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NAINConnect 2010: Many
Faiths – One Family, Building a World of Harmony |
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Digging
Deep: Personal and religious motivations for interfaith work Practical
Application: Harnessing the Unifying Potential of Faith Connecting:
The power of genetics and genealogy in bringing people together. Working
Together for the Common Good. We arrived early in beautiful Salt Lake City for the NAINConnect 2010. We came to do some genealogy work in the Family History Library next door to the conference hotel, the Plaza on Temple Square. The TRAX trolley is wonderful and free in city center. All cities should do this! |
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Pioneer Day Parade
Pioneer Days Parade: Then and Now We had a window seat at our hotel room to watch the staging of the Days of '47 KSL 5 Parade. |
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NAIN Board MeetingsNAIN Board members are all volunteers. They pay their own expenses to attend the Connects and come early to devote extra time for the Board meetings. We had meetings Saturday evening, Sunday, and during Tuesday breakfast. |
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Pictured here are [back row]Judy Trautman, Jan Saeed, Karen Boyett, Jim Wiggins, George Stern, Midge Falconer, Paul McKenna, Paul Chaffee, Rob Hankinson, [front row] Grove Harris, Woody Trautman, Bettina Gray, Don Mayne, and Betsy Wiggins. Pre-Conference Activities |
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Connect attendees had reserved seating for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir performance Sunday morning. They have been broadcasting for over 80 years. It was wonderful! The camera choreography almost as interesting as the performance. But the music was exquisite. NAIN was recognized twice by
the announcer. Then the choir and orchestra performed a special piece for us
- the Battle Hymn of the Republic. |
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At 2 PM we attended the
premier screening of the documentary "The Asian and Abrahamic
Religions: a Divine Encounter in
America." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=okYyMInc7uA
The
documentary aims to demystify the Asian religions; the misconceptions and
stereotypes that many Americans have about them, and to show the deep
historical roots of the Asian religions in America. |
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The film will air on PBS this fall. Two of the producers, Gerald and Adam Krell were present for an introduction and discussion. At a former NAINConnect and locally in Toledo we screened a previous Krell film, "Thee Faiths, One God." A
complete list of film participants and advisors may be found at http://www.nain.org/FilmParticipants.mht.
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Opening SessionWe were welcomed at the Salt Lake City Buddhist Church
[yes, they call it a church]. About 90
people registered for the Connect, including a wonderful contingent of Young
Adults. Our co-hosts were members of the SLC Interfaith
Roundtable, which originated to provide chaplaincy for the SLC Olympics and
has continued since, due to the bonds formed then. Welcomers included Alan Bachman, Chair of
the Salt Lake Interfaith Roundtable, the Rev. Jerry Hirano of the Salt Lake
Buddhist Church, and Bettina Gray, NAIN Chair. Before dinner, Reverend Dr. Stephen Albert and Reverend
Abigail Albert of the All Faith Center, Powoy, California, directed us in a
spirited mixer game where we had to find our shoe and then figure out a way
to remember the finder’s name. |
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The One Voice Children's Choir, directed by Masa Fukuda,
performed several numbers in the church and in the courtyard where we dined. |
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Tarunjit Singh Butalia & Ivan Cendese during mixer |
One Voice Children's Choir, Masa Fukuda, Director |
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Keynote Address |
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Doug Johnston |
Doug Johnston,
Director/Founder of the International Center for Religion and Diplomacy, was
our Keynote Speaker. His book Religion:
the Missing Dimensions of Statecraft is now required reading at the U. S
Foreign Service Institute and is used as a text at colleges, universities,
and seminaries around the world. The
speaker was sponsored by the Religious Studies Program at Utah Valley
University. Mr. Johnston spoke about faith-based diplomacy, which
makes religion a part of the solution.
