bing pixel

绿茶直播

Interfaith Symposium 2026

Healing the Earth, Healing Ourselves – Tending to the Soil We Share

By: Jerilyn Miller, Sr. Benefactor Relations Specialist

There was a moment during the Interfaith Symposium鈥擧ealing聽the Earth, Healing Ourselves鈥攚hen the room grew still.

Rev. Jen Bailey is speaking and wearing bright yellowRev. Jen Bailey, the keynote speaker, began with a story. She spoke about her grandmother, who worked the sugarcane fields of the American South in the 1930s and 40s, in the shadow of Jim Crow. Despite the violence and inequity around her, she cultivated dignity, community, and life from the land.

In that story was something deeper鈥攖he connection between soil and survival, between land and liberation.

Bailey named what many are already feeling. We are living, she said, in a time of 鈥渢oxic soil.鈥 Not only environmentally, but relationally and spiritually. The fractures we see鈥攃limate crisis, political division, loneliness, mistrust鈥攁re not isolated problems. They point to a deeper disconnection: from one another, from the earth, and from our shared humanity.

鈥淭his is not just a political crisis,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is a relational crisis鈥 a spiritual crisis.鈥

And yet, she did not leave the room in despair.

Instead, she offered another image: sunflowers.

Drawing on the concept of phytoremediation鈥攑lants that draw toxins out of the soil鈥擝ailey described the slow, patient work of healing. Even damaged soil can be restored. Not quickly. Not easily. But through sustained care.

Healing, in this vision, is not a grand solution. It is a practice.

With native flower seed packets in hand, participants turned to one another鈥攕haring ideas, hopes, and the ways they are already tending their communities. For Augsburg senior Zuko Buechler 鈥26 an urban studies major, the conversation felt both personal and practical.

鈥淚鈥檓 learning a lot about practices with the land and healing,鈥 Buechler said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 making me think about how I can plant these seeds at my grandmother鈥檚 [home] and share in her love of gardening 鈥攁 connection that has shaped me.鈥

Bailey closed with a simple invitation: a daily discipline of choosing to plant something life-giving, even when there is no guarantee of what will grow.

Over lunch, the conversation continued鈥攇rounded in honesty about life experiences and resilience. Bex Klafter of Lutheran Social Services reflected on what stayed with her most:

鈥淎ll land is good,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here is value鈥攅ven when the soil needs to be amended.鈥

It is a simple idea, but one that shifts the frame. Healing does not begin with perfection. It begins with what is already here.

At Augsburg, that kind of work takes shape in real time鈥攊n conversations like these, in shared practices, and in a community willing to stay with what is difficult and choosing to tend to what is possible.

Marty Center

We鈥檙e delighted that 绿茶直播 President Paul Pribbenow utilized our Executive Director, Prof. Najeeba Syeed鈥檚 writing on a lived theology of neighborliness in his recent piece for the Martin Marty Center at University of Chicago Divinity School.

If there is a blessing to be wrestled from the wreckage of Operation Metro Surge, it鈥檚 that our students have received an indelible education in what my colleague Najeeba Syeed a 鈥渓ived theology of neighborliness,鈥 one that is likely to shape their lives forever.

Read his full piece here:

Interfaith Cooperation in Minnesota

March 5, 2026 鈥 Our Executive Director, Prof. Najeeba Syeed offered testimony on interfaith cooperation in the state of Minnesota in response to current crises. She addressed members of the ELCA Lutheran community along with Augsburg Univerisity alumna Kristen Opalinski. Kristen and Najeeba offered theological and practical ways to improve the conditions of communities in this moment. These contributions were grounded in ELCA and multifaith sources and practices. We love collaborating with Lutheran and interfaith partners, especially when they are Auggie alumni!

 

Zoom call with Najeeba & Kristen

Article: ICE Raids Reignite Rituals of Resistance in Minneapolis

Najeeba Syeed has been featured in an Interfaith America by Rachel Crowe, “ICE Raids Reignite Rituals of Resistance in Minneapolis”:

While ICE鈥檚 presence in Minneapolis has propelled the city onto the national stage in recent weeks, Minnesotans have been 鈥済rappling with a changed reality on the ground for more than six weeks,鈥 executive director of Interfaith at 绿茶直播 Najeeba Syeed says. 鈥淭he reality is people are not okay; it鈥檚 not business as usual.鈥

a protestor holds up a guitar in a march protesting ICE actions in MN

Article: Neighborliness is a lived theology in Minnesota

 

Interfaith Institute Executive Director Najeeba Syeed recently wrote an on Religion News Service about how Minnesotans are caring for each other after the fatal shooting of Renee Good.

