennonite Church USA (MC USA).

She is recognized as this year’s Young Peacemaker, an honor given to “a young adult or teenager who has already demonstrated a clear devotion to peace and justice work,” according to an Aug. 28 from MC USA announcing the award recipients.

Acosta is involved in Mennonite Action, EMU Peace Fellowship, and the EMU Chamber Singers. She credits her participation in a nonviolent civil disobedience action on Capitol Hill with Mennonite Action as a pivotal moment in her vocational call. 

Joe Roos, a founder of Sojourners magazine who served as its publisher, was honored by MC USA as this year’s Legacy Peacemaker. 

MC USA’s Bring the Peace awards are designed to draw attention to the peace and justice work that people within the denomination are doing and to encourage and inspire more people across the country to engage in similar endeavors, according to the release.

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Peace & justice take center stage at Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship /now/news/2025/peace-justice-take-center-stage-at-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship/ /now/news/2025/peace-justice-take-center-stage-at-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship/#comments Fri, 28 Feb 2025 15:25:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=58329 After five-year hiatus, formerly annual conference successfully resumes at EMU

Lars Ă…kerson ’08 used a familiar Mennonite symbol, that of a quilt, to discuss the importance of belonging. “We need to piece back together the quilt of our belonging, acknowledge the extent of our fragmentation, touch and unfold the edges of our differences, and become stitched together by the colored threads of our grief,” he said. Ă…kerson, representing the , served as the first keynote speaker for the 2025 Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship (ICPF) conference. His work with the Coalition involves building Indigenous solidarity, and he discussed collaborations he helped facilitate between Maya and Mennonite farmers. 

The conference, held from Friday, Feb. 21, to Sunday, Feb. 23, in the EMU Seminary building, centered around the theme “Building Solidarity: from Turtle Island to Palestine.” It brought together 110 attendees, some from the Harrisonburg community and area universities, and others from Mennonite, Brethren, and Quaker colleges across the U.S. Aidan Yoder ’24, a recent EMU graduate who served on the conference planning committee, said he was excited by the energy that students brought to the event. “We far surpassed my goals for the conference with the number of people involved and the variety of institutions represented,” Yoder said.

Adam Ramer, left, and Nick Martin, organizers of Mennonite Action, speak at a keynote address during the 2025 ICPF at EMU on Saturday.

Two speakers, Adam Ramer and Nick Martin, shared the second keynote address on , an organization working to build Palestinian solidarity. Ramer and Martin discussed the purpose and mission of their organization for about half an hour, explaining that they stand with the downtrodden and oppressed, particularly those in Palestine, and strive for a world “where all God’s children are free.” For the next 45 minutes, they opened the floor to questions. “How do you build empathy for a cause like a cease-fire?” one attendee asked. Ramer and Martin then discussed the importance of reaching people’s hearts by going beyond logical arguments and appealing to values and emotions.

Between the keynote addresses on Saturday, attendees chatted over pastries, fruit, and coffee and attended workshops. Some workshops focused on broad topics such as nonviolent action, while others discussed specific justice and peacebuilding endeavors, including Palestine solidarity in Harrisonburg and visual and digital activism in Brazil and Argentina. Yoder said he heard from many attendees who enjoyed the workshops as a place to ask questions and learn more.

EMU sophomore Micah Mast speaks at a workshop.

EMU last hosted the ICPF in February 2020, before it was indefinitely put on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Renae Benner, an EMU junior who helped plan the 2025 conference, said she felt that people learned a lot and built stronger relationships between colleges. “I’m optimistic that we successfully restarted the annual ICPF,” she said. As Åkerson said in his address, “The way things are is not the way they must be.” Although he was talking about activism more broadly, his words could also apply to restarting a beloved conference, one that Goshen College first hosted 77 years ago. 

EMU alumnus Aidan Yoder ’24 and junior Eli Stoll share a laugh at a workshop during the ICPF.