He spoke of reconciliation, as opposed to conflict. He said it is not absence of conflict, but
a restoration process which includes all parties, even the enemy. It includes deep-level forgiveness and
social justice. |
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The International Center for Religion and Diplomacy's
approach with local leaders is an excellent example of diplomacy. Johnston quotes from the Qur'anic verses
which indicate that we intended by Allah/God to get along with one
another. He calls himself a 'follower
of Jesus' and reminds the Muslim leaders that they also revere Jesus as a
teacher. He asks, if Jesus were here
now, what would he have us do? He
relates that this approach dissolves tension and allows them to move forward
in discussion. The Center applies faith-based diplomacy in seven parts of
the world, including the Sudan, Kashmir, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the
Middle East. There is no cookie-cutter
approach. In the Sudan they focus on "what women know from
birth and men sometimes get - that all things are relational". They seek the answer to what a Muslim-led
country can do to assure the rights of non-Muslims by recalling periods of
history when this has happened. In Kashmir they avoid a top-down approach. The governments of India and Pakistan are
not interested in a resolution, because the conflict distracts from their
internal issues. Johnston's team
invites second-level leaders - Hindu, Buddhist and Muslim leaders - to work
towards faith-based reconciliation. In Afghanistan/Pakistan, the program of 'madrasa
enhancement' expands the curriculum to include human rights and religious
tolerance without touching the religious core. They seek to transform the pedagogy to
include critical thinking. They have
worked with 2547 madrassas out of about 20,000. The American government has not fully realized that
American Muslims represent a great asset for constructive engagement. He cites the International Institute for
Islamic Thought as a constructive non-profit involved in Islamic Issues. One of the attendees, Mr. Mohammad Fani
from Camp Brotherhood in Mt. Vernon, WA, said that it is the first speech he
had ever heard on issues concerning Islam that was entirely accurate. |
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Digging Deep: Personal and religious motivations for interfaith work
Digging Deep Panel The panel, hosted by NAIN Board member Grove Harris,
discussed various motivations for interfaith work. Rabbi David A. Kunin, President,
Edmonton Interfaith Centre, Rabbi of Beth Shalom Synagogue. Rabbi Kunin feels belief is not so important. Dogma obscures individual identity. Meta-narratives are dangerous. Tarunjit Singh Butalia, Executive Committee and Chair of
the Interfaith Committee, World Sikh Council – America Region; Moderator of
Religions for Peace; Vice-Chair NAIN; Exec. Comm. of the Council for a
Parliament of the World’s Religions. At first Tarunjit was a secular Sikh. A Catholic priest led him back to his
tradition. He is fanatically
mono-theistic, but does not feel that others need to be. He needs to understand other faiths in
order to fully realize his own. He
does not believe other faiths, but honors them. He believes we must move from toleration to
respect and finally to honoring other faiths. Pastor Dean Jackson, Pastor of the Rock Canyon Church, an
affiliate of the Assemblies of God. Pastor Jackson calls himself a 'follower of Jesus' [see
keynote]. He stopped Mormon-bashing in
his church. Cultural differences are
more important than religious differences.
He does not like the verb 'tolerate'.
He tolerates bad weather and potholes, but not people. At core this is about relationships. Problems do not go away, but opportunities
open up for solutions. He feels we
must wrestle with our own values, e. g., honesty vs.
loyalty. He points out that the
business world pays for loyalty, not honesty. Imam Muhammed Mehtar, the Islamic Society of Greater Salt Lake After 9/11 he was asked, "Whose side are
you?" So he asked himself who he
was. He undertook seven years of
sharia law study. 150 non-members come
to the Islamic Society. He urges all
people of the book to find areas of common understanding. Common values are important for relationship. For the little differences, we need greater
understanding. Gayla Sorenson, J.D., Senior
Fellow the International Center for the Study of Law and Religion, J. Reuben
Clark law School, Brigham Young University. The LDS
11th Article of Faith allows others their own faiths. She grew up in an interfaith family and
lived as part of a minority. We need
to practice ways that we can work together. Comments: Jim Wiggins does not like the term
'other'. We need to affirm our
differences and learn from them. He
prefers conversation to dialog.URI-NA
operates on synergy - build with. How do we engage with minorities? |
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Golden Rule Project Panel Golden Rule Panel"The Golden Rule Projects are about to become a Movement." --Paul McKenna Barb Dornan, Designated Sacred Space, Saskatchewan, Canada
discussed a synergy wheel of the Golden rule and
showed slides of their Sacred Space Project Multi-Faith Brochure. Paul McKenna, Interfaith Office, Scarboro Missions,
Scarborough ON, Canada Paul discussed the Golden
Rule Poster and associated projects to animate it and create curriculum based
on it. http://www.scarboromissions.ca/Golden_rule/ Mussie
Hailu is a key interfaith activist in Ethiopia and across Africa. He has
circulated 20,000 golden rule posters, adapted from the Scarboro Missions poster,
around the world. Bonnie Phillips, The Golden Rule Project, Salt Lake City The Golden Rule Project, begun in November 2003, produced
a 16 formulation document of the Golden Rule as a piece of art. The resulting
illustrated documents have been placed free in 500-600 schools. The artistic documents may be found at http://www.goldenruleproject.org/HTML/illuminations.htm Dr. Paul Eppinger, Exec. Dir.,
Arizona Interfaith Movement created a Golden rule
license plate. The funds raised to
start were $32,000. The plates sell
for $25 of which the Interfaith Movement receives $17. They now receive $12,000 - $15,000 per
month from the state. Using the funds
they have put a video on TV and in theaters.
