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General Topics : posted December 12, 2008
A Crisis is a Terrible Thing to Waste

A Crisis is a Terrible Thing to Waste

The ancient Chinese hexagram for crisis means both danger and opportunity. But what determines the outcome? Is it in our hands? Do we have the power to choose?

Danger naturally focuses our minds, and when faced with it we instinctively contract, withdraw, or pull-in to protect and defend. Individuals do it, and so do countries.

Is there another way?

This month our Dialogues explore the theme of crisis and its opportunities. We invite you to engage with these questions and share your thoughts, insights, concerns and ideas with others.

Events : posted December 02, 2008
Teleseminar with the Global Oneness Project

Join Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee, founder and director of the Global Oneness Project, today, Dec 3rd at 5:00pm PST for a live teleseminar with the Institute of Noetic Sciences.

Instructions For Call:

Dial 1-605-475-6401 and enter the Participant code: 1002850#.

The capacity of the call is 200, so call in early to participate! Also, please note that the call is not toll-free; you will charged according to your existing long-distance calling plan.

The teleseminar is part of IONS' Shift in Action program, an exciting way to connect with some of the most brilliant thinkers, innovative leaders, and inspiring change agents of our day. They offer a large media library on conscious change, with leaders such as Deepak Chopra, Marianne Williamson, and Michael Beckwith, as well as two live teleseminars each week and a global network of more than 10,000 allies.

For more information: www.noetic.org.                 

New Content : posted October 14, 2008
New Ubuntu Short Film and Adyashanti Interview

We have just added a new short film about the traditional African philosophy of Ubuntu, and a series of new clips from our recent interview with spiritual teacher Adyashanti . Ubuntu recognizes how we are inextricably bound in each other's humanity. Translated as, "I am because you are," Ubuntu describes a sense of unity between people through which we each discover our own strengths and virtues. Featuring healer Credo Mutwa, GreenHouse Project director Dorah Lebelo, and former Deputy Minister of Health Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge, this glimpse of South Africa shows compassion as a way of life. Adyashanti, the author of Emptiness Dancing, The Impact of Awakening, and My Secret is Silence, offers spontaneous and direct nondual teachings that have been compared to those of the early Zen masters and Advaita Vedanta sages. In these interview clips , he describes how in the development of human consciousness, there comes a shift from a sense of a separate self toward the experience of unity, and suggests that reaching a point of crisis can allow an opportunity for consciousness to shift, individually and collectively.

News : posted October 13, 2008
Money and the Crisis of Civilization

We recently came across a powerful article that looks at the roots of the current financial crisis and offers a compelling alternative based on the principles of oneness. Author Charles Eisenstein explains that by systematically and unsustainably monetizing the world's natural, social, cultural and spiritual capital, our civilization is now faced with the task of "enacting a fundamentally different human identity, a fundamentally different sense of self, from what dominates today." We hope you're as inspired by this article as we are.

General Topics : posted October 01, 2008
Me and You and Everyone

Common Ground Magazine is featuring a new article that discusses the multiple expressions of interconnectedness and how the Global Oneness Project is tackling the abstract "woo woo" notion of oneness by documenting and sharing the stories of individuals who use the concepts of interconnection and social responsibility to spur creative but practical responses to some of the world's greatest and complex challenges.

The article also mentions Jill Bolte Taylor, a neuroanatomist, who experienced the feeling of oneness during and after a stroke that severely damaged her brain's left hemisphere (or the “me”-thinking hemisphere) leaving her unable to talk, walk or identify with the boundaries of her own body.

Read the Common Ground article and then watch Jill Bolte Taylor's amazing TED lecture "My Stroke of Insight".   

News : posted September 24, 2008
Vote for the People's Grocery Short Film

People's Grocery was recently nominated for the Online Jury Prize for the Reduction Festival, a film fest that looks to artists and the creative industries to provide works that discuss and attempt to resolve some of our complex environmental concerns. On the website, selected films are currently being voted on by audience members. Visit www.reductionfestival.org , click on DOCUMENTARY, and vote for your favorite film!

The winning film will be awarded a £1000 prize, which we will offer to the community-based organization, People's Grocery.

People's Grocery

General Topics : posted September 03, 2008
Interview with Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee, founder and director of the Global Oneness Project

Listen to Emmanuel speak about the inspiration behind the project and what he's learned from the many people he has met and interviewed around the world.

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Interview from the radio show Tomorrow Matters with host Deborah Lindsay, KRXA AM540, Carmel Valley, CA,

Travel Stories : posted August 26, 2008
Reflections on Israel

"Did you love Israel?"

I turned and faced my questioner: a beaming, proud Israeli woman just ahead of me in the customs line at London Heathrow Airport. Looking at her face I could see she wasn't going to take anything less than "I loved it" in return. Contemplating my answer, I couldn't help but notice how fresh she looked despite four hours of security questions from El Al Airlines in Tel Aviv, a 1 1/2 hours delay on the tarmac and 5 1/2 hours of flying, only to be currently standing in another long line awaiting more security questions and another flight. Had we just come from the same place? I had just come from one of the more challenging experiences of my life and she was looking as if Israel was the fountain of youth everyone was looking for.

