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Vol. XVI, No.3 Spring, 2002
WHAT WE ARE ABOUT
Please share with us what you are doing
relating to nonviolent change. If you send us a short report
of your doings, learnings, ideas, concerns, reactions, queries
we will print them here. Responses can be published in the next
issue.
Bill and Oma Pemberton (PEMBILOMA@cs.com): Simply amazed at the number
of organizations in your focus, Steve. Just too bad they don't
all get together and make a pitch to influence THE INFLUENCERS.
I feel sorry for our naive and ignorant President. Simply does
not have the sophistication to deal with the complexity of terrorism.
Somehow believes that once he calls someone 'evil' that he has
established a reality. You'll find about the "new thinking"
in my book Sanity for Survival, the revision from Euclidian
to nonEuclidean geomety, the revision from Newtonian to nonNewtonian
physics (The Bomb, if you need evidence) and revision from Aristotelian
to nonAristotelain logic THE "NEW THINKING" I've been
pushing for over half a century. The repopularized song "The
world, you'll never change it!" is about the way it is,
I reckon. Still trying to keep the world from self-destructing.
Letter to Saddam Hussein in January with plea "to talk"
and a billion people will send accolades. Said that to Bush-too
several times, in different ways. Two letters back from the Whitehouse,
neither on the subject sent. Being 90 is burdensome, and #1 problem:
fatigue! Dr Bill had a fun time Aug and Sept, doing a talk show
for KFNX Phoenix called THE WORLD ACCORDING TO DR. BILL. But
after a few weeks, too stressful. so cancelled it out. As I mentioned
earlier, we're rollin' along at 90 and 88, but a long trip to
a meeting is out now. Had the following piece turn up in the
local, Marin I, after having sent it the SF Chronicle: Lessons
and Learning
As a 90 Year resident on planet earth,
a Quaker grandson of Quaker ministers and witness of wars from
World War One to now, I have been waging a losing appeal to convince
human beings that war as a problem solving strategy is crazy,
pure insanity. That judgement is based on my early training as
a psychologist. As the Kingston Trio used to sing it, "When
Will We Ever Learn?"
Marilee Niehoff:
Created a "Local Heroes of Ground Zero" poster, honoring
local people who went to help at the World Trade Towers disaster
site, which was published in "Letters About September 11"
in the December-January Issue of Association for Humanistic Psychology,
AHP Perspective. She continues to work in aquatic fitness to
help people attain inner peace, as an aspect of creating peace
among people on a small scale, to increase peace on a large scale.
She is a professional member of the Aquatic Exercise Association.
Darling G. Villena-Mata, an ongoing contributor to our publication,
holds a doctorate degree in social psychology, with a focus on
trauma and conflict studies. Aside from being a consultant, mediator,
and intercultural trainer who specializes in intergroup conflicts,
Darling has written several articles in the areas of societal
trauma, conflict resolution, and the effects of discrimination
and societal violence on recipients, as well as re-authoring
one's life and transforming life difficulties into adventures
of the soul. She recently presented at a national trauma conference
in Los Angeles, California on "The Impact of Societal Trauma",
which addressed trauma's effects on large scale conflict resolution.
She recently guest lectured on "What Perpetuates Societal
Violence?" at Mount St. Mary's College in Los Angeles. She
is often asked to guest lecture on "How 'isms' Impact Treatment
of Diverse Clients" at Antioch University's Clinical Psychology
department. Some of her talks are based on her book, Walking
Between Winds: A Passage Through Societal Trauma and Its Healing,
which can be requested from her.
She is available for speaking engagements,
consultation, teaching, and training. You may reach her at circlepoint@earthlink.net
or 310.994.6606 in the United States.
Steve Sachs:
I am enjoying my final semester teaching at IUPUI, and looking
forward to being "indefinitely on sabbatical," writing
(including editing Nonviolent Change and Native American Policy
Network Newsletter) and continuing to engage in service work
(particularly with Indian nations and Americans for Indian Opportunity
- which is scheduled to move Leah and I to Albuquerque in a little
over a year from now).
I am excited about being invited to be
a teacher in Bear Song I, an international program with indigenous
elders and spiritual teachers in August, beginning in London,
moving to Dublin and concluding in Belfast, closing with a peace
rally. Organizer Grandfather Michael Bromley, a Druid elder,
says that it is time for traditional elders and teachers to talk
with the public about overcoming the World's many ills and moving
to the next level.
I will also be on the road in April and
at the end of August with a pair of panels I have put together.
At the American Indian Studies Section of the Western Social
Science Association Meeting in Albuquerque, I have organized
a session, "Honoring the Circle: Developing Government to
Government Relations Between Indian Tribal Governments and Federal
State and Local Governments." With LaDonna Harris, President
of American Indian Opportunities, and Barbara Morris, in Political
Science at the University of Redlands, I am presenting a paper
of the same name. It is an extensive overview and analysis of
the whole topic that will become a chapter in the volume we are
writing on American Indian renewal. Recognizing Indian nations
as partners in a federal system has relevance for overcoming
the subjugation of native people around the world. At the American
Political Science Association Meeting in Boston, I have organized
a discussion and am presenting a paper, "Acknowledging the
Circle: The Impact of American Indian Tradition Upon Western
Political Thought and its Contemporary Relevance." It is
often overlooked how much impact European contact with the extremely
democratic societies in the Americas had on Western thinking.
Contact came as a democratizing struggle was in progress in Europe
that could only rely on reports of ancient Greece and Rome and
a few existing small city states for inspiration in Europe. But
those who came to the Americas experienced wide spread participatory
democracy. The profound effect of this is clear in reading John
Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau.
It is well documented that Marx and Engels
developed important parts of their historical theory from Morgan's
reports of the Senaca. The U.S. Founders took a great deal from
Indian ways of governance, and a strong case can be made that
Indians are responsible for there being as much democracy as
their is in the United States. Traditional native ways are particularly
relevant today as many developing practices including democratization
of work places, reinventing government, consensus decision making
in policy development and conflict resolution, restorative justice,
equality for women, and human harmony with the natural environment
are all emerging recreations of traditional native ways. Even
the cutting edge of contemporary physics is returning to a view
approaching that of traditional native people. I am happy to
share copies of these papers on request.
Looking forward to seeing many of you
at the Palwaukee Inn.
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These articles and opinions
of the authors do not constitute the endorsement of Nonviolent
Change nor its publisher, Organization Development Institute,
or any of its staff, nor of CirclePoint which is housing the
Nonviolent Change Journal.
©2002. All rights reserve. The Nonviolent Change Journal
is published by the Research/Study Team on Nonviolent Large
Systems Change - an interorganizational and international project
of The Organization Development Institute.
Permissions:
Reposting and reprints are encouraged, as long as proper source
acknowledgement is given. As a courtesy, please let us know that
you are reprinting or electronically reposting. It helps us know
of the interest level. Thank you.
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