Home Eastern Mennonite University holds 104th Commencement exercises
News

Eastern Mennonite University holds 104th Commencement exercises

Contributors
emu logo
Photo courtesy Eastern Mennonite University.

Eastern Mennonite University’s 104th Commencement ceremony was marked by the conferring of only its second honorary doctorate in its history — to human rights lawyer Bryan Stevenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative.

Check out EMU 2022 Commencement photo galleries.

EMU awarded 408 total degrees on Sunday, May 8. The total included 260 undergraduate degrees, 92 master’s degrees, 54 graduate certificates, one doctorate, and one honorary doctorate. Among those were 29 graduates of the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding and 10 graduates of Eastern Mennonite Seminary.

With the honor, Stevenson joins only Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Leymah Gbowee, a Liberian peace activist who graduated from EMU’s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding in 2007.

During his Commencement speech, Stevenson said he was proud to join the Class of 2022: “You are unique among college graduates around this country because you have committed to do justice and to love mercy and to walk humbly with God and I just believe that we’ve never needed people to take seriously that commitment than we do today.”

Graduate perspectives were offered by Thomas Guadelupe Johnson, Faith Manickum, and Jodi Beller.

Johnson, one of a group that biked from Seattle, Wa. to Washington D.C., spoke of a memorable day of cycling 12 hours, three in the wrong direction and with 10 flat tires. His fellow travelers never complained and “the worst day transformed to the finest,” because of how their collective spirit sustained them.

Manickum, Student Government Association co-president, experienced EMU’s collective spirit as well. “Over and over, we emerged from our grief and isolation to listen to each other, ask questions and empower ourselves to make things better,” she said.

Manickum urged her classmates to continue to be curious. “Beyond the many facts and figures we learned in the classroom, I hope we continue to have genuine curiosity for the world and those around us. As I’ve learned from our EMU community, this curiosity can be what drives us to love fully, live generously and be courageously kind.”

Beller, a teacher who earned a master’s degree in restorative justice in education, highlighted the dignity and worth of each individual and the power of one’s relationships to be a source of light. “The way we treat each other matters,” she said. “We need each other to become what we are truly capable of being.”

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

Politics, U.S. & World

TV: AFP editor Chris Graham talks U.S. Senate passage of ICE funding bill on Fox5 DC

uva basketball ryan odom huddle
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Has Ryan Odom built himself a Top 10 team for next season?

This time last year, UVA Basketball coach Ryan Odom was introducing a bunch of strangers to each other, and trying to convince them, and everybody else, that they could get Virginia Basketball back to where it had been not that long ago. Heading into his second summer as the head coach, Odom is building on...

louise lucas abigail spanberger
Politics, Virginia

Louise Lucas to the ‘Data Center Diva’: No more tax breaks for data centers

Gov. Abigail Spanberger and House of Delegates Speaker Don Scott want the state and localities to continue to be able to offer massive tax breaks to data center developers.

melanie lucero congress
Politics, Virginia

Another contentious Republican primary in the Fifth District in the offing

us politics congress
Politics, U.S. & World

U.S. Senate votes to advance $70B immigration enforcement funding bill

baltimore orioles
Baseball

Baltimore Orioles quietly playing themselves back into playoff contention

joanna hardin uva softball
Etc.

UVA Softball: Coach Joanna Hardin signs three-year contract extension