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Radix@25: Celebrating 25 Years of Ä¢¹½¶ÌÊÓÆµ's Student-Centred Spirituality Magazine

various past issues of Radix

A Notable Milestone for Radix

This winter, MORSL is celebrating 25 Years of Ä¢¹½¶ÌÊÓÆµâ€™s student-centred spirituality magazine, Radix! The first issue of Radix was published in November 2000. MORSL has been funding and helping coordinate this magazine ever since to ensure its continuance. An enthusiastic student board directs each theme and edits the submissions. We value students having a welcoming space to channel their creativity and share their thoughts and feelings about faith, spirituality, and life in general!

Celebrations will include a Retrospective Display running from November 17-21, 2025, a publications fair in January spotlighting Radix and several other thematically related publications on campus, and a 25th Anniversary issue of Radix that will be printed in February. See our Call for Submissions now open for the special 2025-2026 issue, focused on "Growth!"

View the Retrospective Display in the Redpath Library

From November 13 - December 12, 2025, take a moment while you are on the main floor of the Redpath library to view back issues of Radix in the archival display cases. 

Radix magazine back issues in glass display case in Redpath

Visit our Tabletop Retrospective Exhibits In-Person

We invite you to stop by in-person at our Radix@25 Retrospective Exhibits this month, which you can find at the following times and locations:

View the Display Online

For the past 25 years of Radix magazine, an influx of creative thought and expression about faith, spirituality, and life more broadly has accumulated into a rich collection of pieces by Ä¢¹½¶ÌÊÓÆµ students.  

Join MORSL as we celebrate and reflect back on 25 years of Radix magazine. This retrospective display includes a wide variety of creative work, including poetry, painting, short stories, photography, collages, personal essays, and drawings. It spotlights four recurrent, EDI-focused themes, including women and gender minorities, nature and environmental, interfaith dialogue, and inclusion:

painting of mermaid

Women and Gender Minorites

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