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Featured Article: "Kreider, Robert Stanford (1919-2015)"
Robert Stanford "Bob" Kreider: Mennonite educator and denominational statesman; born 2 January 1919 in Sterling, Illinois, USA to Amos Ebersole Kreider (19 October 1889-11 February 1976) and Stella Shoemaker Kreider (17 November 1893-24 July 1977). He was the oldest of two sons. On 30 December 1945 Robert married Lois Lydia Sommer (8 February 1924-); they had six children, five of whom lived to adulthood. Robert died 27 December 2015 at his home in North Newton, Kansas, USA. When Robert was the age of two, the family moved to Goshen, Indiana where Amos Kreider taught at Goshen College. The family later moved to Bluffton, Ohio where Amos taught at Bluffton College. In 1929, Robert was baptized in the First Mennonite Church, Bluffton. In 1935, the family again relocated to Newton, Kansas where Robert entered Bethel College and earned a BA in History. As a conscientious objector to war, Robert was drafted into Civilian Public Service (CPS) from 1941 to 1945. His years of service included Assistant Director of the Colorado Springs CPS Camp, Secretary of Education for Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) CPS Camps, and Director of MCC's mental hospital program. Six weeks after marrying Lois Sommer in 1945, Robert left to direct MCC's relief program in Germany. One year later, Lois joined him as a relief worker, and they served in Europe until 1949. Robert earned MA (1941) and PhD (1953) degrees at the University of Chicago. His major professional positions were professor of history, academic dean, and president at Bluffton College, Ohio (1952-1974; president from 1965-1972); and professor of peace studies at Bethel College, Kansas (1975-1985). Kreider both inspired and created new church programs and institutions—Mennonite mental health centers; the Mennonite Central Committee Teachers Abroad Program in Africa; the Mennonite Experience in America history series; the "Mirror of the Martyrs" traveling exhibit at Kauffman Museum; and more. At Bluffton College he inaugurated an interterm program. At Bethel College he proposed a senior capstone course. As a member of innumerable committees and task forces for Mennonite Central Committee, the General Conference Mennonite Church, Mennonite Weekly Review, Mennonite World Conference, and other interchurch agencies, he pointed to new directions for service and ministry. Kreider had a gift for uniting people of different lifestyles and commitments in common endeavor. Coming from a family that had left the Mennonite Church (MC) in the troubled 1920s, he found ways to bridge differences among Mennonites of different backgrounds (General Conference Mennonite, Mennonite Church (MC), Mennonite Brethren Church, Old Order Mennonites and Amish), as well as across the Swiss-Dutch cultural divide. He claimed a special interest in living on the "margins," and reached out persistently to outsiders. He carried on an extensive correspondence with a high school friend who had gone into military service. He nurtured an unlikely friendship with a Jewish leader who had been complicit in sabotaging plans to display the "Mirror of the Martyrs" exhibit at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. Kreider's broad interests in the arts, in architecture, in the natural environment, and in international travel qualified him as a "renaissance man." As a historian he became fascinated with the Great Plains—the "grassy rolling wilderness of the Flint Hills and the majestic north-south travel route of millions of migratory birds." He was directly involved in the design of the Marpeck Student Center at Bluffton College. In his 88th year he traveled to Uzbekistan for a museum project and took delight in the exotic art and architecture of the city of Khiva. Kreider had a special gift for drawing out the personal stories of people he met. His ability to ask interesting questions and to listen attentively enlarged his amazing circle of friends. He nurtured a positive orthodox Christian faith, but was suspicious of theology and of any kind of dogmatism. Wherever they lived, Robert and Lois Kreider were active local church members and teachers. After his retirement from Bethel College, Kreider wrote a number of books, including the stories of Stephen Wang and James Liu, who in 1930 had come from China to study at Bluffton and Bethel colleges. He chronicled his own life story in a richly documented, two volume autobiography: My Early Years (2002) and Coming Home (2012). His hatful of unfinished projects at the time of his death included a volume of memorial service tributes he had delivered over the years, and an illustrated book about postwar Germany with black and white photos plus Kodachrome slides that he had taken as a relief worker in 1946-1949. BibliographyJuhnke, James. “In Memoriam: Robert S. Kreider (1919-2015).” Mennonite Quarterly Review 90 (April 2016): 131-132. This GAMEO article is derived in part, with permission, from this MQR memorial article. “Robert Kreider.” The Kansan (30 December 2015). Web. 16 May 