But I couldn't deny her question. "Intense," was my reply. Despite her obvious leading, I appreciated her question. I had gotten used to this direct interaction and I found myself delving deeper. “Why so many walls?” I asked. I was thinking of the Old City Walls, the Wailing Wall and the Separation Walls: the ancient, the sacred and the new.
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I began searching her face for what I knew lay beneath the smiling surface. She has a story. Everyone in Israel does. She has an opinion about the conflict. She's divided. She's experienced a loss, pain, anger—an identity crisis. I pleaded silently: “Reveal it to me. Show me where it's taken you and what you have to teach the rest of the world. Feel pity on me, for this was my first visit. Empathize with me, for war isn’t easy. Understand that check points, gunfire and barbed wire are not part of my normal daily existence. Dare to look into my eyes and see what I have witnessed in your country, where I have judged out of ignorance and truth alike. Remind me of a larger purpose and of our underlying unity.”

"Did you love Israel?"

Her question was still lingering in my mind. What was the experience we just had? And what does it have to do with the other parts of our lives? Torn between remaining in the experience and leaving it for some perspective, I slowly began to understand the gleam in her eye. Yes, I did love it. Yes, the holy land is worth fighting for.

As each of the people we interviewed shared, there is tremendous possibility in Israel, and we were reminded that although the Israeli/Palestinian conflict is unique to the holy land, the whole world is affected by it, and the struggle universal. All the peaceworkers we spent time with pointed to the value in our unique individual, communal, national, and religious identities and at the same time, stressed the need to remember we are all part of the same human identity. In other words, there is diversity of life, but unity of spirit, the unifying thread the source of all our differences.

Again I recall Sami Awad’s words that we are standing on a groundless ground of nothingness. “We need to take our individual identities and respect them, understand them and learn from them, but we are free to create a future that has a sense of independency from the past. We can create a future with a new global identity that encompasses everyone.”  And Rabbi Froman’s word’s also apply: “If we can figure out Jerusalem, it can be a bridge for all humanity."

Left with more questions than answers, I have a feeling we have been more deeply affected than we know. We were welcomed with open arms into homes and treated with immense generosity and trust. We symbolically found common ground over coffee and shared meals, and we bore witness to tremendous courage and hope. I shall miss the muezzin’s call to prayer, the hummus and figs, and the golden light over the ancient terraced hillsides and much more. I will even miss the very real reminder of life and death at most every moment. But there is also an impression left by the complete and utter desecration we witnessed as well. Here I am reminded that we have been taught the following teaching: when everything is dying, there is tremendous potential for something new to be born and the light that emerges can be like a torch for all the world.

New Content : posted August 19, 2008
New Interviews Posted: Middle East Peacemakers Speak from the Heart

We have just added a series of new clips from our recent interviews with Sheikh Abdul Aziz Bukhari, co-founder of Jerusalem Peacemakers and the head of the Naqshabandi Sufi order in Jerusalem Rodef Shalom Eliyahu McLean, a fellow founder of Jerusalem Peacemakers and Sami Awad, founder and executive director of Holy Land Trust, a Palestinian nonprofit organization. In these interviews, filmed this summer in Bethlehem and Jerusalem, all three community leaders speak to the challenges and opportunities facing their conflicted region, and offer approaches to peace that can be applied universally.
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Travel Stories : posted July 31, 2008
The Sheikh and the Rabbi: A Jerusalem Fable

Sheikh Abdul Aziz BukhariRabbi Menachem Froman
We recently interviewed Rabbi Menachem Froman, an Orthodox rabbi of the West Bank settlement of Tekoa, famous for traveling to the Gaza Strip to meet with the late Sheikh Ahmed Yassin of Hamas and former Palestinian President Yasser Arafat. Later, we also interviewed Sheikh Abdul Aziz Bukhari, a Sufi Sheikh of the Naqshabandian Religious Method and head of the Uzbeke Community in Jerusalem.

Both Rabbi Froman and Sheikh Bukhari are interested in inter-religious dialogue and a nonviolent means for attaining peace, and both imparted a similar sentiment: When it comes to matters of Jerusalem, the politicians have their role, but the religious leaders have a role too. As Rabbi Froman shared, the issue here is not gold, nor oil: it's God. And since all three Abrahamic religions believe Jerusalem belongs to God, he asks, "Why not give Jerusalem to God?" Froman's view is also global: "If we can figure out Jerusalem, we can be a bridge for all humanity."

Perhaps the moral lesson of Jerusalem is simple and best described by Sheikh Bukhari: "Respect is like a mirror: if you show it, you will receive it in return." For him it's obvious that our destinies are entwined. "We all live here together and we are all going to die together. So why not support each other?"<!--break-->

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