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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August 2021
Virtual! Bev Grant Archival Photography 1968-1972
Bev Grant who many WFC guests know for her social justice music performances and her choral workshops every summer at World Fellowship, was a photo journalist and filmmaker in the late 60s working with NY Newsreel and Liberation News Service. Her black and white photos lay dormant in negative form for about 50 years before she started digitizing them and creating some buzz about their content. Her photos have appeared in the NY Times, New York Magazine, the New Yorker,…
Find out more »Everyday Economic Justice – Building Local Networks for Solidarity and Care
Join Maggie Fogarty and Grace Kindeke from the American Friends Service Committee-NH Program for an interactive workshop to share stories, ideas and practical tools for creating community-based economies built on equality, dignity and abundance. Together we can build the world that we want!
Find out more »What Will it Take to End Mass Incarceration?
Marc Mauer, Senior Advisor to The Sentencing Project, will assess the state of the movement to end mass incarceration and the need to transform our approach to promoting public safety. Marc will engage in a dialogue about what each of us can do to promote these changes within our communities.
Find out more »Live Concert with Judy Gorman
Judy Gorman has performed for the United Nations, at festivals, universities and concert halls, and at labor, peace and environmental events internationally. She has shared programs with her mentor, Pete Seeger, as well as Odetta, Harry Belafonte, Paul Winter, Sweet Honey in The Rock, Suzanne Vega, Richie Havens, the Indigo Girls, Susan Sarandon and James Earl Jones. Judy’s albums include ANALOG GIRL IN A DIGITAL WORLD, THE RISING OF US ALL, IF DREAMS WERE THUNDER, and RIGHT BEHIND YOU IN…
Find out more »Main Street
Join the University of Orange team to read from Mindy Fullilove's Main Street: How a City's Heart Connects Us All. Our reading will be followed by a visit to Tamworth's wonderful Main Street. We will visit and then make postcards with Greetings from Tamworth!
Find out more »Sol Y Canto Concert
Sol y Canto is the award winning Pan-Latin ensemble led by Puerto Rican/Argentine singer and bongo player Rosi Amador and New Mexican guitarist and composer Brian Amador. Featuring Rosi’s crystalline voice and Brian’s lush Spanish guitar and inventive compositions, Sol y Canto is known for making their music accessible to Spanish- and non-Spanish speaking audiences of all ages. Rosi and Brian are often joined by their daughter Alisa Amador, whose powerful songs and gorgeous, supple voice have launched her onto…
Find out more »Listening In Place
Join the University of Orange for an exploration of place using the senses and improvisation. Drawing upon practices of Deep Listening, music-making as everyday living, and place-based popular education, we will explore together ways of sounding out right-relationship with the world.
Find out more »Writing As An Activist with Ellen Meeropol
In this two-hour writing workshop, we’ll think together about ways move beyond headlines and slogans to write about the political issues that engage us. Prompts will be offfered to jump-start your writing. No experience necessary; all genres welcome.
Find out more »History-Telling
What can we take from the words and experiences of those who came before us? WFC’s next Executive Director, Octavia Driscoll, will share some of the insights from her graduate work on the subject and lead a workshop on the ways in which primary sources can open vulnerability, build empathy, and possibly be a vehicle for culture shift.
Find out more »Decoding and Decolonizing Children’s Literature
A workshop with Little Uprisings co-founder Tanya Nixon-Silberg exploring popular children's book titles as critical texts -- opportunities to notice, critically read, and disrupt dominant narratives with children around race, gender, ethnicity, LGBTQ identity, immigrant identity, and other marginalized identities. Tanya (she/her) is a Black mother, educator, artist, and radical dreamer. Her work informs the intersection of all these identities. Called a "translator", Tanya has the ability to distill concepts of racial justice to young children in ways that help…
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