Most Recent Archive

Advent Waiting

December 11, 2020 recent Wider View

As 2020 draws to a close, we are waiting for so much, from Zoom breakout rooms to begin, to shared meals around a table with loved ones, to safety from conflict, to a vaccine that reaches all of us. It is easy to become paralyzed as news stories of devastation and restrictions flash across our screens. As the heaviness and limbo intensifies, it is only fitting that we are entering into the season of Advent, of collective waiting for new birth and the coming of joy, peace and justice. Our Advent waiting is marked by rich traditions which help to […]

Cartography as Reconciliation

November 6, 2020 recent Wider View

Written by Randy Klassen I can remember it like it was yesterday. It was my first week of grade two—half a century ago, now—and my teacher had inscribed the wrong form of my name on my notebooks. It was a well-intentioned but careless act. Bad enough that she had written my full given name—the moniker I only heard from my mother, and that, only when she was displeased with me. But that my teacher had written it with a (Germanic) final “f”, rather than the proper (English) “ph”—”Randolf”—was an indignity not to be tolerated! My seven-year-old self eventually forgave her. […]

At the intersection of racial justice, economic recovery and the climate crisis

October 16, 2020 recent Wider View

By Clara Weybright, Climate Futures Fellow, Center for Sustainable Climate Solutions   The dual crises of climate change and COVID-19 have revealed, with increasing clarity, the inequitable ways in which disasters affect communities across the United States. As we watch these crises unfold, we wonder what we can do to create a more equitable social and economic system that prevents these harms. While California and Oregon endure forest fires of unprecedented proportions, other parts of the United States have experienced increasingly high numbers of hurricanes this year. Just as they have been the most harmed by the impacts of COVID-19, […]

When Mennonites were banned

October 9, 2020 recent Blog

Written by Brian Dyck In March 1922, Gerhard Ens, my step great-grandfather, made a trip to Ottawa from his home in Rosthern, Saskatchewan. He was part of a five-person delegation to meet the newly elected Liberal Prime Minister, William Lyon Mackenzie King. This was a follow-up meeting to remind King of the promise he made at a meeting 10 months earlier that if his party formed the government he would rescind an Order in Council from June 1919 that barred landing in Canada of “…any immigrant of the Doukobor [sic], Hutterite or Mennonite class.”[i]  King kept his word and quietly […]

Addressing hunger amid COVID-19

October 2, 2020 Charles Kwuelum Wider View

The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected populations already ravaged by violence, floods, drought, wildfires, displacements and disease. The pandemic’s disruption on food systems paused production and distribution of food in many places, thereby leading to a hike in the cost of food and food insecurity globally. Inevitably, we are faced with the dual crises of hunger and COVID-19. In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, for example, an estimated 13.6 million people were likely to need emergency food assistance in early 2020. Unfortunately, COVID-19 will increase this projection. As governments imposed lockdowns to stop the spread of COVID-19, smallholder famers […]

Set aside a special Sunday to pray and advocate for migrants

September 18, 2020 Tammy Alexander Wider View

Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office All of us long for safety and refuge. Ultimately this is found only in God, who welcomes the strangers and gives them refuge. As we seek to become more Christlike, we too are called to create places of refuge and welcome for those who are in danger or need. Dina Nayeri writes of her own experience as a refugee in the United States: “It is the obligation of every person born in a safer room to open the door when someone in danger knocks.” Hebrews 13:2 instructs Jesus’ followers to show hospitality to strangers. […]

10 steps to deeper engagement in political advocacy

September 11, 2020 Kate Parsons Wider View

This year has illuminated in new ways the existing inequalities and injustices of this world. If you have  recently felt your heart moved in a new way, but aren’t sure where to begin, below are ten suggestions for deeper engagement in political advocacy: Register to vote Register to vote if you are eligible, and vote in national and local elections. If you are not eligible to vote, you can still help others register to vote or volunteer at polling places. Learn who represents you Identify your members of Congress. Visit their websites or follow them on social media. In addition, […]

Looking back on 13 years

August 21, 2020 Rachelle Lyndaker Schlabach Wider View

At the end of August, I will be stepping down after 13 years as director of the Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office. Although there have of course been challenges over the years, it has been a rich and wonderful experience for me and has helped me grow in many ways. I have been deeply blessed by getting to know and work with MCC staff and partner organizations around the world. It is inspiring to see their unwavering commitment to a more just and peaceful world. On my travels, I have been humbled the generosity and hospitality that has been […]