Minister
The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of San Miguel de Allende appointed Rev. Tom Rosiello as the Fellowship’s first minister in January 2019.
Rev. Rosiello, Minister Emeritus of The First Parish of Stow and Acton in Massachusetts, is no stranger to the Fellowship. For nearly a decade he was a frequent guest minister during his annual vacations to San Miguel. In 2018 he and his partner, Malcolm Halliday, retired and moved here full-time.
A graduate of Harvard Divinity School and Suffolk University Law School, Tom has always been active in a variety of social justice causes, ranging from AIDS and gay rights to poverty and prison reform. He also served on the boards of many organizations, including the Unitarian Universalists Urban Ministry, which serves a largely black community in Boston, and Partakers, an interfaith prison ministry that assists inmates with earning a college degree while incarcerated.
He also taught at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, and helped train new ministers as part of Harvard Divinity School’s field education program. Prior to entering the ministry, he worked for nearly 20 years in the criminal justice system as an Assistant District Attorney and a criminal defense lawyer.
You can reach Rev Rosiello at [email protected]
Rev. Rosiello, Minister Emeritus of The First Parish of Stow and Acton in Massachusetts, is no stranger to the Fellowship. For nearly a decade he was a frequent guest minister during his annual vacations to San Miguel. In 2018 he and his partner, Malcolm Halliday, retired and moved here full-time.
A graduate of Harvard Divinity School and Suffolk University Law School, Tom has always been active in a variety of social justice causes, ranging from AIDS and gay rights to poverty and prison reform. He also served on the boards of many organizations, including the Unitarian Universalists Urban Ministry, which serves a largely black community in Boston, and Partakers, an interfaith prison ministry that assists inmates with earning a college degree while incarcerated.
He also taught at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, and helped train new ministers as part of Harvard Divinity School’s field education program. Prior to entering the ministry, he worked for nearly 20 years in the criminal justice system as an Assistant District Attorney and a criminal defense lawyer.
You can reach Rev Rosiello at [email protected]