#YouAreWelcome to Eastern Mennonite University (upper left, clockwise): Esther Tian, professor of engineering; student Sanghyun Park; students Aminata Wallet Mohamed and Monique Mutombo; and head track and field coach Brian Simpson.

EMU joins #YouAreWelcomeHere campaign with record-setting video

“You are welcome here” is the emphatic message offered by Eastern Mennonite University students, faculty and staff in a new “blockbuster” video released just after President Donald Trump’s travel ban.

The 1-minute short [scroll down to view] features 24 people, speaking several languages and hailing from a variety of countries, including the United States. It’s been viewed more than 20,200 times on Facebook, more than 200 times on Youtube, and 470 times on Instagram with hundreds of “likes” and shares. On EMU’s Twitter account @EMU News, the video has 1,431 impressions, 393 media views and 95 replies, mentions, retweets and likes.

Andrew Strack, EMU’s photography and video manager, says this is an all-time record for an EMU-produced video.

The message of welcome and reassurance was sent more formally on Monday, Feb. 6, in a statement by President Susan Schultz Huxman and Provost Fred Kniss.

But the video has been especially powerful — and popular.

“Obviously the message is important to people right now,” said Strack, who produced the short with Joaquin Sosa. “Offering a genuine welcome to everyone who comes to our campus is a big part of what EMU is all about.”

This observation does not come lightly: In his role, Strack is witness to all kinds of opportunities where strangers are welcomed, from new student orientations to events with special guests who are only on campus for a few hours. “The warmth that’s shown in the video doesn’t just happen when we have a camera rolling. That joy in meeting people and in showing hospitality happens on a daily basis here. It makes EMU a special place.”

EMU currently has more than 100 international students in undergraduate and graduate programs, as well as in the Intensive English Program. In addition to nearly 800 alumni living overseas, EMU holds a special place in the hearts of the 3,075 participants from 124 countries who have studied at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding’s Summer Peacebuilding Institute.

The #YouAreWelcomeHere campaign began with Temple University in November 2016 to reassure prospective international students after Trump’s election win that universities in the United States still welcome them. More than 1 million international students studied in the United States during 2016.

The campaign has been joined by other universities and organizations since Trump’s executive order halting immigration.

From left: Professor Jerry Holsopple , Melissa Howard, Betsy Dintaman and Pastor Matthew Bucher with Immanuel Mennonite Church’s “Welcome Your Neighbor” sign.

Alumni reach out, too!

  • Claudette Monroy ’10 is featured in a Feb. 8 Washington Post front-page article about undocumented immigrants living and working in Washington D.C. Read the article and hear her story.
  • Want a yard sign that speaks volumes? Get in touch with Pastor Matthew Bucher MA ’14, the CJP and seminary alumnus who created the “Welcome Your Neighbor” signs that are spreading around the country.
  • How do Anabaptist values of “welcoming the stranger” trickle down from EMU graduates, those who are Mennonite and those who are not, into communities where they live and work? Recent independent research shows the remarkable effect when a high number of Anabaptist-shaped educators, including Harrisonburg City Schools Welcome Center Coordinator RaMona Stahl ’85, live and work within the multicultural community of Harrisonburg.
  • Many EMU alumni chose to empower immigrants and others through their work in multicultural settings. A Fall 2016/Winter 2017 Crossroads magazine captures their stories.
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BY03ZX1L-Q0

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