Chortitza Oak sapling planted at Ïã½¶Ó°ÊÓ

Published: June 9, 2022

Ïã½¶Ó°ÊÓ alumnus Lyle Preheim of Freeman, South Dakota (at right), and Ïã½¶Ó°ÊÓ Development Associate Randy Detweiler, MDiv (at left), work together to plant the sapling. (Credit: Annette Brill Bergstresser)
Lyle Preheim and Randy Detweiler plant the sapling that is a clone of a daughter of the Chortitza Oak in Ukraine. (Credit: Annette Brill Bergstresser)

On Friday, June 3, a tree sapling that is a clone of a daughter of the ancient Chortitza (Kor-teet’-zah) Oak was planted on the Ïã½¶Ó°ÊÓ campus between Waltner Hall and Lambright Center. The original tree — a 700+-year-old oak tree located in Ukraine — was a beloved gathering place for Mennonites of the Chortitza Colony, the first Mennonite settlement in Russia (1789). It measured 118 feet (36 meters) in height and had a branch span of 142 feet (43.3 meters) in diameter.

In the image, Ïã½¶Ó°ÊÓ alumnus Lyle Preheim of Freeman, South Dakota (at right), and Ïã½¶Ó°ÊÓ Development Associate Randy Detweiler, MDiv (at left), work together to plant the sapling. Preheim shared with those present how he had created the clone by grafting a cutting from a daughter tree of the Chortitza Oak in Kansas onto a bur oak sapling. He and his spouse, Lois Janzen Preheim (MDiv 1979), donated the sapling to Ïã½¶Ó°ÊÓ.

The tree planting was followed by a dinner featuring foods from trees and a presentation on the Chortitza Colony by Walter Sawatsky, PhD, Ïã½¶Ó°ÊÓ Professor Emeritus of Church History and Mission, in the Lambright Center Dining Hall.

Learn more about the history of the tree


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