Two million people saw the ad.
They want to work on a Scouts Interfaith Badge. http://www.interfaitharizona.com/ Mini-Presentations
Mini- Presentations [photo Stovall] ·
Interfaith
Week/Musical Tribute, Noor u l
Hasan and Alan Bachman, Salt Lake Interfaith
Roundtable. The Salt Lake City Roundtable commemorates the Olympic spirit
every February with an Interfaith Week and Musical Tribute. The 2010 Theme was: "Building a World
of Harmony" http://interfaithroundtable.org/week.htm ·
Celebration
of our Faiths project, Don Mayne, Edmonton Interfaith Centre. The Interfaith
Centre and Edmonton City Council are celebrating 30 years of multifaith
prayers opening council meetings. A joint project of the City and the
Edmonton Interfaith Centre is Celebrating Our Faiths: Multi-Faith displays at
City Hall. Each month a new display is unveiled. Each of the city's many
religious traditions will have a turn, over the course of the year, to show
their faith tradition to the public. http://www.edminterfaithcentre.ca/ ·
Discovering
Many Faiths – Richmond’s Hidden Treasures, Midge Falconer and Sharon Clayton,
The Interfaith Council of Greater Richmond.
The council has a dialog event with tables of 10 called ‘Interfaith
Dialogue: “Enlightenment through Prayer and Meditation”’. http://www.icgr.org/2010-01-14-program-flyer.pdf ·
Interfaith
Art, Rev. Tim Miner, American Interfaith Artists Group. Rev. Tim Miner is an interfaith
minister. The American Interfaith
Artists Group (A.I.A.G.) is
a non-profit ministry of clergy and lay members who express, share, and
educate the public about their interfaith values and spirituality through
their art. Talents include singing,
painting, dance, writing photography, fabric, crafts, and other media. http://www.interfaithartists.org/ ·
World
Sabbath of Reconciliation, Gail Katz, Women’s Interfaith Solutions for
Dialogue and Outreach in MetroDetroit. ·
MultiFaith
GROWS, Woody Trautman, Co-Chair MultiFaith Council of Northwest Ohio. MultiFaith GROWs is a program that partners
with Toledo GROWs in encouraging and supporting food-producing community
gardens. In particular, the MultiFaith
GROWs niche is to encourage gardens on all faith-based land. The program focuses on shared values and
has invited many community partnerships.
http://gardens.multifaithjourneys.org/index.html ·
Disaster
Preparedness, Ken Kraudy, Sandy City Emergency
Response, Sandy City, Utah. Activities
and services cover the four phases of emergency management: Preparedness,
Response, Recovery, and Mitigation for disasters like flooding, wildfires,
earthquakes, tornadoes, hazardous materials incidents, and acts of
terrorism. http://sandy.utah.gov/government/emergency-management.html ·
Camp
Brotherhood, Mohammad Fani, Camp Brotherhood, Mt.
Vernon, Washington. Camp Brotherhood
is a beautiful 200 acre retreat center an hour north of Seattle, Washington,
that offers outstanding facilities and service to non-profit 501(c)3 organizations
in a forested farm environment. Camp Brotherhood partners with other
non-profits to carry out programs fostering interfaith, racial and ethnic
harmony. http://campbrotherhood.com/
Young Adult Scholars Panel Young Adult Scholars PanelNAIN received over thirty applications for young adult
scholarships this year. We extended
our budget to offer scholarships to twelve exceptional candidates. One was stranded in India. The remaining eleven were integral parts of
the Connect programming. Six
participated in this panel, hosted by Eric Wilden. The rest took part in other presentations. ·
Erin
Bilir, high school senior at Colorado Academy,
published journalist, award-winning playwright, and president and founder of
ETHOS (Ethics, Theology, Humanity, Oneness, and Society) a student interfaith
club. Erin is a member of Colorado Friends of the
Harvard Women’s Studies in Religion program and researcher for the Pluralism
Project. She is investigating online
spirituality. ·
Kaitlin
Hasseler, Program Specialist, Girl Scout Council of
the Nation’s Capital where she develops programs and curriculum relating to
youth empowerment, gender equity, and interfaith and religious topics. Kaitlin is a participant in the Washington Interfaith
Network and a graduate of Ithaca College with a degree in Journalism and
double minors in Religious Studies and in Politics. She is very involved in helping Girls
Scouts develop inner reflection and a sense of shared humanity. ·
Michelle
Jackson, is the Tannenbaum Inter-religious Fellow
at Vassar College and advisor to the Interreligious Student Council where she
creates and implements campus-wide programming. Michelle has a B.A. degree in
the Study of Religion from UCLA and a Masters of Divinity from the Harvard
Divinity School. Michelle challenged us to the reality that interfaith
needs to be more racially diverse and to reach out to conservatives. ·
Hillary
Kaell, doctoral candidate in American Studies at
Harvard University specializing in the history and practice of North American
Christianity. Hillary has taught undergraduate courses in interfaith
conflict, worked on the Pluralism Project’s World Religions Project in
Boston, and is a paid consultant for the PBS series Religion in America. Hillary suggests a
way to participate in interfaith when living in a homogeneous society is to
use Internet resources, such as pen pals.
