Calendar
Our Summer 2024 program is here! Check calendar below for specific events.
Recurring events also hold each week (June 28-September 3, 2024), including:
Sunday Evenings Games! Kicking off each week with interactive fun from charades to WFC Jeopardy! and even flashlight tag…
Tuesday Afternoons WFC Book of the Summer discussions. Cast your vote for our 2024 Book of the Summer by May 1!
Wednesday Evenings S’more community campfires. What’s more “summer” than a campfire? Stars visible. Guitars/singing welcome.
Weekday Afternoons Summer Social Justice Institute. Our social justice fellows gather to discuss social movements & justice issues. Join for a session or volunteer as a mentor!
Friday Evenings Fun Night! Bring your talents to share with our community. Music, poetry, children’s plays, bad dad jokes. Every Friday. Open to all. Sign up ahead or let the spirit move you.
Saturday Mornings* Tamworth Farmers’ Market. If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em! We help arrange carpooling to the best farmers’ market & local gathering place. *Occasional Saturday morning programs. Check below.
Saturday Afternoons Community conversations. We open spaces for facilitated conversations on issues dividing the left, finding resilience among the horrors of 2024, and sharing hopes/ideas for the future of World Fellowship.
Saturday Evenings* Music and poetry, contra dancing and theater. Served up coffeehouse style to round out your week or hit a weekend high note. *Check below for specifics.
Can an Israel-Palestine confederation serve as a new pathway to peace? (Ron Skolnik)
30 June @ 10:00 am - 11:30 am
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 the traditional two-state approach.