A highlight from the conference for Yoder came during weekend reflections when the committee announced that two colleges had tentatively agreed to host the ICPF for the next two years. “I was glad the energy we created this year resulted in the continuation of the annual conference,” he said.

Those planning the ICPF 2025 conference were Renae Benner, Shawna Hurst, Micaiah Landis, Georgia Metz, Tim Seidel, and Aidan Yoder.

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EMU to host Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship /now/news/2025/emu-to-host-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship/ /now/news/2025/emu-to-host-intercollegiate-peace-fellowship/#comments Mon, 10 Feb 2025 15:06:16 +0000 /now/news/?p=58129 Weekend conference returns to campus for the first time in five years

From Feb. 21-23, 2025, the EMU Peace Fellowship club will host the Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship (ICPF) conference. This student-led weekend conference brings together students and faculty from Mennonite, Brethren, and Quaker colleges across the U.S. and Canada to examine issues of peace and justice.

The theme for the 2025 ICPF is “Building Solidarity: From Turtle Island to Palestine.” Many students from the schools represented at the conference participate in organizations such as  and the â€”organizations that are working to build Palestine and Indigenous solidarities, respectively. The 2025 ICPF will give students an opportunity to learn more about these movements, educate students about organizing and movement-building, and foster connections to encourage activism on home campuses and in home communities.

Keynote speakers at this event include the co-founders and organizers of Mennonite Action, Nick Martin and Adam Ramer, as well as a longtime member of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery, Lars Ă…kerson. Their keynote addresses will be held in Martin Chapel at EMU’s Seminary Building, with different sessions taking place throughout the building.

The conference workshops will provide space for more in-depth conversations with Mennonite Action and the Coalition, as well as a time to hear from other practitioners about the solidarity work they engage in. Some of the workshops include creative approaches to decolonial peacebuilding in South America, Palestine solidarity work in Harrisonburg, and a student panel with a mix of justice-related topics.

Renae Benner, one of the EMU students helping organize the ICPF, looks forward to meeting other students who “care deeply about peace and justice issues.” She hopes those who attend the conference will “leave feeling inspired to take action for peace and be informed about how to do that.” Many faculty and students at EMU care deeply about seeking peace and justice, she added, making the university well-suited to host this conference.

EMU last hosted the ICPF in February 2020 and before that in 2014. Generally, participating institutions take turns hosting the conference every year, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the conference has not been held since 2020. The conference planning committee is excited about restarting the conference and looks forward to building new connections during this time.

Visit the Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship webpage to find more information about the schedule or register for the conference.

Participants at ICPF are expected to come from Mennonite colleges and universities including Hesston College, Bluffton University, Goshen College, Bethel College, Canadian Mennonite University, and Conrad Grebel University; other Anabaptist, Quaker, and Brethren universities such as Messiah College, Elizabethtown College, and Manchester University; and other colleges in the Harrisonburg area such as James Madison University and Bridgewater College.

This event reflects EMU’s commitment to its core value of peace and justice by providing a platform for students and faculty to engage in critical conversations, build meaningful connections, and take tangible steps toward transformative change in their communities and beyond.


Read a preview of the event in the Daily News-Record .

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EMU community joins Mennonite Action march to D.C. /now/news/2024/emu-community-joins-mennonite-action-march-to-d-c/ /now/news/2024/emu-community-joins-mennonite-action-march-to-d-c/#comments Mon, 19 Aug 2024 19:40:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=57512 A group of Mennonites and interfaith allies—many of them students, faculty, staff, alumni, and other members of the EMU community—marched more than 135 miles from Harrisonburg, Virginia, to Washington, D.C., on foot last month calling on lawmakers to support a cease-fire in Gaza.

The “All God’s Children March for a Ceasefire,” organized by , included participants ranging in age from 11 to 74 years old. Marchers left from Community Mennonite Church in Harrisonburg on July 18, walking about 13 miles each day on their journey before arriving at the White House on July 28. Between 35 and 125 marchers took part in the action each day, with some devoting a day and others completing the entire route.

