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Nonviolence Living Room Tonight with Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb & Tour Bus Continues, Shabbat on Friday
November 9, 2011
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Greetings!
Join us tonight as Lynn Gottlieb, long-time nonviolent activist and one of the first women Rabbis ever ordained, leads us in an evening on "the patience to win" through song, texts, activities and discussion.
Then, this Friday, our Tour Bus continues with a Kabbalat Shabbat with Romemu and Rabbi David Ingber. We've added a second evening to attend a Sufi Zikir and have posted a wonderful reflection, video and photos from our visit to the Hindu Kirtan. Come to as many stops as you can because there is no better way to experience your neighbor's faith than to go to their spiritual homes! As a result, we think you'll understand your own faith more deeply too.
Then on November 15th, Faith House is co-sponsoring an event on the Humanist Community and Interfaith Work, hosted by the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard, Park51, and the Center for Inquiry NYC. More below! |
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Living Room The Patience to Win: Practicing Nonviolence as a Multifaith Community
TONIGHT
Wednesday, November 9, 2011 6 pm Doors, 7 pm Program
Intersections, 274 5th Ave Btwn 29th and 30th Sts
With Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb & Community of Living Traditions
Snacks welcome!
"Nonviolence is not inaction. It is not discussion. It is not for the timid or weak... Nonviolence is hard work. It is the willingness to sacrifice. It is the patience to win." - Cesar Chavez
Join Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb and members of the Community of Living Traditions, who are passionately engaged with current day expressions of nonviolence. A shared commitment to nonviolence unites the Jewish, Muslim, Christian and Quaker communities residing at The Community of Living Traditions. At CLT, dedication to religious nonviolence as a way of life incorporates the study and practice of strategic nonviolence, viewing conflict transformation, inner discernment, the struggle for racial justice and intergenerational and multicultural solidarity as essential to the task of waging nonviolence in our own communities, in our neighborhoods and in the world. Members of The Community of Living Traditions understand nonviolence as a transformational force in service of human dignity and well-being. Nonviolence is the opposite of passivity. Passivity implies victimhood, whether as bystander or targeted victim. Nonviolence engenders empowerment and agency directed toward resisting all attempts at treating persons as things, from large systems designed to humiliate and dehumanize to individual acts of impulse, from bullying to murder. As Gandhi said, nonviolence without direct action is meaningless. This Living Room will include a brief presentation, music, text study, small group work, interactive activities, and ritual.
RSVP Today! (requested, not required)
Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb, one of the first 10 women to serve as rabbi, is storyteller, activist and organizer, writer, percussionist, klezmer dancer and ceremonial artist. She cofounded The Community of Living Traditions in an effort to bring the work of creating a multifaith, multicultural and multigenerational environment for activists committed to strategic nonviolence to build upon their work. It is shaped by our three partner organizations: the Muslim Peace Fellowship, Shomer Shalom Network for Jewish Nonviolence and the Luke 6 Project. These communities are grounded at Stony Point Center by their respective elders; Chaplain Rabia Terri Harris, Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb and Rick and Kitty Ufford-Chase. The Community of Living Traditions is located on the campus of the Stony Point Center, a conference center of the Presbyterian Church (USA).
Here's a great article about how CLT began, "A Radical Experiment"
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Tour Bus 2011
Stop #3 Romemu Shabbat - THIS Friday, Nov 11th
Stop Added, Sufi Zikr - Thursday, November 17th
This "tour" of diverse, sacred spaces in New York City will enable people from the Faith House community and each of the congregations involved to enter the religious space of the other, as well as practice spiritual hospitality by hosting the other in their own space.
Stop #1 - Hindu Kirtan Community Service
With Gadadhara Pandit Dasa, Bhakti Center Monks, & Congregation
krishnanyc.com
THIS FRIDAY Friday, November 11th
Stop #3 - Kabbalat Shabbat Service and Potluck
With Rabbi David Ingber, Shir Yaakov Feinstein Feit, and Romemu 7-8:45 pm - Shabbat Service, 9 pm - Potluck (veg or kosher dish) @ 165 West 105th Street, at Amsterdam
romemu.org
RSVP for Romemu Shabbat
Thursday, November 17rd (2nd Night Added!)
Stop - Prayer, Sohbet, Zikr
A night with Sheikha Fariha and the Nur Ashki Jerrahi Sufi Order
7:30 pm until late - Zikr Ceremony (with breaks to leave)
Dergah al-Farah @ 245 West Broadway, between Beach and White nurashkijerrahi.org
RSVP for Zikr (2nd Night)
Wednesday, December 7
Stop #4 - "Creating a Space for Grace"
With Rev. Stephen Phelps, Interim Senior Minister, preaching
6 pm - Soup Supper and Orientation, 7-8:30 pm - "Space for Grace" Assembly Hall, Riverside Church @ 490 Riverside Drive, at 121st St theriversidechurchny.org
Wednesday, December 14
Stop #5 - Faith House Living Room
With guests from all four participating communities 7 - 9 pm - Living Room and End-of-Tour Party @ 274 Fifth Avenue, near 30th Street faithhousemanhattan.org
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Special Event
NYC Event on Humanist Community & Interfaith Work
Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard Event
Faith House is a proud co-sponsor!
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
7 pm
Park51, 51 Park Place
Between Church St. and West Broadway
Join the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard for an event hosted by Park51 and Center for Inquiry NYC, to discuss communities for the nonreligious and the role of atheists in interfaith work, while launching two groundbreaking new initiatives: The Humanist Community Project, and Values in Action at the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard.
The Humanist Community Project seeks to unify millions of nonreligious Americans and develop a comparable social and cultural experience to that of a religious congregation. Values in Action at the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard (VIA at HCH) is our interfaith community service program to better the conditions of life for others through service to humanity, build alliances between religious and nonreligious individuals and communities, and combat the misconception that the nonreligious do not contribute to society.
This event will be co-sponsored by the Harvard Humanist Alumni and major NYC-based atheist, religious, and LGBT organizations: GLAAD (Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation), Faith House Manhattan , World Faith , Groundswell, Auburn Seminary, Journal of Inter-Religious Dialogue, Bronx Community College Secular Humanist Club, and others TBA.
RSVPs for this event are appreciated and donations are welcome at
http://hchnyc.eventbrite.com
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Tour Bus Stop #1
Reflection, Video & Photos from Kirtan |  | |
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