She indicates that media imposed narrative arcs, with a neat
beginning-middle- end, do not reflect reality and can lead to quoting out of
context. ·
Dawinder Sidhu, author and civil rights
attorney with an interest in the aftermath effect of 9/11 on religious
communities. “Dave” has a BA in Philosophy from the U. of Penn., an MA in
Government from Johns Hopkins, and a JD from the George Washington University
Law School. He has held fellowship and/or research posts at Harvard,
Stanford, and Georgetown. His post 9/11 self-imposed role of protecting his father,
who looks the traditional Sikh and therefor was in danger, led him to study
law and engage in civil rights and justice.
He criticizes just talking about belief systems without action towards
a just society. ·
Wm.
Andrew Schwartz, a Ph.D. student in Philosophy of Religion and Theology at
Claremont Graduate University. He is a licensed minister in the Church of the
Nazarene and holds BA degrees in Religion and Missions from Northwest
Nazarene University and an MA in Theological Studies from Nazarene
Theological Seminary. Andrew comes from an interfaith family. His father is Jewish and his mother
Christian. His study abroad program in
the Middle East raised awareness.
Practical Application Panel Practical Application: Harnessing the Unifying Potential of FaithBrian Farr, Rotary Utah
District Chair for Conflict Resolution and Peace, Immediate Past Chair of the
Salt Lake Interfaith Roundtable, President of the Utah Council for Citizen
Diplomacy. Brian states that interfaith can be an agent
towards peace, a condition that allows the full flowering of the human
spirit. Interfaith does this by
countering the roots of violence, selfishness and greed, and inoculating
against fear by increasing understanding.
Peace-building is community building, which rests not in the hands of
government, but in the people. It is a
battle for the hearts and minds of people. Melissa Nozell,
NAIN Scholarship recipient. Melissa is a summer intern at the Pluralism
Project at Harvard University and has a BA, Honors, in Religion and Asian
Studies from Colgate University. The main focus of her academic interest is
on positive interactions between Hindus and Muslims in South Asia. Melissa gained some of her insights from travelling in
India. She says that religion both
brings people together and divides them.
She cites the fact that in India people celebrate each other’s
holidays as a positive example. A
negative aspect of religion in India is the demonization of mental illness;
but religious leaders are combatting this issue. She commented on the Harvard Pluralism
Project’s case studies initiative. She
also states that intrafaith work is needed also. We need to take the concept of interfaith
home to our communities of faith. John Kesler,
J.D., Founder and Executive Director of Salt Lake Center for Engaging
Community. John’s interest in addressing the growing problem of divisiveness
and incivility in society resulted in the timely document and initiative “A
Call to Civility”. John discussed a
program in the Public Schools, a curriculum of the three Rs
– rights, responsibility, and respect.
It has been integrated in the schools for ten years. Now they are challenging adults to behave
this way. They are addressing bodies
of government to adopt community ground rules for successful engagement and
civility. [With such appalling
examples of incivility in our government and public arenas, this strikes me
as a very important initiative for all of us to undertake.]
