Wednesday, June 03, 2009

Response from Rosalio Munoz About UFW Alums On Opposite Sides in Battle For Labor's Future by Randy Shaw

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6-03-2009 @11:36 PM ~
Gracias Companero Rosalio for putting matters in a more enlightened context!
I remember meeting Larry Itliong and hearing about Fred Ross. I was a youngster
in the Brown Berets about 18 years old when I first went down to Delano as part
of a Food Caravan down there.

So many good people are woefully ignorant about labor history in general.
I thought Cesar was too reluctant to offer up alternative more aggressive
methods of struggle back then, but the UFW remains and the Brown Berets
faded away. I have grown and kind of mellowed over the years. I can see
now the way Cesar was handling things was the best way to go, though I
heard he was not the meek humble man many saw when it came down to
conducting Union business and handling his staff.

I only wish he would of written more than he did... writings have a way of
out living their writers.

In waging war, be it spiritually based or not, not tangible tactic can be
discounted and the art of war requires looking at all possible tactics
and trajectories. Nowadays I see the validity of 'means' being appropriate
to 'ends' and do not believe that the ends justify the means or in any means
necessary, especially when mass mobilization has not been done on an on-
going basis, especially when there is not collective consciousness among the
masses and especially when La Raza as a unique people do not even have a
common terms for themselves that almost all can agree with in discussing
political-social matters, though, La Raza is understandable by many Chicanos
and Latinos it can have a negative connotation and Latinos is male gender.
I am comfortable with 'gente de el sol'.

Our strength, besides our numbers, is our diversity as a complex people of
many ways, different cultures and generally honest hard working people.
We do not riot, we can make bloody revolution, but we want to bring about
the necessary transformation as peacefully as we can in order to avoid any
future resentments by the descendants of anyone.

All the wars men have fought and there is still no social peace. Surely a new
approach is needed by vanguard leadership.

Education for Liberation!

Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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From: Rosalio Munoz <rosalio_munoz@sbcglobal.net>
To: PETER S LOPEZ <peter.lopez51@yahoo.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 3, 2009 5:22:27 PM
Subject: Re: FYI: UFW Alums On Opposite Sides in Battle For Labor's Future

Peter here is a response of mine I sent to Portside which ran Shaw's article

Regarding UFW Alums On Opposite Sides in Battle For Labor's Future
by Randy Shaw  -Talking Union -- Posted on June 1, 2009

With friends like Randy Shaw its harder for Mexican American and other workers to take on their main enemy, corporate America.  In his article on the HERE-SEIU conflict Shaw overstates the severity of the conflict, which is serious, but ignores the tremendous unity of labor in the election of Obama, in the fights for a stimulus plan, the seating of Hilda Solis as Secretary of Labor, the growing strength (the New York Times and Wall Street Journal to the contrary not withstanding), in the fight for the Employee Free Choice Act and an immigrant worker friendly comprehensive immigration struggle.  Yes there are important issues to resolve, more democracy as well as disciplined unity in labor, the workers especially with success on the greater issues, will work out the problems, especially with such wonderful leaders as Dolores Huerta and Eliseo Medina.

I read Shaw's recent book on the UFW, Beyond The Fields,  and found it rich with information but poor on understanding.  Shaw says that key decisions by Cesar Chavez were decisive in the weakening of the UFW and not the changes in the correlation of forces in the class struggle world wide which set back workers globally for three decades. While agribusiness and farmlabor struggles are important, the main battle field is more metropolitan in factories, health facilities, harbors etc, etc, the return to more agressive tactics and mobilizing of the community established by left trade unionist before the McCarthy era was an important contribution of the UFW movement and union organizing, we are just now catching up where labor left off.

