Church in the Holy Land

Church in the Holy Land

Rev. John M. Paul, S.J.

Presented by Rev. John M. Paul, SJ

Rector, Tantur Ecumenical Institute

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“Fr. JP” is a member of the Midwest Province of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). He was ordained in 1980 and has a Masters of Sacred Theology from the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley, California, as well as a Masters of Fine Arts in Theatre from The Catholic University in Washington, D.C. He has served as Director of Novices, Assistant Provincial, Director of Formation, and Provincial Assistant for Native Ministry in his years of internal governance within the Jesuits. He also has ministered with Native peoples on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, working as teacher, superior, president, and superintendent of schools at Red Cloud Indian School. Prior to coming to Tantur, he was at Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He was a participant in Tantur’s six-week program in 2013.

Daniel Schwake

Presented by Daniel Schwake

Executive Director, Jerusalem, University of Notre Dame Tantur

Dr. Daniel Schwake was appointed the executive director for the University of Notre Dame in Jerusalem in April 2019.

Schwake joined Notre Dame after a decade in the consulting industry. He most recently held the position of principal (associate partner) in the strategy consulting firm Oliver Wyman. He provided advice to top executives of large corporations, financial institutions, regulators, and ministries. He has led the execution of high profile engagements across the globe, covering a wide range of topics, including enterprise-wide strategy, financial planning, risk and regulation, reorganization, and restructuring. Previously, Schwake held a similar position with Deloitte and had previously also worked in asset management with Deutsche Bank Group.

He holds a B.Sc. and Diploma (M.Sc.) in business administration from the University of Münster, and a doctorate in economics from the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany. Schwake speaks fluent English, German, Arabic, and Hebrew.

Hill in the Holy Land

The University of Notre Dame at Tantur includes the Tantur Ecumenical Institute, a center for Christian and interfaith dialogue founded in 1972, and the Jerusalem Global Gateway, which engages Notre Dame students and faculty with other scholars in the region.

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Podcast - Tantur: Hill in the Holy Land

Exploring Notre Dame’s past, present, and future in Jerusalem

Trailer

Tantur founder Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, C.S.C., once said, “Jerusalem is a place that really catches you in the heart.” And it’s Father Ted’s words that we hear first as we introduce the series. But the experience in and around Jerusalem is about more than a pilgrimage to honor the past. The University is engaging the region to build a better future. This is Tantur: Hill in the Holy Land.


Origin Story

Episode one traces the origins of Notre Dame’s presence in Jerusalem, back to the events of the late 1950s in the Catholic Church. The Second Vatican Council inspired a warming of relations between various Christian traditions, a movement memorialized by Pope Paul VI, who famously embraced Orthodox Patriarch Athenagoras on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem in 1964, ending centuries of excommunication between East and West.

On the momentum of that embrace, the pope would turn to his friend in Catholic higher education, Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, C.S.C., to take on an ambitious and unprecedented project: the establishment of a center for intra-Christian scholarship and dialogue in Jerusalem. 

The task was no small feat to begin with, and many unforeseen obstacles only added to its daunting nature. Not the least of these unexpected turns was the Six-Day War, which literally changed the country in which the institute would be located.

Eventually, in 1972, the Tantur Ecumenical Institute was inaugurated at a spot between Jerusalem and Bethlehem. The dream of ecumenical scholarship was born on 36 acres of land that sit amid some of the holiest sites in Abrahamic religion.

Transcript: Origin Story


Unearthing the Past

In Episode two, we explore what may be under the surface of the University of Notre Dame at Tantur. Abraham (Avi) Winitzer, Notre Dame professor of theology, leads a group of students in the first-ever official archaeological survey on the grounds. 

Then, Winitzer’s class joins students from all over the world at Tel Azekah, in the Judean hill country. Azekah is most famous for anchoring the theater of one of the greatest stories ever told: the battle of David vs. Goliath. We hear from Notre Dame students and scholars from Tel Aviv University on what the past can tell us about the present … and we encounter a truly bizarre scene in which a tour guide bursts onto the site to give us his own rendition of the David vs. Goliath story.

Transcript: Unearthing The Past


The Fifth Gospel

St. Jerome, who famously translated the Bible into Latin working from the same cave system in which Jesus was born, said, “Five gospels record the life of Jesus. Four you will find in books and the one you will find in the land they call Holy. Read the fifth gospel and the world of the four will open to you.”

In Episode three, we visit St. Jerome’s study in Bethlehem with a group of Notre Dame students in the Holy Land for a summer study program. Their time in Bethlehem, Jerusalem, and other key sites in Israel was a transformative experience, and not just in religious terms. “People come here to see the holy sites,” observed University of Notre Dame at Tantur academic director Hannah Hemphill, “but while they see the old stones, they fail to see the living stones, the people who are living in the land today.”

As Notre Dame students explore Israel and the West Bank, they’re exposed to different narratives about the current conflict in the region, and are forced to square the reality they’ve heard back home with the one they’re seeing firsthand.

Transcript: The Fifth Gospel


Oasis

In the final episode, we explore Tantur using two interpretations of a commonly used metaphor for the place: an oasis. Many people describe the Tantur grounds in terms of its tranquility, beauty, and peace. That is certainly true. But the literal definition of an oasis is “a fertile spot.” We’ll explain how Notre Dame at Tantur has become a place where seeds are planted and meet a Tantur “alumna” who views her time there as a pivot point in her career. And, we’ll explore what the University is planning to do to plant more seeds over the next 50 years.

Transcript: Oasis

Lenten Holy Land Pilgrimage

During Lent 2019, FaithND offered readers an opportunity to experience a digital pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Each day throughout Lent, they meditated upon different aspects of pilgrimage to the Holy Land and on the experience of the Christian life as a pilgrimage — as a journey to holy places in Christian history, as catechumens to baptism, as a journey to heaven — while they walked the Lenten pilgrimage towards the celebration of the Resurrection.

Experience the Lenten Holy Land Pilgrimage through reflections, photos, art, music, and more.

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Presented by Daniel Schwake and Rev. John M. Paul, SJ

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Featured Speakers: 

  • Reverend John M. Paul, S.J., Rector, Tantur Ecumenical Institute
  • Daniel Schwake, Executive Director, University of Notre Dame at Tantur

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