Religious,community,and campus life
Harvard and its Schools have prioritized efforts to build and affirm a feeling of belonging for every member of our community. The University has committed to support belonging amongMuslim, Arab, and Palestinianstudents, faculty, and staff, including through community-building initiatives, specially trained support staff, and funded religious and cultural events. Highlights include aPresidential Initiative on Interfaith Engagement, events and activities related to religion and faith,increasedand meal requirements,lecture series and workshops modeling dialogue across difference,and new funding to supportstudent projects related tobuildingbridges.
Last updated April 2026
Supporting religious life
- Interfaith Engagement.In July 2025, Harvard announcedthe PresidentialInitiative onInterfaithEngagement,led byRabbiGetzelDavis, who spent 13years as a chaplain ר Hillel. Initialprogrammingincluded a fall 2025Religious, Spiritual, and Ethical Life Fellowship,the pluralism passport program, and aspirituality-inspiredphoto exhibit.In February 2026, the initiative hostedPresident Garber andnearly 200community members at an interfaith dinnerin the campus center.
- New permanent Muslim prayer space.In August 2025, the University announced the establishment of a permanent prayer space for its Muslim community. A room on the Smith Campus Center’s second floor will bedesignatedas a permanentmusallah, a prayer space for Muslim affiliates to gather for daily worship and reflection. A space previouslyutilizedfor Muslim prayer will now be dedicated to Hindu worship, to accommodate the growing number of Hindu students on campus.
- Community support during Ramadan.Building on similar efforts in past years, during Ramadan in academic 2024-25, the Harvard College Dean of Students Office (DSO) collaborated with the Muslim Chaplaincy, Harvard Islamic Society (HIS), and Harvard University Dining Services to support studentsparticipatingin Ramdan-related activities. Specifically, the College DSO and Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) teams partnered with HIS to host Iftar dinners three evenings each week (excluding Spring Break), supplementing University-provided meals on two other evenings. Additionally, the DSO hosted a Suhoor meal at the Dean of Students Residence. The DSO and EDI teams also supported the HIS Eid celebration.
- New community spaces.In Fall 2024, the University collaborated with the University’s Muslim Chaplains and practitioners from Harvard’s Counseling and Mental Health Service (CAMHS) to moderate “Community Spaces” for Arab, Muslim, and Palestinian students. These spaces aim to foster a sense of belonging through dialogue with peers who have a shared identity.
- Religion, Ethics, and Spiritual Life.HarvardCollege’s Office of Culture & Community hasestablishedReligion, Ethics, Spiritual Life as a pillar of its work and collaborates regularly with the newly appointed Director of Interfaith Engagement to ensure communication, alignment, and collaboration.
- Space for faith-based activities ר Business School. Over the summer of 2025, Harvard Business Schoolbuilt an outdoor terrace, extending the footprint of its MBA Class of1959 Chapel to accommodate faith-based activities.
- Inclusive scheduling and event planning resources. InDecember 2024, Harvard launched,a glossary of religious observances, and suggestions for inclusive catering.
- Harvard Business School multifaith calendar.TheHarvard BusinessSchoolOffice for Community and Culture developed athat lists observances which typically involve fasting or accommodations for class attendance or time off,provides background and guidance,and features a Religious Observances Calendar download that can be added to Outlook.
- Outreach to affected studentsר Graduate School of Education.The Harvard Graduate School of Education Student Affairs teamestablishedexpanded outreach protocols for students who have been affected by natural disasters, wars, or other crises. The expanded protocols were completed and socialized in September 2025. These expanded protocols include steps intended to ensure that students are aware of, and have accessto,Universitysupportsthroughout the duration of the eventimpactingthe student.
Community and campus life
- Community and Campus Life.In April 2025, Harvard launched the new(CCL) office (replacing the former Office of Equity, Diversity,Inclusionand Belonging) with a focus on building a culture of belonging for all members of the Harvard community. CCL supports andexpandsprograms that encourage engagement across differences.
- Faculty advisory group for theOffice for Academic Culture and Community.Launched in July 2025, the Office for Academic Culture and Community (OACC) is focused on fostering community cohesion. OACC hasestablishedan inaugural faculty advisory group to guide the development of this new office and the implementation of its framework. For spring 2026, it has brokered programmatic partnerships with other faculty and administrative groups to support the development and implementation of symposia and programsthat promote historical and cross-cultural understanding.
- “MiddleEast Dialogues” and similar programming at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.Harvard Kennedy Schoolwill continue to organize a set of co-curricular events and activities with speakers from Israel, Palestine, and the broader region through which students can explore a diversity of perspectives on the Middle East.Infall 2025, HKS hosted Middle East Dialogues with former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmertand former U.S. diplomat Rob Malley.
- Harvard Graduate School of Education grants, fellowships, and programs. In August 2025,Harvard Graduate School of Educationlaunched theCourageous Conversations Fund—with award criteria modeled after the President’s Building Bridges Fund. The Courageous Conversations Fund supports smaller-scale, student-led initiatives thatseekto engage students in learning about how to model difficult conversations with respect and dignity at the forefront.
