Event Title
Pain Knows No Boundaries: An Interfaith Journey of Healing and Hope
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Start Date
4-10-2012 7:30 PM
Location
Bigelow Chapel
United Theological Seminary
3000 Fifth Street Northwest
New Brighton, MN 55112
Admission
Free and open to the public
Description
Presentation and Book Signing by Fr. Michael Lapsley
Fr. Michael Lapsley, a legendary hero of South Africa’s anti-apartheid movement and founding director the Institute for the Healing of Memories, explored the fundamental importance of an interfaith vision for the work of building a peaceful world. In the process, he highlighted the urgency of acknowledging past wounds to break the cycle that turns victims into victimizers and he considered how lessons from South Africa’s long journey to freedom—a journey in which he played a key role and for which he suffered greatly—might apply to analogous struggles in the United States. Rabbi Amy Eilberg, the Jay Phillips Center’s special consultant for interfaith conversations, and Dr. Adil Ozdemir, co-director of the Muslim-Christian Dialogue Center at the University of St. Thomas, gave formal responses to Fr. Lapsley’s presentation.
Sponsored by United Theological Seminary in collaboration with the Jay Phillips Center and UST's Muslim-Christian Dialogue Center

Michael Lapsley
Pain Knows No Boundaries: An Interfaith Journey of Healing and Hope
Bigelow Chapel
United Theological Seminary
3000 Fifth Street Northwest
New Brighton, MN 55112
Presentation and Book Signing by Fr. Michael Lapsley
Fr. Michael Lapsley, a legendary hero of South Africa’s anti-apartheid movement and founding director the Institute for the Healing of Memories, explored the fundamental importance of an interfaith vision for the work of building a peaceful world. In the process, he highlighted the urgency of acknowledging past wounds to break the cycle that turns victims into victimizers and he considered how lessons from South Africa’s long journey to freedom—a journey in which he played a key role and for which he suffered greatly—might apply to analogous struggles in the United States. Rabbi Amy Eilberg, the Jay Phillips Center’s special consultant for interfaith conversations, and Dr. Adil Ozdemir, co-director of the Muslim-Christian Dialogue Center at the University of St. Thomas, gave formal responses to Fr. Lapsley’s presentation.
Sponsored by United Theological Seminary in collaboration with the Jay Phillips Center and UST's Muslim-Christian Dialogue Center