Watch a shot and edited by EMU student Micaiah Landis,
offering a behind-the-scenes look at the march.

An aerial shot of the “All God’s Children March for a Ceasefire” as it proceeds through the Blue Ridge Mountains. (Photo by Micaiah Landis)

Together, the group braved the heat, humidity and rain, climbed into the Blue Ridge Mountains and through the Shenandoah National Park, and walked down quiet country roads, along busy highways and through suburban neighborhoods and parking lots. They slept in churches and camped in open fields. They listened and watched as passing drivers honked and waved in support of their cause. They marched while singing hymns and held evening worship services along the way.

You can read daily dispatches from the group’s journey
on the Mennonite Action website
.

A group of Mennonites and interfaith allies hold a service of prayer, song, and lamentation for those suffering in Gaza in front of the White House. (Photo by Rachel Schrock Photography)
Capitol Police arrest 47 members of the peaceful protest in the Hart Senate Office Building on July 30. (Photo by Rachel Schrock Photography)

When they arrived in D.C. the marchers joined an protesting the annual conference of Christians United for Israel (CUFI). On July 30, members of the group protested inside the halls of the Hart Senate Office Building. Capitol Police made 47 arrests in the peaceful protest.

The march and arrests received a flurry of national media coverage. Outlets including , , , and highlighted Mennonite Action and its cause.

We spoke with EMU senior and nursing major Jenna Weaver, sophomore and computer engineering major Renae Benner, and Tyler Goss, director for student engagement and leadership development, about their experiences.

(Photo by Molly Piwonka)

How did you participate in the march and D.C. actions?
Weaver: I walked the first nine days of the march, almost making it to D.C. I also was a medic for the march, which mainly involved tending to people’s blisters, helping remove hundreds of ticks, calling the paramedics when needed, and watching out for dehydrated folks as we walked during several very hot days!
Benner: I participated in the entire march from Harrisonburg to Washington, D.C. On July 28, I joined the service of lament held outside the White House. The next day, I joined an interfaith chorus that sang songs calling for peace at the conference center hosting the CUFI summit. On July 30, I joined another rally with speakers and singing and helped on the jail support team for those arrested for peacefully protesting.
Goss: I was fortunate enough to attend the whole march and time in D.C. So, any of the good trouble Mennonite Action was up to over those days, I was there. Specifically, I helped to coordinate the programming during the march. From daily devotional-style gatherings, to yoga, to game nights, and evening prayer, I was the one tapping shoulders and connecting people’s gifts with the various programming leadership.

What were the most memorable or impactful experiences from your participation?
Benner: The day we marched into D.C. was full of energy. Lots of people joined us in the morning and more joined in as we walked. As we neared the bridge to cross the Potomac River, I was overwhelmed by the significance of what we were doing. It felt like such a powerful political action to enter the city by foot, in a line of over a hundred people, carrying the banners we had carried across Virginia. The entire two weeks felt this way: I knew I was experiencing something remarkable, and all I could do was try to take it in.

(Photo by Molly Piwonka)

What drew you to get involved? Why is it important to participate in actions like these?
Weaver: I barely knew of the ongoing violence in Palestine until my intercultural to Israel-Palestine last summer, led by Tim and Chris Seidel. I learned so much history of native people being removed from their homes, and created relationships with people that I am still in contact with. When the Hamas attacks occurred in October, and then the extreme violence by Israel, it stirred so much anger and sadness in me. I was a part of various local protests, , and was a part of the on EMU’s campus. When the idea of the march came up, I knew I would do it. As a Mennonite, we believe in nonviolence. How could I not stand up for tens of thousands of beautiful humans being killed when my faith calls me to do so?

How has this changed your perspective, or how has participating in this impacted you?
Goss: I have always known our EMU students are incredible, but, wow, I wish everyone could have seen the brilliant ways all of the EMU students involved in the march and D.C. actions led with such courage and compassion. The meal organizers, the videographers, the de-escalators, the phone callers, the police liaisons, the medics, the song leaders, the protesters…our students took the lead in every role of the action.

