Item 1.0 - Snowman outside Mennonite Heritage Center

Original Digital object not accessible

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Reference code

CA MHC 466-1.0

Title

Snowman outside Mennonite Heritage Center

Date(s)

  • 1987 (Creation)

Level of description

Item

Extent and medium

1 photograph : b&w ; 17.5 x 10.5 cm

Context area

Name of creator

(1937-2011)

Biographical history

Mennonite Weekly Review obituary:

Muriel Thiessen Stackley, who touched many lives as a writer, editor, pastor, theologian, peacemaker and poet, died of cancer Jan. 29. She was 73.

She edited The Mennonite from 1986 to 1992 when it was the publication of the General Conference Mennonite Church. She worked in the denominational office in Newton, Kan., for 18 years, writing and editing news, curriculum and materials for youth.In her editorials and in a recent book of poetry, War Is a God That Demands Human Sacrifice, she demonstrated that she was also called to be a prophet.

She was born March 2, 1937, in Champa, India, to missionaries John and Elizabeth (Wiens) Thiessen. She graduated from Bluffton (Ohio) University, the University of Kansas and Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary in Elkhart, Ind.

She married Theodore Stackley on June 21, 1964. He died April 5, 1985. They served with Church World Service in Botswana in the early 1970s.

She was coordinator of the Newton Area Peace Center from 1992 to 1995. After completing seminary, she served as pastor of Bergthal Mennonite Church, Pawnee Rock, Kan., from 1996 to 2002. She co-authored Garden in the Wilderness, a book about the Mennonite colonies in Paraguay, with Edgar Stoesz.

In 2003 she served with Mennonite Voluntary Service as operations coordinator with the Arts in Prison program in Kansas City. She became a member and deacon of Rainbow Mennonite Church in Kansas City.

Though her health was fragile, she completed Christian Peacemaker Teams training in January 2009 and became a CPT reservist. She served on the CPT steering committee and participated in delegations to Chiapas, Mexico, and to the Middle East.

She witnessed for peace through her writing, speaking and lifestyle. After her children were grown, she downsized her living space, giving away possessions and eventually living in an efficiency apartment. She resisted paying for war by living with a below-taxable income.

In a farewell message, she asked her friends and family to continue her work for peace and to "sing out daily with the joy of one who appreciates the smallest details and feels powerful enough to do battle with giants."

Stackley is survived by three children, Therron Stackley and Christy Aggens of Lincoln, Javan and Melissa Stackley DeCino of Longmont, Colo., and Tammur Stackley and Jason Minford of Philadelphia; two grandchildren; a sister, Dorothy Anderson of Lawson, Mo.; and a brother, Arthur D. Thiessen of Port Orchard, Wash.

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Scope and content

This is a photo of a snowman built between the Mennonite Heritage Center and the CMBC residence building.

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Price: 5.00
Megapixels: 2.4
Resolution: 1950x1207

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