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From the
YES! Magazine website
Winter issue "Can Love Save the World"

by Rik Langendoen
and Pam Chang
ORGANIZATIONS
American Friends
Service Committee (AFSC), an organization founded by Quakers, works on
issues of economic justice, peace building, social justice, and youth in the US,
Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. AFSC works in prisons, on
environmental justice, on building healing relationships between races, on
issues confronting sexual minorities, youth, Native Americans, and impoverished
peoples. AFSC was founded in 1917 to provide conscientious objectors with an
opportunity to aid civilian victims during World War I.
1501 Cherry Street
Philadelphia, PA 19102
215/241-7000
www.afsc.org
Bread for the Journey is a national network of local nonprofit charities
serving the poor and underprivileged. The organization supports local people in
bringing health, education and community-based projects to their communities.
The organization is also responsible for the Institute for Engaged Spirituality,
which examines how spiritual practices take fruit as loving kindness,
sympathetic joy, and compassion.
1219 Luisa Street, Suite 7
Santa Fe, NM 87505
505/438-4696
www.breadforthejourney.org
Buddhist Peace Fellowship (BPF) addresses issues of human rights,
systemic violence, economic justice, and environmental sustainability through
serving the homeless, teaching meditation in jails, working in community gardens
with at-risk youth, and sitting in meditation at vigils for peace and justice.
Think Sangha, a socially engaged Buddhist think tank affiliated with the
fellowship, works on critiques of social structures and alternative social
models. Turning Wheel is the BPF quarterly.
PO Box 4650
Berkeley, CA 94704
510/655-6169, www.bpf.org
Center for the Advancement of Nonviolence is sponsor of the Season for
Nonviolence in LA, an international commemoration of M. K. Gandhi and M. L. King
that demonstrates how nonviolence can heal, transform, and empower our lives and
communities.
1223 Wilshire Blvd. #472
Santa Monica, CA 90403
www.nonviolenceworks.com
Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors since 1948 has helped
people resist being inducted into the military and those already in the military
who want to get out.
630 20th Street, Suite 302
Oakland, CA 94702
888/231-2226, www.objector.org
The Fellowship of Reconciliation, the largest and oldest interfaith peace
organization in the US, holds a vision of a “beloved community” in which
differences are respected, conflicts are addressed nonviolently, oppressive
structures are dismantled, and people live in harmony with the Earth. FOR
offers a resource packet for responding to 9/11, hate crimes, and the US
military campaign. Ongoing projects include a campaign against the Iraqi
sanctions, for the abolition of nuclear weapons, for a death penalty moratorium.
FOR also sends delegations to Israel/Palestine, works for economic justice, and
honors those working for social change through nonviolent means with the Pfeffer
Peace Prize and the MLK Award.
PO Box 271, Nyack, NY 10960
845/358-4601, www.forusa.org
The Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR) is an association
of 275 Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish institutional investors—including
national denominations, religious communities, pension funds, and
endowments—which press companies to be socially and environmentally
responsible. Each year ICCR members sponsor over 100 shareholder resolutions on
major social and
environmental issues. They also meet with management, screen their investments,
divest stock,
conduct public hearings and investigations, publish special reports, and sponsor
prayer vigils, letter writing campaigns, and consumer boycotts. ICCR-member
community development investments surpass $900 million.
475 Riverside Drive, Room 550
New York, NY 10115
212/870-2293
www.iccr.org
Jubilee USA Network is continuing the work of the Jubilee 2000 to get
Third World debt canceled.
222 East Capitol Street
Washington DC 20003
202/783-3566
www.j2000usa.org
Metta Center for Nonviolent Education provides links to writings relevant to
the September 11th attack and a documentary collection of incidences where
nonviolence has proven successful. Michael Nagler (see “Is there No Other
Way,” below) is president.
2398 Bancroft Way
Berkeley, CA 94704
510/549-3096
www.mettacenter.org
Naropa University’s Center For Engaged Spirituality is a vehicle for
the practical application of spirituality in local communities and across the
planet. Housed at the Naropa University, the Center extends the frontiers of
engaged spirituality in prison settings, AIDS work, elder communities, medical
settings, legal and ethical arenas.
2130 Arapahoe Ave.
Boulder, CO 80302
303/444-0202, www.naropa.edu
Nevada Desert Experience believes that nuclear and other weapons of mass
destruction are immoral as well as physically, emotionally, and spiritually
devastating to all of creation. They mobilize people of faith to work toward
nuclear abolition with particular focus on ending nuclear testing in the Nevada
desert.
PO Box 46645
Las Vegas, NV 89111
702/646-4814
www.nevadadesertexperience.org
Pace e Bene Franciscan Nonviolence Center, an agency of Franciscan Friars
of California, aims to counteract society’s epidemic violence by practicing
active nonviolence as a way of life and as a methodology for cultural
transformation. The center does training in nonviolence, trains trainers, and
spreads information on the success of active nonviolence.
1420 West Bartlett Ave.
Las Vegas, NV 89106
702/648-2281
www.paceebene.org
Prison Dharma Network is a Buddhist support network for prisoners, prison
volunteers, and correctional workers founded in 1989 by Fleet Maull, then a
federal prisoner. PDN is an affiliate of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship. The
organization supports prisoners in the practice of contemplative
disciplines through their publications, email listserv, correspondence and
trainings.
