Ohio University's Better Together
Campaign thrived this year with students leading the 9-11 Interfaith Peace
Walk, raising “a ton of food” for the SE Ohio Foodbank, participating in two
watershed service-learning clean-up projects with interfaith reflection,
organizing an interfaith panel on faith and violence, hosting the first Better
Together Day (April 4) with a focus on interfaith movements for social change, in-service
trainings to residential housing
staff, and weekly participation in Interfaith Impact, Thursday Supper and
Saturday Lunch. With the support of OU’s Office of Diversity and Inclusion, we
were able to send two students, Olivia Bullock and Phil Morehead to the
Interfaith Youth Core’s Interfaith Leadership Institute and will send two more
this August. The campus and community interest in this kind of work just keeps
growing and recent tragedies in Boston and elsewhere remind us of the urgent
importance of building interfaith bridges. How is this impacting the students
and overall climate at Ohio University? Here’s a glimpse.
PHIL
MOREHEAD
is currently a third year student who found his way to Better Together and
United Campus Ministry because of his participation in the 2011 Interfaith
Peace Walk. A self-proclaimed “party-guy” who was ambivalent about his Jewish
faith, Phil was so moved by his experience with the Peace Walk, which brings
together many campus and community faith groups and congregations, that he
sought out an internship at UCM in fall 2012, which included participation on
the Better Together Steering Committee. He played a leadership role in the
Peace Walk as a walk organizer and “wrangler” (keeping people safe and on the
designated route), as well as assisting with sound amplification for the
speakers at the church, Hillel, and the Islamic Center. He regularly
participates in UCM’s Interfaith Impact weekly meetings and, in that interfaith
space and community, he found himself being drawn to examine and engage more
deeply with his own faith tradition and so began attending Shabbat services at
Hillel. UCM and the Office of Diversity and Inclusion sponsored his
participation in the Interfaith Youth Core Leadership Institute in Atlanta
(January 2013), where he further developed his skills to lead Better Together
and organize for interfaith community on campus. It was an experience that he
called nothing short of “life changing.”
“I don’t know what I’ve been doing the past
three years. My friends don’t understand why I’ve changed over the last year,
but I’ve found something more important to do with my time than just the party
scene. It’s because of UCM.” He reflected on the power of the leadership
weekend and the friendships he’d made there, most notably with a Muslim student
from another campus. “We talked for hours and I learned so much about the
similarities between our faiths.” He also learned the importance of listening.
“I only shared my story a few times, whereas I found myself much more ready to
listen to others. I learned about religions that I knew little about and came
to the realization that we all strive for the same virtues: peace, love, and
acceptance.”
Phil will help lead the 2013-14 Better Together campaign with an interest in engaging his peer group in interfaith service. This spring he led an Interfaith Impact by sharing his experiences and perspectives on being Jewish and organized a “field trip” to Hillel for Shabbat services. He continues to be inspired by the possibilities of interfaith community while moving through his own personal transformation and re-engaging with his Jewish faith. We are excited to see where Phil will take Better Together 2013-14!
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