The Immanuel Mennonite Church "sign team" of (from left) Jerry Holsopple, Melissa Howard, Betsy Dintaman and Pastor Matthew Bucher have teamed up to handle the demand of their popular signs that voice support and hospitality for immigrants and refugees. The signs read, "No matter where you're from, we're glad you're our neighbor" in three languages. (Photo by Andrew Strack)

‘Welcome Your Neighbor’ sign continues to spread around the nation, to the delight of its creators at Immanuel Mennonite Church

From Washington D.C. to Colorado, demand for Immanuel Mennonite Church’s “Welcome Your Neighbor” sign has skyrocketed. The sign, with a distinctive tri-color banding, reads in three languages: No matter where you’re from, we’re glad you’re our neighbor.

Since first posted in front of the Harrisonburg, Virginia, church in September 2015, a flood of attention from supportive citizens to interested media outlets, spurred on by social media posts, has created a new demand for Pastor Matthew Bucher and his congregation. [Bucher is a 2015 graduate of Eastern Mennonite Seminary and the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding.]

From the beginning, Bucher says it’s been a team effort—from the sign’s conception to the first printing, early dissemination and now, handling queries from people across the country. And they’ve been aided by a growing network of fans, some Mennonite and many others not, who believe strongly in the equity and hospitality embodied in the sign’s message.

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Ready-made protest signs: “We just took our sign out of our yard on the way to the rally,” said one participant at a Jan. 28 rally for immigrants and refugees in Harrisonburg, Virginia. (Photo by Lauren Jefferson)

“It’s still blooming,” Bucher said.

“For us, philosophically, we don’t see the need to own stuff,” says sign designer Jerry Holsopple, a professor in the Visual and Communication Arts Department at EMU. “We definitely don’t own God.”

Working together

Lost in some of the media re-tellings has been the spirit of collaboration, not just between individuals but also between organizations.

So let’s set the story straight:

In 2015, the sign idea was born: English, Spanish and Arabic representing the most common languages in the Immanuel neighborhood. Bucher, fluent in Arabic after spending four years in Egypt with Mennonite Central Committee, asked Melissa Howard to paint the original sign in front of the church, located in a historically black, now multicultural neighborhood in Harrisonburg.

Bucher then brought the idea to the Mission Advisory Commission – Jennifer Davis Sensenig, Ben Risser ’85 and Nick Meyer ‘08 – a small group of the Harrisonburg District Mennonite Pastors organization. This group wanted to produce a yard sign, and Meyer, pastor of Early Church, and his friend Alex Gore created the first digital version, turning to Holsopple for help formatting the Arabic.

Holsopple then took over the design and printed an initial order to sell, alongside the church’s tamales, at the Sept. 30-Oct. 1 Virginia Mennonite Relief Sale in Harrisonburg, an event which draws hundreds of people from the region and out of state.

“Early on, we thought we had to get it done and out before the election, because then it would be over,” says congregant Betsy Dintaman. “And the opposite happened.”

“The relief sale really helped it get out of Harrisonburg,” says Holsopple.

As demand grew, the congregation formed a “sign team,” which includes Bucher, Howard, Holsopple, and the trio of Dintaman, with Greta Bucher and Janet Stutzman, handling Facebook questions, comments and requests.

Some of those requests have included substitutions of the Spanish language text with German, Armenian, French and Somali. However, in a political climate in which many are concerned about anti-Muslim harassment, Holsopple says nobody has asked him to swap out the Arabic text, which “says something beyond just their neighborhood.”

Staff members and volunteers with The Roberta Webb Child Care Center , a ministry housed in the church’s lower level, have taken over printing and shipping for the Harrisonburg area. After costs are covered, the remaining proceeds benefit the daycare, as well as Mennonite Central Committee and New Bridges Immigrant Resource Center.

Notably, like the sign, the daycare (started 22 years ago) was an outgrowth of the church’s community-centered values. “It was part of the conversation of how the church was started with the community,” explains Bucher. “There’s a need. How do we respond as new neighbors in the community? That’s been an integral part of the congregation’s identity.”

