Calendar
We are thrilled to offer a wide range of educational programs, recreation, body movement, creative expression, and much more throughout the Summer 2025 season. Please check regularly for updates and additions! Direct any questions, offers, and ideas to programs@worldfellowship.org.

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May 2024
The Equality Blueprint: Rethinking Solutions for Palestinians and Israelis (Samer Elchahabi) *VIRTUAL PROGRAM*
Samer Elchahabi is a Palestinian-American expert in international governance and democracy, with extensive experience across Southwest Asia and North Africa (SWANA). Recently, he published an article on the potential of a one state-solution to achieve lasting equality in Israel/Palestine. In his upcoming presentation, Samer will offer insights and strategies to realize this vision, emphasizing the importance of equal rights, justice, and collaborative efforts in shaping a sustainable peace. Understanding the Landscape. Revisit the one-state solution as a pathway to sustainable…
Find out more »June 2024
Energy Education to Build Climate Resilience (VEEP/NHEEP)
Vermont and New Hampshire energy educators share out take-aways from their just-concluded VEEP/NHEEP 2024 Summer Institute, June 24-28, at World Fellowship, focused on hand-on education strategies to teach solutions for climate change.
Find out more »Following the Ancient Waterways (Freddie Wilkinson & Ryan Ranco Kelly)
In 2023, adventurer and writer Freddie Wilkinson embarked on a ~15,000-mile "big-ass canoe" trip together with a group of other paddlers from different first nations within the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, including Ryan Ranco Kelly of the Penobscot Nation in Maine. Ryan and Freddie share stories from the adventure, which will also feature in a book Freddie is writing for National Geographic on the history of the canoe.
Find out more »Can an Israel-Palestine confederation serve as a new pathway to peace? (Ron Skolnik) [**VIRTUAL PROGRAM**]
Over the last thirty years, the driving concept of Israel-Palestine peacemaking has been a two-state solution based on a hard territorial partition. Recently, however, a growing number of Israelis and Palestinians have been exploring an innovative, EU-like confederal arrangement as a way to overcome the obstacles that have tripped up diplomacy in the past. Ron Skolnik will discuss these confederation-oriented initiatives, including “A Land for All: Two States One Homeland” and “The Holy Land Confederation”, comparing and contrasting them with…
Find out more »Homecoming: Life after Incarceration (Jacob Mihalak, housing rights specialist)
The United States has 5 percent of the world’s population but 25 percent of the world’s prison population. The majority of the people in America's jails and prisons will eventually be released, and then they often to face a myriad of challenges. This presentation offers an overview of 10-episode training series, Homecoming: Life after Incarceration, developed by Jacob Mihalak and his filmmaking colleague, Josh Hayes, for the U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development. Homecoming is a multimedia project that is…
Find out more »July 2024
Refugee Resettlement and Humanitarian Migration Pathways to the US (Alison Millan, Deputy Director at International Rescue Committee in New Jersey)
How does the United States Refugee Admissions Program look almost 45 years after it was created with the Refugee Act of 1980? This presentation will focus on the current realities of US refugee resettlement, along with an overview of expanded pathways to protection, including humanitarian parole, for those facing persecution based on their race, religion, national origin, political beliefs or membership in a social group. Alison Millan has worked in immigrant services and refugee resettlement for nearly two decades and is currently the Deputy Director…
Find out more »Protecting the Right to Boycott in the US (Film Screening & Discussion) (Fadi Abu Shamallah & Jordana Rubenstein-Edberg,Just Vision)
Presentation opens with screening of the documentary film Boycott, which follows litigation against anti-boycott legislation by accidental plaintiffs in several U.S. states. Here's an excerpt from the filmmakers' statement: For the past 18 years, we’ve been making films about everyday people going up against extraordinary odds in the struggle for justice, equity and dignity in Israel-Palestine. As we followed this thread in an era of unprecedented democratic backsliding, we noticed a troubling trend: attempts to silence voices of dissent on…
Find out more »Building climate resilience through energy education for rural youth in Kenya (Jackline Ochola Edung, activist)
Climate change isn’t something for the future; it is happening now and we need a now mentality to solve it. What if we cultivate youth leadership to build climate resilience around us? Jackline Edung is a founder the Kenya Institute of Energy, which offers practical education on alternative energy solutions to youth in oil-affected communities in Kenya's Rift Valley, and will offer strategies and perspectives from her work educating and mobilizing youth to be part of the solution to the…
Find out more »Berenice Abbott: pioneering photographer documenting urban life in the 1930s (Gina Bilander, photographer)
Berenice Abbott: Pioneering Photographer, whose work spans her portraits of cultural figures in Berlin and Paris in the years between WW1 and WW2, documentation of urban life and architecture in the 1930s, a member of the board, teacher and mentor of the New York Photo League, a group and school of progressive photographers concerned with documenting through social realism and innovative photo techniques the important issues of that time from 1936-1952; and her experiments with photographs illustrating for textbooks scientific…
Find out more »How to Halt Sudan’s Vastly Destructive Civil War and Save Millions from Needless Hunger and Death (Robert Rotberg, scholar)
Robert Rotberg, who has written recently and over many years about the desperate and senseless genocidal wars in Sudan, will talk on “How to Halt Sudan’s Vastly Destructive Civil War and Save Millions from Needless Hunger and Death.” He was the Founding Director of Harvard Kennedy School’s Program on Intrastate Conflict and Conflict Resolution and earlier taught political science at MIT, was vice-president of Tufts University, and president of Lafayette College. His most recent book is Overcoming the Oppressors (OUP,…
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