I have raised my concerns about Shaws take on these issues with him a few times and now feel compelled to share one of my main criticism of his work I told to him.  If he had written a book "about the Virgen de Guadalupe Juan Diego would turn out to be named Fred Ross."  For those not familiar with UFW and farmworker history Ross was an Industrial Areas Foundation profesional organizer who helped initiate the Community Service Organization the Mexican American civil rights group where Cesar learned about organization and who helped Cesar organize and run the UFW. Ross played an essential role in the history.  But so did others like Ernesto Galarza, Larry Itliong, J.J. Rodriguez and countless communists and other progressives.  Oh

Shaws predominately references white activists in the UFW who helped establish and propagate innovative tactics.  Just check out his books index for Spanish and English surnames.  Historical progress develops dialectically, or as Cesar might say the "Lord works in mysterious ways."  Monday morning quarterbacking it seems to me we are likely better off so many of the organizers went on to the labor and democratic struggles all over the country for virtually all progressive causes since Reagan was President than focussing solely on the farmworker struggle.  

The internecine fights between HERE and SEIU need to be resolved for the best, but we should not let them take our eyes off the prize which Shaw's critique tends to do. La Union Hace La Fuerza!, Si Se Puede!

--- On Wed, 6/3/09, PETER S LOPEZ <peter.lopez51@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: PETER S LOPEZ <peter.lopez51@yahoo.com>
Subject: FYI: UFW Alums On Opposite Sides in Battle For Labor's Future
To: "Net-Aztlan-News Group" <NetworkAztlan_News@yahoogroups.com>, "H-R-A Group" <Humane-Rights-Agenda@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Wednesday, June 3, 2009, 12:54 PM

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The struggle between for and against is one of the mind's most worse disease
as it tends to get stuck in the either-or polarity. The same as the Left-Wing
vs. Right-Wing political schizophrenia.

Obviously, whatever hinders the free expression of farmworkers and all working
-class people should be opposed, but we should be careful not to throw the baby
out with the bathwater.

Let the workers involved decide in FREE OPEN AND MONITORED ELECTIONS and
they should be included in all matters that pertain to their real welfare. We need
to get away from any form of hero worship. If I recall correctly, Herman Delores
at first was not in support of Obama when he ran for President.

Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo..com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "moderator@PORTSIDE.ORG" <moderator@PORTSIDE.ORG>
To: PORTSIDE@LISTS.PORTSIDE.ORG
Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2009 9:40:50 PM
Subject: UFW Alums On Opposite Sides in Battle For Labor's Future

UFW Alums On Opposite Sides in Battle For Labor's Future
by Randy Shaw
Talking Union -- Posted on June 1, 2009

From Websource: PSL ~

http://talkingunion.wordpress.com/2009/06/01/ufw-alums-on-opposite-sides-in-battle-for-labors-future/

by Randy Shaw

Randy ShawAfter electing the most pro-union President in decades, organized labor is being torn by internal fights.. And on different sides of these conflicts are veterans of the United Farmworkers of America (UFW), whose strategic innovations have shaped today's labor movement and whose "Si Se Puede" ("Yes We Can") rallying cry became the hallmark of Barack Obama's campaign.


One dispute, now occurring in California's Central Valley city of Fresno, pits Eliseo Medina, a former UFW Executive Board member and now Executive Vice-President of SEIU, against his former UFW Executive Board colleague, Dolores Huerta. The backdrop: an election to represent Fresno's 10,000 home health care workers, who are currently represented by SEIU. Huerta held a Fresno press conference on May 27 urging workers to oust SEIU and to instead join the newly created National Union of Health Workers (NUHW). Voting begins June 1, and continues for two weeks.


The other ongoing conflict finds SEIU and UNITE HERE–the two unions most shaped by the UFW's legacy–battling over SEIU's raids on UNITE HERE's jurisdiction and membership. This fight has put longtime UFW allies on opposite sides, and is causing strains throughout the entire labor movement. The struggle led UFW veteran Fred Ross, Jr., one of the nation's leading organizers who Medina recruited to join SEIU, to announce that he was leaving the union after ten years so that he could help UNITE HERE resist SEIU's attacks.


How did this conflict emerge? As recently as April 2006, UFW alums Stephen Lerner and Eliseo Medina asked Huerta and the prominent UFW veteran Reverend Wayne "Chris" Hartmire to come to the University of Miami to help SEIU win a "Justice for Janitors" organizing campaign. While Huerta pressed the janitors cause with University of Miami President Donna Shalala, Hartmire provided strategic advice to religious supporters. Similarly, SEIU worked closely with UNITE HERE on the massive immigration marches of spring 2006, and on the national campaign to pass comprehensive immigration reform.

