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Was ist der Buzz über Bees for Peace? Nehmen Sie an Dinner Church teil, um herauszufinden!

Dinner Church beinhaltet eine einfache Mahlzeit und einen Gottesdienst, der auf den Gemeinschaftsmahlzeiten der frühen Christen basiert. Während dieser Zeit der physischen Distanzierung halten wir eine englische Andacht Dinner Church online über Zoom.

Am Mittwoch, den 19. Mai 2021, um 19.00 Uhr, treffen wir uns, um mit Carrie Dohe und Anne McArdle (Bees for Peace) Wort, Gebet und Besinnung zu sprechen.

Nehmen Sie am Zoom Meeting teil, indem Sie sich auf Eventbrite anmelden, www.MLCDinnerChurchOnlineMay19.eventbrite.ca, oder ein E-Mail am Kirchenbüro churchoffice@martinluther.ca senden.

Bitte halten Sie ein Getränk, Brot und eine Kerze für unser Treffen bereit. Sie können auch gerne während der Gesprächszeit Abendessen. Unsere Gastrednerinnen haben die folgende Rezepte geteilet: vegan banana muffin tops and spiced fruit salad.

Bitte spenden Sie an Second Harvest, oder auch an lokale Partner, die unseren Nachbarn Lebensmittel anbieten.


Learn more about our guest speakers:

Carrie B. Dohe (Ph.D., University of Chicago, 2012) recently started a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Toronto School of the Environment, focusing on a project she started in Germany called Bees for Peace. This project builds bridges between religious organizations and nature conservationists to mobilize faith communities for pollinator protection. Bees for Peace was recognized as an Official Project of the UN Decade on Biodiversity in Germany in August 2020.
Until relocating to Toronto, Carrie was a project research associate at the University of Marburg. With funding by the German Research Foundation, Carrie investigated how faith-based environmentalism and climate protection are transforming religious teachings and practices. She is especially interested in examining the role non-religious factors play in this transformational process, as well as the kinds of issues raised by interfaith engagement for the environment.

 

Anne McArdle is a Toronto local working with Bees for Peace in Canada. After graduating from the University of Toronto, Anne began pursuing a career with international charitable organizations, and has lived overseas twice as a result. Having always been interested in world religions and cultures, living and working with the local communities around the world encouraged her to work with many different communities together in Toronto to make a positive impact in her hometown. Anne’s next goal is to learn a fourth language.

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