70.6 F
Spokane
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
HomeCommentaryR. Skyler Oberst

R. Skyler Oberst

Date:

Related stories

How a sudden clinic shutdown upended my husband’s mental healthcare

Therapeutic Solutions clinic in Spokane Valley abruptly closed March 14, leaving 1,800 patients like the author's husband without mental healthcare.

How to heal eco-anxiety with Buddhist principles of interdependence

From chickens to climate action, Tracy Simmons finds hope in backyard ecology and Buddhist values like interdependence, urging local steps to counter eco-anxiety.

Ask a Buddhist: Is Theravada Buddhism closest to the Buddha’s?

This Ask a Buddhist question explores the different branches of Buddhism, including Theravada, and what they teach, where they come from and how close they are to the Buddha's original teachings.

Is a faith-based charter school a threat to religious freedom, or a necessity to uphold it?

The Supreme Court hears case on Oklahoma's bid to fund faith-based charter school, raising key First Amendment church-state questions.

Hey, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., I am autistic and I am OK

Read the poet's response to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s recent comments on autism. The writer shares how discovering he was autistic later in life made his past make much more sense.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

SPO_SkylerOR. Skyler Oberst is an active leader in the interfaith movement, both locally and nationally. Recently, he attended NAIN Connect in Atlanta and had the opportunity to meet with Ambassador Andrew Young on interfaith issues. Oberst has been a research contributor for the Pluralism Project at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., where he worked closely with Diana Eck and other faith leaders.

He wanted nothing to do with religious diversity, until one day he saw attackers assault a group of his Muslim peers.

“Something shifted inside of me after that evening. I realized that the anguish and torment occurring in front of me was happening all over the world, and that in order to create a lasting peaceful world, action started not on the floor of the United Nations or the United States Senate, but in my heart and through my actions,” Oberst wrote in a recent letter to Harvard.

That event, he said, prompted him to start the Compassion Interfaith Society at EWU. He described the student group as a forum for understanding and appreciation. He’s also involved in Friends of Compassion, a group of Spokanites interested in exploring compassionate action.

He’s a SpokaneFAVS Foundation Board member.

R. Skyler Oberst
R. Skyler Oberst
R. Skyler Oberst is an interfaith advocate in Spokane and in 2016 won Young Democrat of the Year.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img
Previous article
Next article
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest


0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
spot_img
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x