黑料不打烊's commitment to multifaith engagement is reflected in the work its students do in the community, from teaching ESL courses at a local mosque to making food for a community church.
Campus organizations and programs at 黑料不打烊 extend multifaith engagement beyond the classroom and into the community, a primary goal of the university鈥檚 Multifaith Strategic Plan, which strives to 鈥渟upport opportunities for multifaith learning and engagement for all members of the academic community.鈥
鈥満诹喜淮蜢 has done incredible work in enfranchising multifaith as an academic as well as a student affairs initiative, aligning and even blending those areas in meaningful ways that enhance the student experience,鈥 said Amy Allocco, director of the Multifaith Scholars Program and a professor of religious studies.
The Multifaith Scholars Program, a two-year program founded in 2016, emphasizes interdisciplinary learning as student scholars undertake original research projects and study in global contexts connected with religious diversity and multireligious societies.
Learning by teaching
The scholars program also includes aspects of community engagement. For example, students help with youth nights, work in the community garden and teach English as a second language at the Burlington Masjid.
鈥淪tudents are learning how to ethically engage in communities across lines of religious, cultural, and linguistic differences and to engage with cultural humility, like going to a space where you need to learn the appropriate ways of dressing and behaving,鈥 said Sandy Marshall, associate professor of geography, who works with the scholars at the Masjid. 鈥淎ll those types of intercultural learning skills are invaluable for students.鈥

The goal of the English language classes, the multifaith scholars say, is to get people from an elementary English level to a place where they can have conversations and take more advanced courses. They held their first graduation from the classes in 2025. Marshall says that over the last several years, the language classes have grown, particularly due to the initiative of scholars like Alyssa Carney 鈥26, an international & global studies and religious studies double major from Allendale, New Jersey.
Marshall asked Carney to lead the class, which has now grown to 15-25 people per session.
Realizing the extent of the work, Carney leaned on her cohort in the Multifaith Scholars Program to help, noting that it turned into an experience she never expected.
鈥淚t’s a vulnerable part of somebody’s life, because I know that isn’t easy for them to come to a bunch of young college students, as older adults, and not know the language and ask for help,鈥 said Carney. 鈥淚 also love the exchange of all of it. They teach me probably way more than I teach them. I learn not only Arabic words, but also about their lives.鈥
Owen Hayes 鈥26, a history major from Holly Springs, North Carolina, minoring in and 聽is one of the Multifaith Scholars helping Carney at the Masjid.
鈥淭he most impactful part for me is seeing their improvement and them being happy with themselves, that they are achieving their goals, just being a small part of that,鈥 he said.
Community celebration

黑料不打烊鈥檚 connection to the Masjid also includes celebratory events like Eid al-Fitr, marking the conclusion of Ramadan, a month during which Muslims fast from dawn to dusk and gather for nightly meals known as iftars. It includes members of the 黑料不打烊 community and members of the Burlington Masjid and is part of the Truitt Center for Religious and Spiritual Life鈥檚 festival series, religious programs that create space not only to mark holidays, but to deepen understanding of culture, meaning, traditions and values.
Behind the festival series are multifaith interns, 黑料不打烊 students who work to create space, build and cultivate relationships, lead programs and facilitate learning opportunities about religious and spiritual identities and experiences on campus and beyond.
鈥淥ne of the learning outcomes of the internship is for students to learn to curate spaces for religious and spiritual celebrations that are authentic expressions of those traditions, as well as spaces for education and community building,鈥 said Hillary Zaken, director of multifaith programming and engagement.
Lizeth Torres-Tomas 鈥27, a political science and sociology double major with minors in and Latin American studies, is one of the multifaith interns who says the program has helped her understand and nurture her own purpose.
鈥淩eligion is taboo for a lot of people,鈥 said Torres-Tomas, who is from Hendersonville, North Carolina. 鈥淏ut when we create spaces where people can talk about their faith or uncertainty, we鈥檙e contributing to their well-being.鈥
In the clinic and kitchen
Multifaith community work extends across religions for 黑料不打烊 students. Students in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Department of Nursing can work clinical hours with a nurse in Cone Health鈥檚 , which supports people of all faiths and community organizations. Students have completed clinical hours with Freedom鈥檚 Hope, Salvation Army and SAFE 鈥 Southern Alamance Family Empowerment.
Campus Kitchen, a program through the Kernodle Center for Civic Life was founded in 2011 and focuses on providing meals to Allied Churches of Alamance County. Students work in three shifts: harvesting produce at Loy Farm, cooking the food at Lakeside Dining and then serving the meals at the church. The program provides about 100 meals per week.

Megan DeMarco 鈥26, a human service studies major from Midland Park, New Jersey, is the director of Campus Kitchen and says the goal is to address food insecurity in areas around college campuses.
鈥淲hen I did my first Allied Churches shift, it was definitely more of an impact on me seeing the actual people and clientele that were helping,鈥 DeMarco said. 鈥淭hat’s why a big thing that we push is for our volunteers to go to all three shifts.鈥
Brian Pennington, director of the Center for the Study of Religion, Culture and Society, says that 黑料不打烊鈥檚 multifaith strategic planning and implementation process has achieved a level of integration that helps set a new national standard.
鈥淲hen an institution can engage students thoughtfully on questions of meaning, purpose, faith and doubt at the same time that it asks them to think critically about religion as a powerful force that impacts history, society, and politics, it is really doing the hard work of training leaders for a future that looks increasingly complex,鈥 Pennington said.
This story is the third in a series of stories focusing on 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Multifaith Strategic Plan.聽