 

People gather around a makeshift memorial honoring Renee Good, near the site of the shooting in Minneapolis, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/John Locher)

 

Interfaith Scholars Visit Brian Coyle Center

Our November 20th Interfaith Scholars class took place at the in the Minneapolis Cedar-Riverside community where Augsburg is located. During their visit students:

  • Learned about community youth programs focused on sports, job readiness, tech education, and others that help neighborhood kids thrive from Auggie alum Coach Jennifer Weber聽 and聽 Abdirahman Mukhtar of .
  • Attended an interfaith dialogue between Trinity Lutheran church and Dar Ul Hijrah mosque members, led by Pastor Jane Bucklee Farley and Imam Sharif Mohamed .Table conversations focused on how faith communities can support bridgebuilding and interfaith cooperation on community based challenges and dire issues of our time including mental health support.
  • Reflected on what they learned with community leaders during dinner and connected with volunteer opportunities to serve our unhoused neighbors, work with youth, support food shelf projects and further Augsburg鈥檚 engagement in building a better world for all.

After the visit, Imam Sharif noted, “The interfaith exchange we experienced together reflects the very best of what community engagement and education can be鈥攔ooted in care, dignity, and mutual respect.”

 

Hashcast Podcast Features Najeeba Syeed: Are We in Each Other’s Futures?

 

 

17 min

Hosts Jason and Tuhina sit down with peacemaker, healer, and scholar, Dr. Najeeba Syeed, to talk about a whole host of topics adjacent to building the interfaith table, the difference between inter-faith and intra-faith dialogue, and what it means to recognize the pluralistic reality all around us.

 

Augsburg Students Featured in Interfaith America Magazine

 

 

Auggie Mahamed Yusuf was quoted in an Interfaith America article about his work to raise awareness and funding for basic hygiene supplies for unhoused neighbors in the Cedar-Riverside community. Many thanks to Pre-Med students, former Interfaith Scholars, and other Auggies who helped make this project a success!

In Good Faith Podcast features Najeeba Syeed: Lived Religion & Peacebuilding

 

Ep. 311: Lived Religion & Peacebuilding | Najeeba Syeed

 

In Good Faith Podcast

29 min

Dr. Najeeba Syeed discusses how peacebuilding and lived religion unify us and how they’re crucial to a democratic society. Najeeba Syeed is the inaugural El-Hibri endowed chair and executive director of Interfaith at 绿茶直播 in Minneapolis MN. She co-edited the book 鈥淐ritical Approaches to Interreligious Education,鈥 and she鈥檚 been feature in the Los Angeles Times, or NPR, PBS, and other television shows, and she lectures at major universities across the US.

Welcome to our 2024-25 Advancing Religious Pluralism Faculty Fellows

 

Please welcome our distinguished 绿茶直播 2024-25

Interfaith Institute Advancing Religious Pluralism Faculty Fellows!聽

 

绿茶直播 2024-25 Interfaith Institute Advancing Religious Pluralism Faculty Fellows

 

Margit Berman, Department of Clinical Psychology聽

Kathleen Clark, Department of Nursing (Chair)聽

Sarah Degner Riveros, Department of Languages and Cross-Cultural Studies

Daniel Hickox-Young, Department of Physics

Brooklyn Loxtercamp, Department of Nursing聽

Sergio Madrid-Aranda, Department of Education

Vanessa Marr, Department of Social Work聽

Kao Nou Moua, Department of Social Work聽

 

We are so pleased to welcome this cohort from across academic disciplines , the cohort is led by El-Hibri Endowed Chair Najeeba Syeed and Matthew Maruggi, Chair of Religion and Philosophy Department. In addition to working on curricula in their own fields related to religious pluralism they will be supported for further training and travel of their own choice in religious pluralism. We look forward to their campus wide impact!聽