2016. http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/thekansan/obituary.aspx?pid=177071547. Zuercher, Melanie. "Kreider bridged denominations, institutions, centuries." Mennonite Life 70 (2016). Web. 7 June 2016. https://mla.bethelks.edu/ml-archive/2016/kreider-bridged-denominations-institutions-centuri.php. Books by and about Robert KreiderKreider, Robert S. Where are we going? Newton, Kan : Faith and Life Press, 1971. Kreider, Robert S., et al., eds. The Mennonite Central Committee story, 5 vols. Scottdale, Pa. : Herald Press, 1980-1988. Kreider, Robert S. Anabaptist Mennonite time line. Newton, Kan. : Faith and Life Press, 1986. (A wall chart.) Kreider, Robert S. Interviews with Peter J. Dyck and Elfrieda Klassen Dyck : experiences in Mennonite Central Committee service in Europe, 1941-1949. Akron, Pa. : Mennonite Central Committee, 1988. Kreider, Robert S. Christians true in China. Newton, Kan. : Faith and Life Press, 1988. Biographies of James Liu and Stephen Wang. Kreider, Robert S. and Rachel Waltner Goossen. When good people quarrel : studies of conflict resolution. Scottdale, Pa. : Herald Press, 1989. Kreider, Robert S. and John S. Oyer. Mirror of the martyrs. Intercourse, PA : Good Books, 1990. Also issued in translation in French, German, Romanian, Russian, Indonesian and Spanish. Kreider, Robert S., et al. An Ebersole story : the ancestry and descendants of Abraham D. Ebersole (1822-1892) and Anna Rutt (1827-1904). Goshen, Ind. : Ebersole Family Association, 1996. Kreider, Robert S. Looking back into the future. North Newton, Kan. : Bethel College, 1998. Kreider, Robert S., et al. Joseph & Elizabeth : a sourcebook : the lives and ancestry of Joseph Shellenberger Shoemaker (1854-1936) and Elizabeth Sechrist Brubaker (1856-1931). North Newton, Kan. : Shoemaker Family Association, 1998. Kreider, Robert S. My early years : an autobiography. Kitchener, Ont. : Pandora Press, 2002. Kreider, Robert S. Coming home : an autobiography of my 1952-2011 years. North Newton, Kansas : Create Space/Mudcreek Press, 2012.
Cite This ArticleMLA style Juhnke, James C. "Welcome to GAMEO." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. May 2016. Web. 18 Dec 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Welcome_to_GAMEO&oldid=134229. APA style Juhnke, James C. (May 2016). Welcome to GAMEO. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 18 December 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Welcome_to_GAMEO&oldid=134229.
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Who We AreThe mission of GAMEO is to provide reliable information on Anabaptist-related (Amish, Mennonite, Hutterite, Brethren in Christ) topics, including history, theology, biography, institutions and local congregations. Secular topics from an Anabaptist perspective are also included. GAMEO includes the full text of the print Mennonite Encyclopedia, and continues to add new content both from North America and around the world. In July 2015 there were over 15,900 articles in GAMEO. A minimal amount of non-English content is currently available within the encyclopedia, and this content will continue to grow. GAMEO works together with the editors of other Mennonite encyclopedias to make their content available in the English language. These encyclopedias include the Lexikon der Mennoniten in Paraguay and the Mennonitisches Lexikon (MennLex) in Germany. Articles in GAMEO are assigned and editorially reviewed before upload; GAMEO is not a "Wiki"-style project. If you have specific corrections to articles or suggestions that should be added to the encyclopedia, please send them to GAMEO's email address at admin@gameo.org. GAMEO cooperates with the Global Anabaptist Wiki. The Global Anabaptist Wiki is an interactive community of Anabaptist-Mennonite groups from around the world. Initiated by the Mennonite Historical Library at Goshen College, the site is committed to helping individual groups: 1) tell their own stories; 2) post and preserve electronic archives; and 3) become better informed about other groups in the global Anabaptist fellowship. The Global Anabaptist Wiki is a major site for primary sources related to the Anabaptist-Mennonite tradition from the 16th century to the present and in a wide variety of languages. As a volunteer organization we are unable to respond to questions on Mennonite history or genealogical questions of any kind. For questions of that type, please contact a local genealogical society, or check with a Mennonite historical library or archives. For a list of Mennonite historical society or archives near you, please consult the Directory of Mennonite and Related Church Historians and Committees. If you would like to make a donation to the ongoing development and expansion of GAMEO we'd be glad for your help! Donations should sent via Mennonite World Conference and designated for GAMEO. Like us on Facebook |
GAMEO falls under the umbrella of the Mennonite World Conference Faith and Life Commission. Members of the Management Board include: Mennonite Historical Society of Canada, Mennonite Church USA Archives, Mennonite Brethren Historical Commission, Mennonite Central Committee, Mennonite World Conference and the Institute for the Study of Global Anabaptism