Father Columba Stewart, OSB, to deliver 2019 Jefferson Lecture

COLLEGEVILLE, Minn. – Father Columba Stewart, OSB, executive director of the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (HMML) at Saint John’s University, Collegeville, Minnesota, will deliver the 2019 Jefferson Lecture to a distinguished national audience on Monday, October 7.

Established by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) in 1972, the Jefferson Lecture is the highest honor bestowed by the Federal Government for contributions to the humanities. NEH awards this honor annually to an individual whose career exemplifies the utmost level of achievement in American intellectual and cultural life.

This is the first time the award has been given to a Minnesotan, a member of the clergy, or a Benedictine monk.

Previous Jefferson Lecturers include John Hope Franklin, Toni Morrison, David McCullough, Donald Kagan, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., and Ken Burns.

The lecture will take place at 7:30 p.m. (EDT) Monday, October 7, at the Warner Theatre in Washington, D.C. The title of the lecture is “Cultural Heritage Present and Future: A Benedictine Monk’s Long View.”

In his lecture, Fr. Columba will explain why preserving cultural heritage from other peoples and other times — such as the manuscripts he and his colleagues digitize to ensure their contents are safe despite the many threats to manuscript from weather, war, and civil unrest — is essential to the future of humankind. The stories contained in them offer a shared experience between cultures, making possible the intellectual engagement and debate necessary for mutual understanding. Such understanding, he says, is the only possible basis we have for moving away from fanaticism and ignorance, and toward the common good. 

Fr. Columba delivers this critical message by tracing HMML’s adventurous history, from its roots with the medieval Benedictine laboring in the scriptorium, to the modern monk hiding from armed militants in Timbuktu. The talk goes to the heart of the humanities: why cultural heritage is so valuable that people spend — and even risk — their lives to preserve them. 

Tickets to the lecture are free of charge and distributed on a first-come, first-served basis at www.neh.gov or (202) 606-8340. The event will be livestreamed at www.neh.gov and archived by the NEH.

Fr. Columba, a native of Houston, Texas, and a graduate of Harvard, Yale, and Oxford universities, is Professor of Theology at Saint John’s University School of Theology and Seminary. He has published and lectured extensively in his research field of early Christian monasticism. In 2009-10, he was the recipient of a year-long research fellowship from the NEH and a residential fellowship in Byzantine Studies at the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library in Washington, D.C. In 2016-17, he was awarded both a residency at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton and a Guggenheim Fellowship for work on his upcoming book, “Between Earth and Heaven: Interpreting the Origins of Christian Asceticism and Monasticism.” He is also a Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar for 2019-20, speaking about the work of HMML and his own research at colleges and universities across the United States.

Since becoming HMML’s executive director in 2003, Fr. Columba has traveled throughout the Middle East, Africa, Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, and South Asia, cultivating relationships with communities possessing historic manuscript collections from the early medieval to modern periods. Under his leadership, HMML has digitized over 150,000 manuscripts in many of the world’s most dangerous and inaccessible places, including northern Iraq, Syria, and the libraries of Timbuktu in Mali, covering a range of religious and cultural traditions. These texts and records are made available online through the Virtual HMML platform (vHMML.org).

“A ‘Monument Man’ of our time, Fr. Columba Stewart has dauntlessly rescued centuries’ worth of irreplaceable cultural heritage under threat from around the world,” said NEH Chairman Jon Parrish Peede. “In doing so, he and his colleagues have helped preserve the records of the religion, art, literature, culture, and knowledge of distant eras of human history so that we may celebrate and learn from those that came before us.”

A professed Benedictine monk of Saint John’s Abbey since 1981, Fr. Columba has become a recognized authority in the monastic and ecumenical worlds, having been appointed to the International Joint Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Oriental Orthodox Churches in 2009. Since 2018, he has been a resident scholar at the Collegeville Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research.

Established in 1965, HMML is a global cultural organization whose mission is to preserve and share the world’s manuscript heritage. It has formed partnerships with over 580 libraries and archives worldwide. HMML has three areas of focus: digital preservation of rare and endangered manuscripts; cataloging and sharing the manuscripts online; and fostering research and education about the cultures that produced them. HMML curates exhibitions and hosts scholars, classes and workshops throughout the year and is the home of an internationally known handwritten and illuminated Bible in modern English, The Saint John’s Bible. HMML’s work is inspired by a 1500-year Benedictine tradition of cultural preservation.

Learn more about HMML and Fr. Columba at https://hmmlorg.com/

Saint John’s University is a Catholic liberal arts college for men with a graduate school of theology for women and men located in Collegeville, Minnesota.

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