Sign pops up in new places daily

In the same spirit, rather than try to control dissemination, the team has provided a free PDF file, which can be found on Immanuel’s website.

If mass printings happen, Bucher and his team ask that any proceeds go to an immigrant-focused organization in that community. A dozen organizations across the country have participated in this way, contributing greatly the spread of the sign.

Each day brings some new notice of growth and attention. Recently, it was an editor of “O” magazine, which plans to feature the sign in March.

Still, their goals are simple, says Melissa Howard. “I hope it tones down violence, and just brings out true humane character.”

For his part, Bucher wants the phenomenon of the signs “to remind our congregation to note ways in which we are cared for by our neighbors, and to continue showing God’s love in small ways, as a congregation and as individuals in our communities.”

Read, watch and listen to media coverage of the “Welcome” sign

An incomplete list of “Welcome Sign”-spreaders across the country

Thanks to the efforts of citizens around the continent, including many EMU alumni, the signs have spread to at least 14 states and Canada:

  • Conrad Gross ‘09, of Washington, D.C. helped print and sell 350 signs  in his neighborhood, with proceeds going to immigrant service non-profit Ayuda. Petworth News, a blog written by Drew Schneider, publicized the initial story, which was picked up by major news outlet WUSA-9.
  • Ben Wideman ‘04, who heads the Third Way Collective at Penn State, has distributed over 320 signs in the State College, Pa. area. Penn State’s radio station WPSU covered the story.
  • Chris Landes ‘07 and Ron Hershey ‘90, of Mennonite Central Committee, are two of the many Lancaster, Pennsylvania, residents spreading the signs.
  • Andy Richter ‘12 is a distributor for eastern Pennsylvania, where they’ve printed close to 450 signs.
  • Meg Smeltzer ‘13 is the printing coordinator for the Colorado Springs, Colorado, area. She blogs about losing the sign in a fierce wind one day, and having it returned to her yard by an unknown neighbor.
  • Jenni Leister ‘93 was interviewed in a LancasterOnline article.
  • Kendra Good Rittenhouse ‘85 has spread them to her home state of Maryland.
  • Immanuel member Steve Carpenter SEM ‘11 wrote a blog post for The Mennonite about the signs’ creation and significance.
  • Daryl Byler, executive director of EMU’s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, took signs to friends in Mississippi.

If you’re involved in spreading the “Welcome Your Neighbors” sign around the country (or the world), please let us know by sending us a note in the comment box below.

Discussion on “‘Welcome Your Neighbor’ sign continues to spread around the nation, to the delight of its creators at Immanuel Mennonite Church

  1. Impacting our youth group, the message in this sign motivated them to collectively create, compose and coordinate a drama. They performed the short skit at their annual Spaghetti Supper fundraiser. It sent a profound message to the 120+ folks who attended. We are blessed the youth are embracing and living out the unity in diversity.

  2. After reading about the sign on Facebook a couple of months ago, we downloaded the pdf and had some printed on card stock. One has been in my Mennonite church office window ever since. A few weeks ago we found somewhere to buy plastic yard signs, so now they’re popping up all over the Cedar Valley of northeast Iowa.

  3. I love your sign and wanted one from the first time I saw one. I live in Durham, NC and see the signs around here. There are many people here that need the education that this movement can provide and I would like information on how to help. I am not interested in any religious message, but brotherhood should cross all beliefs. Please let me know, if you can, where to get signs in my area and I will spread the message.

    1. Hi Peter,
      I’m not aware of any connections in Durham, but you can order signs through Immanuel or print your own. Visit https://immanuelmennonite.wordpress.com/ for more information. You are also welcome to become “the source” for signs in your area. I believe Immanuel’s only request is that proceeds from the sale of the signs (beyond covering your costs) be donated to an organization that supports immigrants or refugees.

  4. May a suggestion be offered? The signs will be more visible and easier to read if there is more contrast between the words and the background. Leave it to my old eyes to notice. Thanks for putting love and acceptance out in the world.

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