But since 2006, two developments have raised questions whether SEIU President Andy Stern is leading his union down the same path that led Medina and other key leaders to leave the UFW, and that caused the farmworker movement's decline.


First, SEIU moved to consolidate its local chapters throughout the nation. While reducing administrative overhead and freeing up organizing dollars, the plan also gave Stern the right to select the leadership of the newly consolidated locals. This prevented workers from electing their own leadership for three years.


As a result, Stern appointees, not representatives elected by the membership, soon dominated SEIU's governing Executive Board. When the Board then made controversial decisions–such as breaking up its third largest local, whose former leadership then started NUHW–opponents argued that this was Stern's decision, not that of a truly democratic process.


Nearly thirty years ago, it was Cesar Chavez's decision to deny farmworker representation on the UFW's Executive Board at its 1981 convention that represented the final blow to his union's growth. In the years leading up to that event, Chavez's critics were often fired or forced out, raising the same questions about union democracy that have now emerged under Stern..


The second development that dividing UFW alumni was Stern's decision to encourage Bruce Raynor and the former UNITE to secede from UNITE HERE and join SEIU. On March 23, Raynor's faction affiliated with SEIU as "Workers United," and SEIU has been raiding UNITE HERE's hotel, gaming and food service workers on the grounds that they are now part of its jurisdiction. Stern engineered this major policy shift with little or no public debate within SEIU. Workers were shifted from UNITE HERE to SEIU through little-noticed, small turnout elections–such as less than 100 voting in a bargaining unit of over 2000–that make a mockery of union democracy.


The UFW precedent is clearly on many minds. Medina responded to Huerta's urging Fresno's home care workers to vote for NUHW by noting that in the UFW she "led the campaign to fire and expel" rank and file workers "because they were independent of the UFW leadership and accountable directly to the members." Huerta responded that Medina had left the UFW in 1977 "when Cesar most needed him." While the two have privately debated the UFW's legacy, the SEIU-NUHW battle has brought this dispute between two giants of the UFW and labor movement out in the open.


NUHW's appeal to Fresno home-care workers directly challenges SEIU's commitment to union democracy, and could prove the defining issue as balloting begins this week. But the election's end will not soon heal the wounds between the many UFW veterans on both sides of this conflict, weakening if not breaking the bonds between those working side by side for social justice for over three decades.


Randy Shaw is the author of Beyond the Fields: Cesar Chavez, the UFW and the Struggle for Justice in the 21st Century (University of California Press).


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Read: The Howls of a Fading Species


From: "moderator@PORTSIDE.ORG" <moderator@PORTSIDE.ORG>
To: PORTSIDE@LISTS.PORTSIDE.ORG
Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2009 9:40:18 PM
Subject: The Howls of a Fading Species

The Howls of a Fading Species

By Bob Herbert

New York Times - June 1, 2009

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/02/opinion/02herbert.html

One can only hope that the hysterical howling of right-
wingers against the nomination of Sonia Sotomayor to
the Supreme Court is something approaching a death
rattle for this profoundly destructive force in
American life.

It's hard to fathom the heights of hypocrisy currently
being scaled by the foaming-in-the-mouth crazies who
are leading the charge against the nomination. Newt
Gingrich, who never needed a factual basis for his
ravings, rants on Twitter that Judge Sotomayor is a
"Latina woman racist," apparently unaware of his
incoherence in the "Latina-woman" redundancy in this
defamatory characterization.

Karl Rove sneered that Ms. Sotomayor was "not
necessarily" smart, thus managing to get the toxic
issue of intelligence into play in the case of a woman
who graduated summa cum laude from Princeton, went on
to get a law degree from Yale and has more experience
as a judge than any of the current justices had at the
time of their nominations to the court.

It turns the stomach. There is no level of achievement
sufficient to escape the stultifying bonds of bigotry.
It is impossible to be smart enough or accomplished
enough.

The amount of disrespect that has spattered the
nomination of Judge Sotomayor is disgusting. She is
spoken of, in some circles, as if she were the lowest
of the low. Rush Limbaugh - now there's a genius! - has
compared her nomination to a hypothetical nomination of
David Duke, a former head of the Ku Klux Klan. "How can
a president nominate such a candidate?" Limbaugh asked.

