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  • Home
  • About
    • Our Values and Mission
    • Latest News
    • History
    • Contact
    • Directions
  • Conferences
    • Group Inquiry Form
    • Meals at Walker
    • FAQ
  • The Inn
    • Inn Rates and Policies
    • Breakfast Menu
  • Community Living
    • Housing Information
    • Inquire About Housing
  • Programs
  • For Religious Leaders
  • DONATE
  • BOOK NOW

Campus News and Notes

Remembering the Dead, and the Future of Faith in a Radicalized World

10/29/2018

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Memorials for the dead, outside Tree of Life. (From https://wamu.org, 10/29/2018. Credits: Matt Rourke / AP)


​A woman in her 90s. An 88 year old jokester. A family doctor. Two “inseparable” brothers who faced mental challenges and were unwavering volunteers. A couple married at Tree of Life over 60 years’ ago. A researcher at Pitt’s Learning Research and Development Center. A dentist and runner. A youth coach.


These eleven lives were taken from Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life community, indeed from all of us, on Saturday. Add this to the 57% increase in anti-Semitic incidents in the U.S. in 2017 (following a 34% increase in 2016), mostly on school and college campuses – and it is clear that we are well beyond the point now of ever attempting to categorize what happened on Saturday as an isolated, apolitical incident. The last statements of the shooter make clear that he was only the latest violent example of the online-supported nationalist radicalization that has infiltrated our lives and our entire globe.


This radicalization, despite the times where it co-opts the language of faith, is antithetical to the definition of faith that we uphold at Walker Center: a spiritual connection and commitment to the Divine, to our world, and to our fellow humanity, that finds concrete expression and through various religious traditions—and which must therefore shape our practices towards the common good, and our political (i.e., for the sake of the polis) aspirations towards justice and equality.


For the eleven people above, and all who were injured and scarred by Saturday's attack, faith was and is an important part of their lives. Faith contributed to their community becoming a target of violence. Tree of Life is a spiritual home, where people live out their commitment to the G_d of the Torah and to their neighbors, through the love and life they share. Even if they do not all believe the same things, in a world full of hatred faith still brought them together, and provided a place where their love could be activated and their hope renewed. Such love and hope threaten hate. 


Rabbi Yosef Itkin, of the Baal Shem Tov Shul congregation in the same Squirrel Hill neighborhood as Tree of Life, reportedly told a writer for The Atlantic on Sunday, “‘You can’t chase away darkness with a broom. You have to chase away darkness with light.’”


Right now, I don’t know if any of us have a foolproof plan on how to combat the world-wide nationalist fervor that is feeding some of our nation’s darkest legacies (of Anti-Semitism, anti-immigrant, anti-black, anti-LGBTQ,  anti-indigenous, etc.) and encouraging them out of the shadows. All I know is that, as the rabbi says, we have to chase such darkness away with light – the all-embracing light of faith. We must commit to greater study and understanding, and to more direct action, in order to fight these dangerous trends. Through it all, we must commit to each other, to our own spiritual homes, and to our interfaith sisters and brothers. We must continue to gather together to pray, learn, sing, and love – to find our bread for the journey.


Here, our prayers and thoughts will remain with Tree of Life, long after the news outlets have moved on. And to all the faith and interfaith communities who call Walker a spiritual home away from home, who in spite of the landscape continue to chase darkness away with light -- we send you all our heartfelt gratitude and love today. Keep fighting, and keep shining.  
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Walker Website Updates Signal Big Changes Ahead

10/9/2018

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A Pop of color! (Photo taken in 2015).
Every fall, the Walker Center campus maple trees signal the start of autumn, the season of change, the preparation for something new. 

Three years ago, Amy and I began our journey with the Walker Center, and since then we have seen some amazing changes already! We hope that we have honored the past of those who have come before us well, while also helping to ensure that the Walker Center is ready for the future.

We did a website overhaul last summer in order to prepare for this future - and we have just updated the website again! Come see what we've been working on: 
  • An updated Home Page
  • A new About Page, which includes our new Mission and Vision statements that were just adopted this year.
  • Some slight updates to the Community Living section, which highlight the Barton Community and our Interfaith Learning and Leadership intentional community program. 
  • The start of  a brand-new Programs section! That's right, we're planning to begin some original events, workshops, and retreats for faith communities and their leaders, as soon as 2019! This is a Walker Center legacy that we're excited to revive.
  • To help us with this, we've made a quick SURVEY for faith leaders (i.e., ANYONE in a leadership capacity, who is a person of any faith). If this describes you, we would be thrilled if you could spare a few minutes and participate. 
  • Finally... go check out our brand new Fundraising Page! We're now partnering with Network 4 Good to coordinate our fundraising efforts, which will be critical to the success of the programs and events we hope to have. 
There's more to share about the changes ahead ... in the meantime, go check these things out - and be sure to share the Survey and the Fundraising Page with others! 

Thanks for everyone who has supported and found a home here at Walker Center over the years. We can't wait to see what's next! 
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    The Directors' Desk

    Be on the lookout for more news soon! . 

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