Staff
Rev. Dr. Mae Elise Cannon is the executive director of Churches for Middle East Peace and an ordained pastor in the Evangelical Covenant Church (ECC). Cannon holds an MDiv from North Park Theological Seminary, an MBA from North Park University’s School of Business and Nonprofit Management, and an MA in bioethics from Trinity International University. She received her first doctorate in American History with a minor in Middle Eastern studies at the University of California (Davis) focusing on the history of the American Protestant church in Israel and Palestine and her second doctorate in Ministry in Spiritual Formation from Northern Theological Seminary. She is the author of several books including the award-winning Social Justice Handbook: Small Steps for a Better World and editor of A Land Full of God: Christian Perspectives on the Holy Land. Her work has been highlighted in The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, Chicago Tribune, Christianity Today, Leadership Magazine, The Christian Post, Jerusalem Post, EU Parliament Magazine, Huffington Post, and other international media outlets.
Tamar Haddad is currently a full-time And Still We Rise Coordinator. She is based in Jerusalem. She was hugely impacted by her involvement in many phenomenal leadership programs like MEPI - Student Leaders Program, International Women Leaders, and the Clinton Global Initiative University. Tamar previously served as the Project Manager for Gender Justice at the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land (ELCJHL). Currently, Tamar panels at the UN Commission on the Status of Women and volunteers as a Regional Coordinator at the Lutheran World Federation (LWF).
Adysen holds a bachelors in Global Studies from Georgia State University. She has spent extended time in the Middle East, including Jordan, Palestine, and Egypt, studying Arabic as well as the Arab-Israeli conflict. Adysen began as an advocacy intern at CMEP and transitioned to Trip Coordinator. She is delighted to be a part of people experiencing the Middle East for themselves.
Fellows
Lauren earned her bachelor’s in Arabic and Middle East studies from the University of St Andrews in Scotland. After spending four years in youth ministry and community building in the UK, she moved to Jerusalem. In Israel/Palestine, she continues to utilize this relational skill set through the position of Middle East Fellow, while also elevating the voices of Christian leaders in the region.
Ben is a researcher and public organizer. Inspired by his study of higher education in Palestine, Ben currently works on the ways educational and epistemological structures develop responsively to physical landscapes, especially those that are highly configured and imposed. In his local community, Ben helps churches engage more thoughtfully with Native communities and come to terms with histories of injustice.
Ben holds his Ph.D. in Higher Education from Azusa Pacific University (Los Angeles) and his M.A. in Liberal Arts from St. John's College (Annapolis). Ben's dissertation is a qualitative project exploring adaptive Palestinian approaches to pedagogy.
In his career in higher education leadership, Ben has experience building international educational partnerships, teaching, and establishing an academic center for applied public research.
Beth holds a PhD in Intercultural Studies and a Master of Divinity from Trinity International University. Beth is the author of Not Done Yet: Reaching and Keeping Unchurched Emerging Adults (IVP, 2020). Her primary research explores churches making a difference in the lives of Gen Z and Millennial “Nones and Dones” in a North American climate of young adult church disaffiliation and disinterest.
Beth is Affiliate Professor of Theology at LCC International University in Klaipeda, Lithuania, where she introduces students from eastern Europe and the Middle East to the Old and New Testament Scriptures. She is the former Associate Professor of Youth and Christian Ministry Studies at North Park University and the former director of evangelism for the Evangelical Covenant Church denomination. Beth has a background in campus ministry with InterVarsity Christian Fellowship and academic leadership at Wheaton Graduate School. She is a certified trainer for the Intercultural Development Inventory helping people grow in intercultural fluency.
Beth has a deep commitment to racial righteousness, justice and peace-making. The Ambassador Warren Clark Fellowship fits Beth’s vocational calling to learn from and assist the global church to further God’s kingdom on earth and her passion and to represent God and his holistic mission to bring peace and reconciliation, mercy and international justice, racial righteousness and ethnic healing to the whole world.
Interns
Taylor Issa is a junior at the American University in Washington, DC, studying Arabic and International Relations/Peace and Conflict Resolution. Taylor is passionate about fighting for peace and she is thrilled to work towards positive change for the Middle East with CMEP!