What do you feel the result of your actions and involvement were?
Benner: Hundreds, and sometimes maybe thousands of cars, drove past us each day as we marched. Lots of people took videos. I don’t know exactly what people were thinking as they saw us walking. However, I was inspired by how many positive, or at least curious, responses we received. I think we gave some people hope, because we are continuing to care about Gaza and speak out against violence. Maybe we inspired some people to also raise their voices in protest. I hope our demonstration caused a few people to learn more about what’s going on in Palestine, or even to question their preconceptions for a moment.

Is there anything else you feel that would be important to share about?
Weaver: Just overall gratitude for the organizers of Mennonite Action who worked so hard to make the march happen, as well as donors and Mennonites across the U.S. and other countries who prayed for and supported us.

For more photos from the march and protests, visit the .

Participants on Day 7 of their march from Harrisonburg, Virginia, to Washington, D.C. (Photo by Micaiah Landis)
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Students, faculty, staff join voices for peace in Gaza /now/news/2024/students-faculty-staff-join-voices-for-peace-in-gaza/ /now/news/2024/students-faculty-staff-join-voices-for-peace-in-gaza/#comments Thu, 22 Feb 2024 14:55:52 +0000 /now/news/?p=55680 In a stirring display of solidarity, a group of about 200 protesters gathered outside City Hall in Harrisonburg, Virginia, on Tuesday afternoon calling for an end to the violence in Gaza. 

Protesters join in hymns calling for peace on Tuesday in Harrisonburg, Virginia.

The protesters, which included a large contingent of passionate EMU students, faculty and staff, held signs and banners with demands such as: “Ceasefire Now,” “Let Gaza Live,” “Stop Genocide in Gaza” and “Free All Hostages and Prisoners.” 

They joined together in nearly an hour of hymns led by Benjamin Bergey, assistant professor of music at EMU, and Dorothy Jean Weaver ’72, emeritus professor at Eastern Mennonite Seminary. 

While the protesters lifted their voices in song and prayed for peace, Tim Seidel, associate professor of peacebuilding, development and global studies at EMU, and Emily Hershberger MA ’12 hand-delivered a petition to Harrisonburg City Manager Ande Banks ’97 inside City Hall. More than 500 local signatures are attached to the petition, which urges Harrisonburg City Council to pass a resolution supporting a permanent cease-fire in the Gaza Strip. 

Harrisonburg City Manager Ande Banks, left, receives a petition with more than 500 signatures from Tim Seidel, center, and Emily Hershberger.

Seidel organized Tuesday’s protest along with the local committee of . The primary goals of the Mennonite Action grassroots movement are a permanent cease-fire in Gaza, a release of all hostages and an end to Israel’s occupation of Palestine. 

Heartened by the healthy turnout, Seidel said the protest provided a powerful witness to elected officials, both at the local and national levels. 

“This momentum is a testimony to the grief people are feeling and their conviction and desire to see change,” Seidel said.

Mennonite Action student panel discussion
Where: University Commons Student Union
When: 8-9 p.m., Monday, Feb. 26
EMU students who were involved in the Jan. 16 protests at the Cannon House Office Building in Washington, D.C., including those arrested by U.S. Capitol Police, will share their experiences. Read The Weather Vane’s coverage of the D.C. protest . The event also will include a brief update on the current state of affairs in Gaza.

As EMU senior Aidan Yoder posted photos and video of the protest to the Harrisonburg Mennonite Action social media accounts, he estimated that about 40 of his fellow students had shown up to demonstrate. 

“I think we really showed City Council that the people of Harrisonburg want a cease-fire and that we support them passing this resolution,” he said. 

For EMU junior Emma Nord, the demonstration marked the first protest she’s attended. The student chaplain often leads hymn sings on campus and reflected on the power of song as a form of protest.

“It’s wonderful to see Mennonites coming together and acknowledging the crisis … to proclaim that genocide is wrong,” she said. 

For a visual recap of the impactful protest, explore our curated photo gallery below.

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