Student Profiles
Zach Warren, MDiv '07
Zach Warren, MDiv '07, was drawn to HDS because of its juggling club. Once
here, his talent for juggling and unicycling led him to the children's circus
that would become the focus of his research and ministry training.
During his first year at HDS, Zach learned about the Mobile Mini Circus for
Children (MMCC) in Afghanistan. When the circus invited him to teach juggling
and unicycling, he created a summer field education placement through the Office
of Ministry Studies: "It was the most magical experience I've had." The MMCC
uses entertainment to provide education and support to over 300 children,
helping to feed their spirit and sustain moments of joy. "For me, one of the
primary reasons that religion, circus, and forms of artistic expression are
important is because they help people move beyond survival mode."
Zach's passion for the circus has been woven into his time at HDS. He wrote
his MDiv senior paper on the circus as a theological expression of Christian
faith. "I looked at what it is about wonder and fascination that the circus
tradition holds and which the Christian tradition celebrates, at where they
overlap and compete for the same mythic space, and why it is that American
churches over the past few decades in particular have taken on more strategies
for entertainment that are circus-like, such as drumming, magic and dance."
Themes of the circus pervade his research on Christianity: "The circus is about
celebration, and Christianity is a strategy for celebration. Jesus' death and
rebirth is a joyful trick, in a simple sense, the way peek-a-boo was pleasurable
to us when we were children. Circus and Christianity tell mythic stories about
death and rebirth, disappearing acts, impossible possibilities, the tightrope
walker who tempts fate and survives, the lion tamer, the woman sawed in half and
restored."
While completing his MDiv, Zach also made use of the resources at Harvard
Medical School as a research fellow. "I wanted to find a way to measure
children's resilience through laughter and smiles." He is working to find a
quick tool to assess Afghan children most at risk for problems such as
post-traumatic stress disorder or depression.
Zach was awarded the prestigious Frederick Sheldon Fellowship to return to
Afghanistan and complete three research projects. First, he will create a
cross-cultural laughter databank for research, examining "laughter acoustics."
Second, he will collect jokes, particularly from religious leaders—continuing
research he began several years ago, which has been funded by The New Yorker,
National Public Radio, and HDS's Office of Ministry Studies. Finally, he will
examine the way laughter affects stress responses across cultures.
Read more from Zach Warren:
Profile Posted July 2007. Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell.
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