Media Presenters |
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Judy Trautman, co-chair of the MultiFaith Council of Northwest
Ohio, NAIN Communications Chair, and Editor of NAINews, led this session and
reported on highlights from the recent Religious Communications Congress. She
currently also serves as. Judy shared some of the changes happening in media - the
impending demise of print media, the shift to handheld devices, the emphasis
on interactive, short, and visual communications, the virtual faith online
and phone app phenomena. She advises a
plan to include multiple and flexible approaches, in order to stay current
and relevant. There is a values issue in that many of the new technologies
appeal to the affluent. She urges
filling the needed role to reflect, evaluate, and tell good stories. But if no one hears a story, is it still a
story? R C Congress 2010
Implications PowerPoint of the
presentation. Sumitra Srinivasan,
NAIN Scholarship recipient, board member of the MultiFaith Council of
Northwest Ohio, and Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at
the University of Toledo. Sumitra’s teaching and research interests are in the
areas of journalism, international/intercultural communication, new
technologies, faith-based learning, and multimedia communication. Sumitra focused her presentation on Facebook and its successful
use by non-profits. She also showed
some websites prepared by students.
She showed how vocabulary is affected by media changes - we tweet
and facebook - new verbs. She mentioned a YouTube video that shows
the religious buildings in the Virtual Reality portal called Second
Life. You may see it here. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=huQtY79xsNY Alisa Roadcup, NAIN Scholarship
recipient and Communications Director, the Council for a Parliament of the
World’s Religions. Alisa led the Council’s most successful marketing campaign
ever for the 2009 Parliament and holds a BA in Humanities and an MA in Religious
Studies. Alisa
showcased PeaceNext http://www.peacenext.org/ as a best
practices example of a successful social networking site. The launch at the Parliament of the World's
Religions in December 2009 was a true spiritual experience. It now has over 2500 members and about 80
groups. The launch was aided by
sharing of advice from the Interfaith Youth Core whose Bridge-Builders http://bridge-builders.ning.com/ site is also
very successful. |
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Many Faiths - One Family Connecting: The power of genetics and genealogy in bringing people together.David Rencher, Chief
Genealogical Officer, Family Search.
This was a most appropriate inclusion from the genealogy capital of
the world. Mr. Rencher
gave a fast-moving and fascinating glimpse into DNA genealogy which proves
that we are indeed one family. By the
50th generation back, we are all connected to Moses, Jesus, and
Mohammad through common DNA. Working Together for the Common Good.After this introductory presentation, there were two sets
of breakout sessions. [As this
reviewer could not attend all of the sessions, additional comments are
welcome.] |
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WISDOM |
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·
Five
Women, Five Journeys: How Different Are We? Women’s Interfaith Solutions for
Dialogue and Outreach in MetroDetroit (WISDOM) Gail Katz, President and
Co-Founder; Patricia Harris, Co-Founder; Paula Drewek, President-elect. Three leaders from
WISDOM told the story of how they formed and wrote their book. They then demonstrated how they present
their program. http://www.interfaithwisdom.org/ http://www.readthespirit.com/friendship-and-faith-book/ ·
Refugee
Resettlement Program of Interfaith Works, Dr. Jim Wiggins, Interfaith Works
of Central New York. http://interfaithworkscny.org/blog/ There are 11
million refugees worldwide and InterFaith Works is
currently working with refugees from Afghanistan, Burma, Burundi, Colombia,
Democratic Republic of Congo, Cuba, Ethiopia, Iran, Iraq, Rwanda, Sudan,
Somalia, Ukraine, and Vietnam. Refugee Services: Great Projects That
Cross Lines of Religion and Culture. Amy Wylie, Volunteer Coordinator, Utah
Refugee Services Office. http://refugee.utah.gov/about/index.html ·
Awaken
the Dreamer – Be the Change. Derek LaCroix and
Maureen Jack-LaCroix, Multifaith Action Society
(MAS) of Vancouver, B.C. The intended result of this session is to activate
environmental change through personal and social awareness, while providing a
connecting point for faith-centers and the broader community to develop
common goals and collaboration. http://www.multifaithaction.org/ |
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· Our Challenges; How to Build a Global Family, Rev. Paul Chaffee, Director of the Interfaith Center at the Presidio www.interfaith-presidio.org, Mrs. Prabha Duneja, Hindu teacher and chair of the Women’s Interfaith Circle of Service (WICS) of the United Religions Initiative (URI) http://www.uri.org/cooperation_circles/detail/womensinterfaithcircleofservice , Pastor Kevin Thompson, Regional Director of Universal Peace Federation UPF http://us.upf.org/ . This panel will be joined by NAIN Scholarship recipient Peter Frank Womack. Mr. Womack has a BA degree in Economics, an MBA in Entrepreneurial Studies, and a JD in International Governance and is the Founder and Executive Director of Interfaith Settlement Foundation, an interfaith organization dedicated to the establishment of a municipality specifically predicated upon interreligious cooperation. |
Building a Global Family, photo Tomiko
Nojima |
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·
Can
Faith-based Work Really Make a Difference? Getting Beyond the Quick Fix.
