Community Corner
Newton Photography Exhibit Examines Faith Amid Pandemic
As part of the exhibit, Hebrew College is organizing a multi faith panel discussion virtually on April 18.

NEWTON, MA β How does one worship alone? How have people of different religions embraced their faith traditions during the pandemic?
Hebrew College is tackling these questions in a pandemic-inspired photography show entitled βFaith in Isolation Expressed,β which can be viewed in-person by appointment from April 12 through June 6.
βAll religions have beautiful things to share with one another. I want to show how different religious practitioners who were isolated from their communities were strengthened by their faith, revealing the core values of their inherent purpose,β said Beacon Hill photographer and teacher Brenda Bancel, who is curating the show. βI want to show how they embraced this time with grit and grace.β
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This is the first exhibit of the new Hebrew College Arts Initiative, and the first in-person public event at Hebrew College since the start of the pandemic. It is supported by Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Bostonβs Arts and Culture Initiative.
The exhibit's images range from βBefore the Pandemic with the Western Wallβ and βMecca with the Hajj,β to St. Peterβs square with masks, barriers, and emptiness. There are parking lots where people have come together for prayer; a memorial of white flags; Passover zooms; church groups feeding the hungry; outdoor bat mitzvahs; and funerals in empty funeral homes.
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Bancel, who uses photography to bring awareness to social issues, hopes the new show will be a testament of "resilience rooted in faith.β
After a career in advertising, she studied at the New England School of Photography and Harvard Divinity School and founded the TAKE 5 Foundation.
As part of the program, Hebrew College is organizing βFaith in Isolation: A Multifaith Panel Discussion,β a virtual panel on April 18 with leaders from the Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions, who will respond to the exhibit and explore how they and their communities fared during the pandemicβthrough prayer, meditation, study, and acts of service and advocacy.
βThis thoughtful and evocative exhibit provides us with a much-needed context to process all that we have experienced over the past yearβloneliness, loss, gratitude, and hope,β said Rabbi Or Rose, director of the Miller Center for Interreligious Learning & Leadership of Hebrew College; βOur panel discussion and other programming will allow for powerful sharing across traditions.β
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