Open houses, open hearts

For 75 years, an MCC volunteer exchange program has shaped worldviews, life paths

Nestar Lakot holds a Ugandan flag at IVEP’s 75th anniversary at the MCC campus in Akron, Pa. From Uganda, she was a participant in IVEP in 2006-07 with Canadian Foodgrains Bank in Winnipeg, Man. Currently she lives in the Netherlands. — Christy Kauffman/MCC Nestar Lakot holds a Ugandan flag at IVEP’s 75th anniversary at the MCC campus in Akron, Pa. From Uganda, she was a participant in IVEP in 2006-07 with Canadian Foodgrains Bank in Winnipeg, Man. Currently she lives in the Netherlands. — Christy Kauffman/MCC

Since 1950, more than 3,900 young adults from around the world have taken part in Mennonite Central Committee’s International Volunteer Exchange Program, spending a year living with host families, worshiping in local congregations and serving in work placements.

In November, in honor of IVEP’s 75th anniversary, IVEP alumni came together in a Zoom call reaching hundreds of people across the globe, in a weekend of events at the MCC campus in Akron, Pa., and in gatherings from Bolivia and Paraguay to Zimbabwe and Kenya, India and Bangladesh.

They shared memories and stories of the difference IVEP has made.

“The impact this program has given in the lives of young people is beyond imagination,” said Vikal Pravin Rao, who came from Chhattisgarh in central India to serve with IVEP in 1993-94.

Settling into his IVEP placement in Akron, he was shaped by how he saw his host parents, Phil and Cindy Horst, live out their faith.

“I learned from their life, their simplicity. What does it mean to follow Jesus? What is the true meaning of discipleship?” he said. “That touched me deeply. I thought I should also serve.”

These kinds of connections — the testimonies and ties built slowly over months of shared meals, lives and experiences — are why IVEP was formed.

After World War II, MCC relief workers in Europe saw the difference that meeting with people who had been called the “enemy” had made in their lives. They dreamed of an MCC program that would, as longtime IVEP leader Doreen Harms once recalled, bring young people to the U.S. or Canada for a year “to live and work, worship and play with people here in their homes, communities and churches.”

Harms was asked to bring that dream to life — and would spend most of her four decades at MCC shaping the program.

In 1950, the first 21 young adults in the new program — all men, all from Europe, all required by MCC’s agreement with the U.S. government to work in agricultural settings — boarded ships for the U.S.

That was just the beginning. The first female participants came in 1951. In 1955, the program welcomed a participant from Japan and another from Paraguay in 1956. Other countries were added, work assignments broadened.

At the IVEP anniversary gathering in Akron, Pa., Madhur Kant Gardia, left, and Vikal Pravin Rao, right, who both came from India in 1993-94, greet Mary Martin, a longtime IVEP host in Akron as well as a longtime staff member at the MCC Material Resources Center in Ephrata. — Christy Kauffman/MCC
At the IVEP anniversary gathering in Akron, Pa., Madhur Kant Gardia, left, and Vikal Pravin Rao, right, who both came from India in 1993-94, greet Mary Martin, a longtime IVEP host in Akron as well as a longtime staff member at the MCC Material Resources Center in Ephrata. — Christy Kauffman/MCC

Over 75 years, young adults from more than 80 countries have taken part. As they do, participants — like Leonard Triyono, who left his village in Central Java, Indonesia, to serve with IVEP in 1978-79 — step from the world they knew into new cultures, languages, food, weather, customs.

“When I learned I had been selected for IVEP, I was thrilled, anxious and terrified all at once,” Triyono recalled. “My English was limited and my world was small, but my heart was wide open.”

In Souderton, Pa., in the home of Andy and Ruth Rosenberger, his language skills grew. The cornflakes and cold milk at breakfast — a jarring change from the fried rice that usually marked his mornings — in time became a welcome treat.

