Record number of guests attend Grebel’s convocation

Celebration as marker between what has gone before and the future



Waterloo, Ont.

“Convocation is a time to celebrate!” With this announcement, President Susan Schultz Huxman welcomed a record number of guests sharing the day with 165 graduating students. The 2015 Conrad Grebel convocation ceremony shifted to a larger venue this year to accommodate all the friends and family members of graduating students.

The ceremony celebrates the achievements of all students who have lived at, associated with, or studied at Conrad Grebel. In addition, degrees are conferred conjointly on the Master of Theological Studies students with the University of Waterloo.

Grebel was delighted to welcome Canadian Mennonite University’s president, Cheryl Pauls, as the keynote speaker. Reflecting on being “somewhere in the middle,” Pauls addressed the fact that we are always in between places. Convocation is “a marker standing for what’s gone on before and speaking into what goes on ahead.”

“We’re always somewhere in the middle . . . somewhere between joy and sorrow, learning to love more deeply and release more generously, searching for clear paths amidst a world that at once needs more of this and a whole lot less of that.” As a musician, Pauls chose to play a fugue to illustrate her address. “Music consists firstly in the practice of gestures of grace—embrace and release, expansion and closure, beginning and ending—and secondly of living into the middle as form takes on expression,” she said.

“Our time at Grebel has been instrumental in shaping our experience at university,” said Jono Cullar in his valedictorian speech. “We have all learned many things: how to work hard and study for what seems like days on end, to be vulnerable with others about our insecurities or struggles, to take risks and expand our comfort zones by trying new things, and somehow we have learned how to grow together.”

“Grebel and Waterloo has been a place of diversity. A place where we have asked questions and had many opportunities to become involved in clubs and leadership roles. It is a place where we have grown and developed as young adults, shaped by those around us.” Jono encouraged his fellow graduating students to “go out into your communities that you will continue to build: dream big, create peace, and follow your passions. It is in our hands to positively influence those around us and the world of which we are a part.”

As a representative of the graduate classes in Peace and Conflict Studies and Theological Studies, TS student Alvis Pettker reflected on his experience at Conrad Grebel, pronouncing it as exceptional. “Conrad Grebel, with its exceptional faculty and staff, has called us together from all over the world for the purpose of forming us into exceptional people, into permanently incongruous and incompatible people who live in the world as it is, but with the strength of mind and conviction to see the world and people for what they could be and to always, ceaselessly strive for what is good, and just, and right.”



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