- Middle East & North Africa Conference ר Business School. The Middle East & North Africa (MENA) Club ר Business School organizes an annualbusiness conference on campusthat brings together industry leaders and experts, entrepreneurs, and enthusiasts, and featureskeynote addresses, panel discussions, and networking sessions, to explore the dynamic business landscape of the MENA region. The conference typically draws more than 400 attendees, including undergraduate and graduate MENA students from top U.S. schools, young professionals interested in working, doing business and/or investing in the region, and startups, founders, entrepreneurs and investors interested in the region.
- Harvard Kennedy School debate series.In the2025-26 academic year, Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) announced the “Debate, Dessert,Debrief” series, a series of debates between HKS faculty and professional counterparts of significantly different viewpoint, followed by structured debriefs (and dessert)facilitatedby Candid and Constructive Conversation faculty.The first sessionsoccurredinearly March 2026.
- Model student leaders ר Law School.Harvard Law School (HLS) posted a new “Dean’s Community Impact Award”for2025-2026 that will celebrate one or more graduating students who foster a sense of community and connection between fellow students and/or whose actions have had a meaningful impact on improving relationships between student groups or repairing divisions within the student body.
- RappaportForum ר Law School.At Harvard Law School, faculty serve as organizers and moderators of the Rappaport Forum, designed to promote and model full, vigorous, and civil discourse on critical and complicated issues facing our community, our nation, and our world, and which has hosted debates on topics such as whether the Constitution supports a unitary executive; the future of the administrative state; the propriety of universal injunctions; censorship, content moderation, and the First Amendment; stare decisis and the future ofRoe v. Wade. Additionally,the Julis-Rabinowitz Program on Jewish and Israeli Law regularly hosts crosscutting events thatseekto unpack contemporary questions of Jewish and Israeli legal scholarship.
- Harvard Law School “Why I Changed My Mind” series.Harvard Law Schoolis continuingtohost an event series, “Why I Changed My Mind,” where prominent faculty discuss an important legal and social issue where they became convinced to change their original view.
- Harvard LawSchool Community Connection Grants.The Community Connection Grant program ר Law Schoolprovides grants for student-led projects that encourage small group discussion across differences, build facilitation skills, and/or model constructive disagreement. Activities may include; discussions that encourage a well-informed, nuanced understanding of divisive legal and political issues; social events that build trust among members of groups with differing views, perspectives, or approaches; and experiences that help community members develop skills and methods for constructively engaging with one another on difficult topics, or in the wake of discord and distrust prompted by use of social media.
- Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Dental Medicine student collaboration fund. The fund supports projects proposed by at least two or more recognized student organizations to foster conversation and dialogue as well as tocollaborate with one another on a range of topics, ideas, and experiences to advance learning across different students. Dialogue proposals will be reviewed twice ayearand student organizations can apply for funding for their project.
- Harvard Medical School event on Islamic Bioethics. InNovember 2025, the HMS Office for Culture and Community Engagement sponsored an event entitled, “Mapping the Landscape of Islamic Bioethics.”Led by the Muslim Chaplain,the session was an introduction to the topic of Islamic bioethics, an emerging area of study and practice for medical practitioners and public health professionals. The session offered a general overview of the theoretical and practical applications necessary for non-Muslim medical professionals to provide care to Muslim patients and stakeholders.
- Harvard Chan School of Public Health sessions and workshops.In September 2025,Harvard Chan School of Public Healthoffices hosted “Resisting Hate Together: Muslim and Jewish Voices Against Antisemitism, Islamophobia, and Anti-Palestinian Racism,” featuring external experts. This two-hour session provided students with strategies for intervention in response to both implicit and explicit bias, using scenario-based activities and offering educational content about the lived experiences of these communities.Additionally, the Schoolintroducedtwo new workshops in October: “Finding Your Voice: How Receptiveness Shapes Solutions” and “The Price of Silence: Solving Problems Within Our Own Networks.”
- Constructive engagement models ר Divinity School. In September 2025, Harvard Divinity Schoolhosted a workshop on religiousnationalisms, considering a wide variety of case studies.
- BuildingCommunitythrough love.As part of Harvard Divinity School’s Office of Community and Belonging’s (OCB) series “Building Community Through Love,” in October 2025, OCB hosted a workshop called “Faith-Informed Inclusion: Addressing Islamophobia and Intersecting Biases” with Intercultural Networks Group. In November 2025, OCB hosted a workshop on combating antisemitism facilitated by the Center for Jewish Studies and an HDS professor in Modern Jewish Studies.
- Mental health resources.The University securedadditionaltrauma-informed counseling resources through Harvard Counseling and Mental Health Services, prioritizing awareness of and access to its mental health and counseling resources, including the 24/7 CAMHS Cares line and in-person and virtual counseling support offerings. In January 2024, Harvard University Health Services removed visit limits for outpatientand medical consultations under Harvard’s student health insurance plan.
- Community support sessions.In 2024, Harvard organized community support sessions led by the counseling team and Harvard’s chaplains, whichcomprisemore than 30 faith leaders.
- Resources in Times of Crisis.Harvard launched a support and resources website,Resources in Times of Crisis, to provide community members with a central hub of resources for personal safety, online safety, and mental health and community support.
- Engagement withSidechat.Inspring 2024, Harvard engaged with the leadership ofSidechat, a social media app that allows college students to post anonymously. Though Harvard has no relationship withSidechat, the University asked the app to strictly enforce its content-moderation policies.