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Archive for September 10, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: 9/11 Love

The start of autumn often reminds me of that crisp September day in 2001 in NYC when our world shook, but then I remember that Sept 11 in history is also when Vivekananda gave his famous speech on interfaith understanding at the 1893 Parliament of World Religions and Gandhi announced his strategy of non-violence in South Africa in 1906. Let’s reclaim 9/11 as a day of transcendent kindness. -Preeta

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Editor’s Note: The start of autumn often reminds me of that crisp September day in 2001 in NYC when our world shook, but then I remember that Sept 11 in history is also when Vivekananda gave his famous speech on interfaith understanding at the 1893 Parliament of World Religions and Gandhi announced his strategy of non-violence in South Africa in 1906. Let’s reclaim 9/11 as a day of transcendent kindness. -Preeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A tiny Canadian town opened its heart to 7000 stranded travelers on 9/11; their kindness was passed on and rippled back stunningly to their community as well.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A KindSpringer with a golden heart makes memory quilts from clothing and photos of lost loved ones. After 9/11, she recruited others and helped make personalized quilts for over 500 9/11 families.
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9/11 Babies
Hugs 9/11 babies, born after the deaths of their fathers, find strength in the kindness of community, the support of one another, and the love of their mothers and families.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Writer Rajni Bakshi reminds us that the human missiles of 2001 don’t have a unique claim on 9/11; Sept 11 marks notable historical events of co-existence, faith and cooperation.
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Janwaar Castle: A Modern Skate Park in Rural India

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September 10, 2019

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Janwaar Castle: A Modern Skate Park in Rural India

If Iâm losing balance in a pose, I stretch higher and God reaches down to steady me. It works every time, and not just in yoga

– -T. Guillemets- –

Janwaar Castle: A Modern Skate Park in Rural India

When is a skatepark more than a skatepark? When it is Janwaar Castle, a local playground in Janwaar village. Between 50-60 children visit the park every day where they learn English, music, dance, painting, 3D modelling, and general life skills. It is a place where Adivasis and Yadavs, boys and girls, and all age groups play together. There are two rules: no school no skating and girls first. Since skateboarding is âcool,â the children will do anything to hang out thereâincluding going to school. The park was conceptualized and created by Ulrike Reinhard, a German who fell in love with and moved to India after a trip there in 2012. Of skateboarding she says, âIt teaches you to fall and rise, take risks and most importantly, maintain balance.â { read more }

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Awakin Weekly: Hard Times Require Furious Dancing

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Hard Times Require Furious Dancing
by Alice Walker

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tow4.jpgI am the youngest of eight siblings. Five of us have died. I share losses, health concerns, and other challenges common to the human condition, especially in these times of war, poverty, environmental devastation, and greed that are quite beyond the most creative imagination. Sometimes it all feels a bit too much to bear. Once a person of periodic deep depressions, a sign of mental suffering in my family that affected each sibling differently, I have matured into someone I never dreamed I would become: an unbridled optimist who sees the glass as always full of something. It may be half full of water, precious in itself, but in the other half there’s a rainbow that could exist only in the vacant space.

I have learned to dance.

It isn’t that I didn’t know how to dance before; everyone in my community knew how to dance, even those with several left feet. I just didn’t know how basic it is for maintaining balance. That Africans are always dancing (in their ceremonies and rituals) shows an awareness of this. It struck me one day, while dancing, that the marvelous moves African Americans are famous for on the dance floor came about because the dancers, especially in the old days, were contorting away various knots of stress. Some of the lower-back movements handed down to us that have seemed merely sensual were no doubt created after a day’s work bending over a plow or hoe on a slave driver’s plantation.

Wishing to honor the role of dance in the healing of families, communities, and nations, I hired a local hall and a local band and invited friends and family from near and far to come together, on Thanksgiving, to dance our sorrows away, or at least to integrate them more smoothly into our daily existence. The next generation of my family, mourning the recent death of a mother, my sister-in-law, created a spirited line dance that assured me that, though we have all encountered our share of grief and troubles, we can still hold the line of beauty, form, and beat — no small accomplishment in a world as challenging as this one.

Hard times require furious dancing. Each of us is the proof.

About the Author: Alice Walker is a Pulitzer-winning author, poet, novelist, and activist. The passage above is from the preface of her book of poems: "Hard Times Require Furious Dancing".

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Hard Times Require Furious Dancing
What does learning to dance mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time when you held the line of beauty, form and beat through grief and troubles? What helps you stay aware of your balance so you can maintain it?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Life is a balancing act. It’s like a string of a string instrument. If you stretch it too hard, it will break. If you keep it too lose, it will not make a sound. Like all of us I have felt thousan…
David Doane wrote: The glass is always full of something, and the value of what’s there is defined by the glass holder. Learning to dance means learning to be in the present, enjoy the process, be ongoingly responsi…
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