PO Box 4623
Boulder CO 80306
303-544-5923
www.prisondharmanetwork.org
Season for Non-Violence
A Season for Nonviolence, January 30 - April 4, is a national 64-day
educational, media, and grassroots campaign dedicated to demonstrating that
nonviolence is a powerful way to heal, transform, and empower our lives and our
communities. Inspired by the 50th and 30th memorial anniversaries of Mahatma
Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., this international event honors their
vision for an empowered, nonviolent world. The Association for Global New
Thought is the convening organization.
Association for Global New Thought
1514 Main St. #2 Evanston, IL 60202-6502
tel 847-866-9525 fax 847-866-9545
www.agnt.org/snv02.htm
United Religions
Initiative supports people of diverse faiths in exploring how interfaith
cooperation can make a positive difference in their local communities. Local
efforts, ranging from ending religious violence in conflict zones to creating
new models of religious education for children, gain strength by being part of a
global community.
PO Box 29242
San Francisco, CA 94129
415/561-2300, www.uri.org
by Rik Langendoen and
Pam Chang
The Rhythm of Compassion: Caring for Self, Connecting with Society, by Gail
Straub (Charles E Tuttle Co, 2001). Using the primal rhythm of breath-in and
breath-out, renowned author and teacher Gail Straub shows readers how they can
serve the spirit and the planet simultaneously and offers numerous activities
and exercises to make this remarkable book even more tangible.
The Wheel of Engaged Buddhism: A New Map of the Path, by Kenneth Kraft (Weatherhill,
1999). This short introduction to engaged Buddhism highlights the activities and
challenges of socially conscious Buddhism. A defender of rainforests, imprisoned
Burmese president Aung San Suu Kyi, poet and environmentalist Gary Snyder, and a
woman who led an effort to comfort victims of the Bosnian war are some of those
cited.
Thomas Merton and Thich Nhat Hanh: Engaged Spirituality in an Age of
Globalization, by Robert King (Continuum Publication Group, October 2001).
Thomas Merton and Thich Nhat Hanh met briefly at the Gethsemani Trappist
monastery in Kentucky in 1966, and though they admired each other, they had no
further significant contact. This book explores the convergence of their
viewpoints and their impact on current thinking regarding spirituality and
social action.
Bearing Witness: A Zen Master’s Lessons in Making Peace, by Bernard
Glassman (Random House, July 1999). Zen practitioner and nonprofit community
developer Bernie Glassman offers teaching stories that illustrate ways of making
peace one moment at a time. Each chapter focuses on an event or person and
demonstrates how a particular peacemaker vow is put into practice.
Loved By Love: The
Memoirs of Vinoba Bhave, edited by Kalindi (Chelsea Green Publishing, March
1996). Inspired by his teacher, Gandhi, Vinoba spent 20 years walking from
village to village throughout India, persuading wealthy landowners to give
literally millions of acres to the landless poor. These memoirs reveal both the
inner and outer life of this great man who had an unwavering commitment to the
practice of nonviolence, to an engaged spirituality, and to the power of love.
Soul of a Citizen:
Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time, by Paul Rogat Loeb (St. Martin’s
Press, 1999). Paul Loeb presents an alternative vision of hope and courage in
this book based on 30 years studying the psychology of social involvement. Loeb
describes how ordinary citizens can make their voices heard and their actions
count. The book explores what leads some to get involved in larger community
issues while others feel overwhelmed or uncertain. He also looks at how to
maintain commitment and how involvement can give us a sense of connection and
purpose rare in purely personal life.
www.soulofacitizen.org
Take This Job and Love It: How to Find Fulfillment in Any Job You Do, by
Matthew Gilbert (St. Martin’s Press, 1998). How to turn any job into an
opportunity for spiritual growth and understanding. This book is an invitation
to anyone who has ever found work unfulfilling to discover that in even the
simplest and humblest acts there is potential for blessings.
Is There No Other Way?
The Search for a Nonviolent Future, by Michael Nagler (Berkeley Hills Books,
2000). Beginning with the achievements of Gandhi and the legacy of nonviolence
in the struggles against Nazism in Europe, racism in America, oppression in
China and Latin America, and ethnic conflicts in Africa and Bosnia, the author
proposes that nonviolence has proven its power against arms and social injustice
wherever it has been correctly understood and applied. (See the author’s
article on this in YES! #7.)
Healing the Soul of
America, Reclaiming Our Voices as Spiritual Citizens, by Marianne Williamson
(Simon and Schuster, 2000). Spirituality is not just self-awareness; it involves
transforming spiritual principles into social activism, says the author.
Williamson defines politics as “caring for the public good” and—citing the
Constitution, Pennsylvania Quakers, Lincoln, King, and others—notes how
people’s hearts have inspired them to repudiate injustice. She suggests that,
rather than trying to fight what is wrong, we love what might be and make the
commitment to bring it forth.
From the
Yes! magazine
website
http://futurenet.org/20spirituality/resourcesspirituality.html
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