Professor of Religion Paul Valliere marvels at the similarities between the Butler University he joined in 1982 and the Butler University from which he’s retiring in May.

“It’s perfectly obvious that all kinds of things are happening at Butler now that weren’t happening in 1982,” he said. “But there are real continuities in the Butler of yore and the Butler of today. Most of those continuities are very positive—face-to-face community, dedication to students, ability to attract really fine students. We get really fine students. So did we in 1982. Most of the changes at Butler have built on the positives that were already there.”

And over 36 years at Butler, Valliere, 74, has had a hand in several of those positive changes. He collaborated on creating the Change and Tradition core curriculum (which has evolved into Global and Historical Studies), built up the Honors Program, co-wrote the application for a Lilly Endowment Inc. grant that created the Center for Faith and Vocation, and wrote the application that helped Butler get a Phi Beta Kappa chapter.

Then there’s teaching. Valliere approached his courses with the memory of something his former colleague John Beversluis told him: “I want every class to be an event.”

“My favorite moments at Butler are walking out of a class that I know in my heart went really, really well,” Valliere said. “For me, nothing compares to the sense of elation when I know at the end of a class that it really went well—I accomplished what I intended to in there, but much more, because the students grabbed hold of it and ran with it and it ended up being a great class.”

Betsy Shirley ’10, now Associate Editor at Sojourners magazine, remembers Valliere referring to students as his “young colleagues. And he really meant it. It wasn’t a gimmick.”

“He took more notes in class than any professor I had,” she said. “He took notes on what students were saying—interesting points they made or something he wanted to follow up with them. Sometimes after class, he would say, ‘I really appreciated that point you made. You might want to check out this extra essay, or this article that might help you develop your point.’ He saw what students were saying as important and wanted to learn with them and from them.”

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Valliere grew up in Longmeadow, Massachusetts. After earning his bachelor’s degree from Williams College, he got a job as a community organizer in East Harlem. In 1971, he began his teaching career at Columbia University, from which he earned his master’s and doctorate, and started his career-long scholarship in religion and theology in modern Russia.

He taught religion at Columbia for 11 years. But by this point, he and his wife, Marjorie, had three young children, and he wanted a tenured professorship.

Butler offered him that. He moved to Indianapolis to be Dean of Butler’s University College, which advised all first-year students and sophomores and oversaw the core curriculum and the honors program, and an Associate Professor of Religion.

He said Marjorie had to get a driver’s license when they settled in Indiana—she didn’t need one in New York—but the adjustment to the Midwest was otherwise easy.

“You’re still the same person with the same unfinished articles in the same drawer,” he said. “People have a tendency to get too hung up on externals—what environment do I live in, that kind of thing. Those things are superficial compared to the continuities: same family, same profession, same responsibilities, same challenges.”

One of those challenges was integrating his interest in and knowledge of Russian theology into the curriculum. He did that through a course he team-taught with History Professor Bruce Bigelow called Peoples and Faiths of the Soviet Union (later Peoples and Faiths of Russia and its Neighbors).

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Valliere described himself as “the product of a 100 percent pure liberal arts tradition.” In fact, he said, “There was concern among some of the people at Butler who hired me that I might be too liberal-artsy for the good of the institution.”

He said Butler “broadened me” by exposing him to students in professional areas.

“In my years of working with students in the arts, pharmacy, education, and the other professional colleges, I’ve become a broader, better-informed academic,” he said. “I feel very good about that part of my Butler experience, where I had to stretch. I hope I stretched Butler and my students. That’s what we’re supposed to do. Stretch. But I got stretched also. And to the good.”

Judith Cebula, the Founding Director of the Center for Faith and Vocation, said one of Valliere’s strengths is that he “believes in the possible.”

“He hired me to help launch the Center for Faith and Vocation and I saw first-hand how he believed Butler could become a better university when he created the Center, when he created the Seminar on Religion and Global Affairs, when created new courses, such as Faith Doubt and Reason in collaboration with Philosophy Professor Stuart Glennan, for example,” she said.

“I saw it most clearly when he shared with me that he always strived to see the fullest potential in each student who walked into his classroom. Each student entered a new semester with an A in Paul’s grade book. That is how much he believes in the possible.”

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Valliere said he’s enjoyed watching the city of Indianapolis grow, and Butler grow with it. That’s one of the reasons he put off retirement.

“Why leave when the institution is doing so well and the city has gotten so interesting?” he said.

But now that the time is right for retirement, Paul and Marjorie plan to stay in Indianapolis and keep their Butler Basketball season tickets. He plans to continue his Russia scholarship, and will be working with the Emory University School of Law to co-edit a volume on the history of Christianity and law in Russia. It’s part of a big study program being coordinated by the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory.

“I’m retiring from teaching,” he said, “but there’s no rule that says you have to retire from scholarship—and I don’t have any plans to cut back on that front.”

As for teaching, yes, he will miss the interactions with students and the dynamics of the classroom.

“But I taught for 47 years, which is a lot longer than a lot of people have a chance to do,” he said. “I turn 75 this year, so I’ve had a long run, and I’m grateful.”

The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will hold a retirement reception for Paul Valliere and Philosophy Professor Harry van der Linden on Tuesday, April 3, from 4:30-6:30 PM in the Robertson Hall Johnson Room. All are welcome. No RSVP necessary.

Media contact:
Marc Allan
mallan@butler.edu
317-940-9822