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By Joseph Bobrow
5
44 ratings
The podcast currently has 11 episodes available.
Join Kazu Haga, author of Healing Resistance: A Radically Different Response to Harm, and me as we delve into the nature of personal, social and ecological change, healing trauma, and the intersection of non-violent direct action and spirituality.
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Kazu Haga is the founder and coordinator of the East Point Peace Academy and is an experienced nonviolence trainer, certified in several methodologies of nonviolence and restorative justice. Having received training from elders including Dr. Bernard Lafayette, Rev. James Lawson and Joanna Macy, he teaches nonviolence, conflict reconciliation, restorative justice, organizing and mindfulness in prisons and jails, high schools and youth groups, and with activist communities around the country.
Kazu was introduced to the work of social change and nonviolence in 1998, when at the age of 17 he participated in the Interfaith Pilgrimage of the Middle Passage; a 6-month walking journey from Massachusetts to New Orleans to retrace the slave trade. He spent a year studying nonviolence and Buddhism while living in monasteries throughout South Asia, and returned to the US at age 19 to begin a lifelong path in social justice work.
Kazu spent 10 years in social justice philanthropy, while playing leading roles in many movements. He became an active nonviolence trainer in the global justice movement of the late 1990s, and has since led hundreds of workshops worldwide.
He is the founding board chair of Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice (CURYJ), sits on the board of Peace Workers, and is a member of the Ahimsa Collective. He is the recipient of several awards including the Martin Luther King Jr. award and the Gil Lopez Award for Peacemaking.
Kazu is an avid meditator and enjoys being in nature, particularly with his dog. He is a die-hard fan of the Boston Celtics and of mixed martial arts, the latter of which he is still sometimes conflicted about.
" If we carry intergenerational trauma, then we also carry intergenerational wisdom. By maintaining a relationship with our ancestral wisdom, we can build a truly peaceful world for future generations."
-EastPointPeaceAcademy.org
-Healing Resistance: A Radically Different Response to Harmhttps://www.parallax.org/product/healing-resistance
- Fierce Vulnerability, work in Progress
Join me for a most stimulating conversation on the origins and nature of genuine change with Kritee, climate scientist, socioecological community activist, Zen priest, original, integrative thinker, and inspiring presence.
Sensei Kritee Kanko, PhD is a climate scientist, educator-activist, grief-ritual leader and a Zen priest. She is a Sensei in the Rinzai Zen lineage of Cold Mountain, a founding dharma teacher of Boundless in Motion and a co-founder of Rocky Mountain Ecodharma Retreat Center. She has served as an Ecodharma teacher for Earth-Love-Go (Lama Foundation), One Earth Sangha, Impermanent Sangha and Shogaku Zen Institute. As a senior scientist in the Global Climate Program at Environmental Defense Fund she helps implement climate-smart farming at scale in India. She was trained as a microbiologist and isotope biogeochemist at Rutgers and Princeton Universities.
Website: www.BoundlessinMotion.org
Recent blog post: https://bit.ly/2COwPgG
Join me for an illuminating conversation with Donald Rothberg on living a responsive, integrated, empowered life in the face of multidimensional upheaval. Donald is a teacher and writer on meditation, the intersection of psychology and spirituality, and socially engaged spiritual practice. He has taught and practiced Buddhist meditation for over 35 years, and his teaching and trainings have helped to pioneer new ways of connecting inner and outer transformation. He is a member of the Teacher's Council at Spirit Rock Meditation Center and the author of The Engaged Spiritual Life: A Buddhist Approach to Transforming Ourselves and the World.
":...If in your country, all hope is lost in the heat of summer / the snows in my country help you to get it back." —Rafael Alberti
Today I'm joined on the pod by my friend and Dharma sister Mushim Ikeda, socially engaged Buddhist teacher, social justice activist, author, and diversity and inclusion facilitator. In this personal and wide ranging dialogue, we explore resources for and challenges of transformation and change, inner and outer, during these trying times. Mushim also reads and discusses her beautiful poem, The Stowaway Seeds. For more, visit MushimIkeda.com and EastPointPeace.org
I am afraid to touch the shopping cart, the bright
But something unknown has always contained our death,
Such abundant offerings – these tiny crowns
—Mushim Ikeda
Join me as I welcome Tenzin Tethong, formerly H.H. The Dalai Lama's Special Envoy and Prime Minster of the Central Tibetan Administration. Tenzin and I discuss the critical importance of free media and the free flow of information in Tibet. He describes a new sense of identity among Tibetans: Even though Tibetans are occupied and controlled by the Chinese, in mind, spirit and in the cultural sense, Tenzin says they cannot be controlled at all. We discuss the fascinating story of Tenzin's family art collection, a series of 84 paintings of legendary Tibetan Mahasiddhis (great beings). These were carried out of Tibet by his Grandfather, and in turn carried by Tenzin around the world. Now all 84 paintings are reproduced in and the subject of a book with commentary by the Tibetan scholar Donald Lopez. Finally, we spoke about the pathos of the increase in self-immolations in Toibet as a way to protest the occupation and plea for H.H.'s return. While they are shocking, Tenzin and other feels that their intention is pure. He showed me a book, Tibet on Fire, that he has been reading about just this. We closed by acknowledging life's 10,000 sorrows and the 10,000 joys.
The incomparable Joanna Macy—author and teacher, scholar of Buddhism, systems thinking and deep ecology—joins Joseph for a stimulating, personal, and wide-ranging conversation. A pioneering voice in movements for peace, justice, and ecology, Joanna is the root teacher of The Work That Reconnects, a ground-breaking framework for personal and social change and a powerful workshop methodology. Her many books include A Wild Love for the World, Active Hope, and World as Love, World as Self.
Susan Murphy, Zen teacher and author of Minding the Earth, Mending the World: Zen and the Art of Planetary Crisis, explores responding to the Earth's suffering, which is our own, and the indigenous notion of "country," which "moves beyond landscape, allotment, vista or wildlife as discrete components, to embrace place, Ancestors, shadows, mist, warble, maps, vapor, Knowledge, Ways, Forms, Spirit, Healing – a fluid fixity that is a web of inter-connection...where everything has its place to teach, feel, show, speak."
Zen teacher, eco-activist, and philosopher David Loy explores with Joseph the sense of self, its sense of lack, and the interplay of individual awakening, social transformation, and the fate of the biosphere. David is the author of Ecodharma: Buddhist Teachings for the Precipice
Roshi Wendy Egyoku Nakao, author of The Book of Householder Koans, joins Joseph to explore Dharma practice in the midst of our tumultuous times, and the practice of not turning away, bearing witness and compassionate response.
Duncan Williams, author of American Sutra: A Story of Faith and Freedom in the Second World War, joins Joseph and reflects on how crisis and anguish can remind us of how connected to each other we are, how we can work with overwhelm, and use suffering wisely to resist, practice, and liberate ourselves and others.
The podcast currently has 11 episodes available.