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Mennonite Collegiate Institute (Gretna, Manitoba)

  • CA-MHC-2016
  • Corporate body
  • 1889-

The Mennonite Collegiate Institute (MCI), originally known as the Mennonitische Bildungsanstalt (Mennonite Educational Institute, MEI) was founded by the MEI School Society in 1888. Opening its doors in Gretna, Manitoba in 1889 under the direction of teacher Wilhelm Rempel, the school's primary mandate was the training of Mennonite elementary school teachers. With time, however, an increasing number of Mennonite parents came to value education beyond basic arithmetic and literacy skills, and sent their children to the institute for the more general purpose of acquiring a good education in a Christian context.
Heinrich H. Ewert was hired as the school's principal and teacher in 1891, opening the door for the provincial government's support since he had the qualifications required by Manitoba's Department of Education. Under Ewert's leadership the school experienced its incorporation in 1893, the curtailment of governmental support in 1903, and the 1904-1908 controversy regarding the location of a new school building since the MEI's facilities had become unable to meet the growing demands on the institution. When Altona was chosen above Gretna and Winkler as the site of the new school, Gretna supporters appointed Ewert as the principal of a new school of their own which they named the Mennonitische Lehranstalt (Mennonite Collegiate Institute). Both the MCI (Gretna) and the new MEI (Altona) were dedicated in 1908.

H.H. Ewert was succeeded by Gerhard H. Peters as principal of the MCI at the time of his death in 1934. Other principals include Paul J. Schaefer, 1948-1967; Gerhard Ens, 1967-1976, with Ernie Wiens as acting principal from 1971-1972 and Henry Dick as vice-principal during this time; Ken Loewen, 1976-1985; and Allan Dueck, 1985- , with vice-principal Dave Regehr.

Following its re-opening as the MCI, the school in Gretna underwent several administrative changes. In 1930 the School Society which had founded the institute transferred its control of MCI to the Mennonitische Schulkonferenz von Manitoba (Manitoba Church-School Conference). When this organization disbanded in 1936, the school fell into the jurisdiction of the Conference of Mennonites in Manitoba (CMM), which soon relinquished its control to the Schulverein der Mennonitengemeinden Manitobas (Manitoa Inter-Mennonite School Society) in 1939. The school was rebuilt in 1964/65 following a fire destroyed the facility in 1963, and major renovations to the dormitory and gymnasium were made in 1976. During the 1976, MCI again began accepting government funding, signalling a movement towards the educational mainstream that was ushered in with the appointment of Ken Loewen as principal. This trend was somewhat reversed with the Think Tank which met in 1986 to provide direction and purpose for the MCI and whose recommendations reflected a renewed commitment to the values espoused by the school's founders.

Mennonite Community Association

  • Corporate body

Mennonite Community Association was organized in 1946, its stated purpose being "to support and strengthen the Christian community as expressed in Mennonite teachings and practices; to stimulate community interests—religious, social, cultural, economic—among the Mennonite people; to publicize the Mennonite way of life through the medium of publications and any other means deemed advisable by the Association."

The major undertaking of the Association was the founding of the Mennonite Community magazine which it published from January 1947 to October 1949. Beginning in November 1949 and continuing to December 1953 the magazine was published by the Mennonite Publishing House. Beginning in January 1954 the Mennonite Community and the Christian Monitor were discontinued and a new periodical, Christian Living (A Magazine for Home and Community), took their place. The Mennonite Community Association maintained a close relationship to the new periodical, two of its officers serving, as consulting editors of Christian Living.

In 1950 the Association, in cooperation with the John C. Winston Company, published the Mennonite Community Cookbook, a compilation of 1,400 favorite family recipes collected by Mary Emma Showalter from Mennonite communities. The Association sponsored an annual Conference on Christian Community Relations and supported the work of the Mennonite Research Foundation, and after 1953 awarded several scholarships annually to advanced students who show promise in the area of Christian community leadership.

Mennonite Community Orchestra Concert: (1978: Winnipeg, Manitoba)

  • CA-CMBS-2023
  • Corporate body
  • 4 June 1978
  • first concert of the newly organized 80-member orchestra performed a varied program of light classical works and accompanied Haydn's choral work, Te Deum in C, directed by Dr. George Wiebe, Canadian Mennonite Bible College.
  • a combined choir consisting of choirs from MBCI and Westgate Mennonite Collegiate were accompanied by the orchestra
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