He treasures a crocheted blanket Ruth Rosenberger made and shipped to him in Indonesia, a few years after his IVEP time, with a letter saying there was “love in every stitch.”

He vividly recalls the welcome he found in the second half of the year in Berne, Ind., where youth at First Mennonite Church invited him to meals and ballgames and on adventures to Chicago and St. Louis.

Returning to Indonesia, he found it wasn’t just his appetite for cornflakes that had shifted.

“IVEP changed how I saw the world and my place in it,” he said. “It taught us to listen more deeply, to see beyond stereotypes and to value service above self.”

In 1984, Tabitha Thomas, an IVEP participant from India, taught third-grade children at Hinkletown Mennonite School in Lancaster County, Pa. Forty IVEP participants have served at the school. — Joy Hofer/MCC
In 1984, Tabitha Thomas, an IVEP participant from India, taught third-grade children at Hinkletown Mennonite School in Lancaster County, Pa. Forty IVEP participants have served at the school. — Joy Hofer/MCC

At the anniversary gathering in Akron, as IVEP alumni each wrote a word representing their year onto a square of fabric, testimonies stretched across the room: life-changing, transformative, wonder, learning, blessing, connected, breakthrough, launch pad.

Nestar Lakot wrote “instrument.”

“The blessings I got through the year and what I learned through the year helped me be an instrument of blessing to others,” said Lakot, who grew up in a village in Uganda and served with the Canadian Foodgrains Bank in Winnipeg, Man., in 2006-07.

She drew a tuning fork on her quilt square and said: “Just like a tuning fork gives you the key, I believe the experiences, the knowledge, the person I have become because of this program, the way I reflect on things . . . changed so much.”

Young adults in IVEP have sparked change in their workplaces, host families, churches and communities.

Since 1982, 40 young adults from 22 countries have served at Hinkletown Mennonite School in Pennsylvania through IVEP, sharing their cultures and traditions as they gain teaching experience.

“It brings the world to the students,” said principal Miles Yoder. “It helps the students to have a worldview larger than Lancaster County.”

Celebrations of IVEP’s 75th anniversary were held in locations across the globe. This group of 45 IVEP alumni gathered in Semarang, Indonesia, Nov. 1. — Wahana Wijnamurti Indonesia
Celebrations of IVEP’s 75th anniversary were held in locations across the globe. This group of 45 IVEP alumni gathered in Semarang, Indonesia, Nov. 1. — Wahana Wijnamurti Indonesia

Rachel Nolt, now pastor of Akron Mennonite Church, was 10 years old when her family welcomed a young adult from Poland into their home in northern Michigan.

“And with his arrival my small rural world expanded exponentially,” she said during the IVEP anniversary ­global Zoom call.

Her own daughters were 9 and 11 in 2012 when she and her husband welcomed Brenda Perez from Paraguay into their home in northern Indiana.

“Through my experience as an IVEP host mom, I’ve learned to see with new eyes, to question my assumptions, to be open to new ways of doing things,” Nolt said.

She had texted with Perez about what to share in the gathering. Perez, noting how much war, hate and division are present in the world today, recalled Colossians 3:14, which she and her sons recently memorized: “But above all these things put on love, which is the bond of perfection.”

“IVEP is about growing love among individuals across divisions, and as that love grows, it spreads to others around us,” Nolt said.

Today, IVEP Alumni are living out the love and growth they experienced in the program.

Vikal Pravin Rao has served as general secretary for the Mennonite Church of India and is now a regional representative for Mennonite World Conference. His family has hosted young adults from Asia and Africa as they serve in the Young Anabaptist Mennonite Exchange Network, or YAMEN, a joint program of MCC and MWC.

He has urged young people in his church, including Emmanuel Mahendra, to try IVEP.

In turn, Mahendra, inspired by how his IVEP host family in 2017-18 provided him with a second home, hosted a YAMEN participant in 2022-23 and another in 2023-24.

“You not only open your house,” Mahendra said, “but open your heart also.”

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