Benefit from lessons learned from 41 years of tackling some of the most
systemic problems facing a city. Rabbi George Stern, Executive Director of
the Neighborhood Interfaith Movement, and Eric Wilden, Assistant
Director. http://www.nimphilly.org/ Rabbi Sterns and
Eric spoke of their successfully diverse staff. A beautiful mural has enhanced their
visibility. Their services include older
adult programs, long-term care resources, childcare
and youth programs. ·
Respectful
Contestation of Irreconcilable Differences, Dr. Randall Paul, Founder and
Exec. Director of the Foundation for Inter-religious Diplomacy. http://www.fidweb.org/home |
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Ralph Singh |
·
Changing
the Narrative: Using Stories from Our Traditions and Music to Build a More
Compassionate, Engaged, Pluralistic Society. Ralph Singh, Director of
Publications and Public Relations for Gobind Sadan Institute and Society for
Interfaith Understanding http://www.gobindsadan.org/usa-website/usa-home.html , will share progress of
his project “Nurturing an Ideal Citizen of the State of Virtue” using the
audio CD “Stories to Light Our Way, Journey to the World of Good” and study
guides. He will be joined by NAIN Scholarship recipient |
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Judy Wight & Skyler Oberst |
·
Teaching
Children and Youth Respect for Others. Rosemary Baron, Interfaith Chaplain,
Former Middle School Principal, co-developer of The 3 R’s Project.(Rights,
Respect, Responsibility) http://www.schools.utah.gov/curr/socialstudies/teachers/pdf/3R.pdf ; Jacqueline Thompson,
REACH (Respecting Ethnic And Cultural Heritage) coordinator for the Davis
School District http://www2.ed.gov/pubs/EPTW/eptw8/eptw8h.html ; |
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Judy Wight, The Ulster Project http://www.ulsterprojectutah.com/joomla/ Northern Irish teens from Omagh arrived in Utah on Tuesday June 29, 2010 and along with their US host teens engaged in activities and service projects; Skyler Oberst, NAIN Scholarship recipient. (Skyler is a student at Eastern Washington University working on a double major in philosophy and anthropology, founder of Compassionate Interfaith Society and recipient of one of EWU’s prestigious Student Excellence Awards.) http://www.ewu.edu/x62902.xml?printer_friendly=1 CelebrationsNAINConnect 2010 was NOT
all work and no play. In addition to
the opening event at the Salt Lake Buddhist Church, we enjoyed several meals
together. St. Mark’s Episcopal Cathedral hosted a sumptuous continental breakfast and a wonderful dinner catered by Bombay House. Breakfast tickets on Tuesday could be used either at the Nauvoo Café or Hagermann's Bake House.
LDS Luncheon Tuesday lunch was a banquet
hosted at the LDS Church Headquarters on the 26th Floor. The view was spectacular.
Evening Gala Our final gala event was at the Jewish Community
Center. Again, the balcony view was
captivating. Middle Eastern food was
delicious. The music of a half Jewish-half Arab band with the Interfaith
Roundtable’s President Alan Bachman and his wife and friends. The music had most attendees dancing and
clapping.
Ben Clark, Brian Farr, Alan Bachman, Jan Saeed, Elaine Emmi Many members of the Salt Lake City Interfaith Roundtable
and their friends worked for months of detailed planning and preparation to
host NAINConnect 2010. Committee
members included Wendy Stovall [registration], Ivan Cendese, Brian Farr
[presenter and host, new NAIN Board member], Alan Bachman [musician, host,
Roundtable Chair], Andalin Bachman [music and
video], Benjamin Clark [conference program and tech support], Linda Hilton
[Roundtable Treasurer], Gary Poll, Leela Baggett,
Elaine Emmi [Roundtable Secretary], Rahz Saeed, Jan Saeed [NAIN Board], Nahzaneen
Aqhdassi, Samantha Meland,
and Katie Danner. Thank you seems inadequate. NAINConnect on Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/x/t/0091009/photos/jltrautman/sets/72157624538382675/ and http://www.flickr.com/photos/jltrautman/sets/72157624669231326 NAINConnect on YouTube
Harvard Pluralism Project
interview of Young Adult Scholars’ Views on the Interfaith Movement http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nGE6aDsTL5I&feature=player_embedded Glimpses of our annual Connect http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLDvwsPiv94 |
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