Ms. Sotomayor is a member of the National Council of La
Raza, the Hispanic civil rights organization. In the
crazy perspective of some right-wingers, the mere
existence of La Raza should make decent people run for
cover. La Raza is "a Latino K.K.K. without the hoods
and the nooses," said Tom Tancredo, a Republican former
congressman from Colorado.

Here's the thing. Suddenly these hideously pompous and
self-righteous white males of the right are all
concerned about racism. They're so concerned that
they're fully capable of finding it in places where it
doesn't for a moment exist. Not just finding it, but
being outraged by it to the point of apoplexy. Oh, they
tell us, this racism is a bad thing!

Are we supposed to not notice that these are the
tribunes of a party that rose to power on the filthy
waves of racial demagoguery. I don't remember hearing
their voices or the voices of their intellectual heroes
when the Republican Party, as part of its Southern
strategy, aggressively courted the bigots who fled the
Democratic Party because the Democrats had become
insufficiently hostile to blacks.

Where were the howls of outrage at this strategy that
was articulated by Lee Atwater as follows: "By 1968,
you can't say `nigger' - that hurts you. Backfires. So
you say stuff like forced busing, states' rights, and
all that stuff."

Never a peep did you hear.

Where were the right-wing protests when Ronald Reagan
went out of his way to kick off his general election
campaign in 1980 with a salute to states' rights in, of
all places, Philadelphia, Miss., not far from the site
where three young civil rights workers had been
snatched and murdered by real-life, rabid, blood-
thirsty racists?

We've heard ad nauseam Ms. Sotomayor's comments -
awkwardly stated but hardly racist - about what she
brings to the bench as a Latina. But how often have we
ever heard the awful, hateful position on race offered
up by William F. Buckley, the right's ultimate
intellectual champion? He felt comfortable declaring,
in the wake of the Brown v. Board of Education decision
ordering the desegregation of public schools, that
whites had every right to discriminate against blacks
because whites belonged to "the advanced race."

Right-wing howls of protest? I think not.

Ms. Sotomayor's nomination is a big deal because never
before in the history of the United States has any
president nominated a Latina to the highest court. Only
two blacks have ever been on the court, and the one
selected by a Republican has been like a thumb in the
eye to most African-Americans.

The court is a living monument to America's long
history of exclusion based on race, ethnic background
and gender. Where is the right-wing protest against
that?

It was always silly to pretend that the election of
Barack Obama was evidence that the U.S. was moving into
some sort of post-racial, post-ethnic, post-gender
nirvana. But it did offer a basis for optimism. There
is every reason to hope that we've improved as a
society to the point where the racial and ethnic
craziness of the Gingriches and Limbaughs will finally
have a tough time finding any sort of foothold.

Those types can still cause a lot of trouble, but the
ridiculousness of their posture is pretty widely
recognized. Thus the desperate howling.

_____________________________________________

Portside aims to provide material of interest
to people on the left that will help them to
interpret the world and to change it.

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Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Read: News for an Alliance for a New Humanity

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Venceremos! We Will Win!

I have taken a Vow of Peace and know that the truth is not stuck to the
left-wing or the right-wing, it is in the center of connected reality. If there
is to be a mass transformation in consciousness upon Mother Earth it will need
to be led by a disciplined vanguard of humane beings who have care, concern
and compassion for all living beings. We need to have a New Alliance for a
New Humanity that will unite us all together based upon the basic common
denominator of respect for the humane rights of all peoples, of all sacred
living beings, without being limited by sex, race or tribe.

We know the way to go is the way of peace, that neither the strictly political
nor the strictly military will bring about a true lasting peace upon Mother Earth.
We need to all have common dreams, shared principles and solidarity with each
other on the cosmic-universal, existential-present and quantum dimensions.

JOIN ALLIANCE FOR A NEW HUMANITY!
Education for Liberation!

Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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From: The Alliance for a New Humanity <newsletter@anhglobal.org>
To: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2009 1:46:24 PM
Subject: News for a New Humanity

header oct

June 2009

IN THIS ISSUE


I TAKE THE VOW

How can we make the world a better place?
Deepak Chopra discusses what we can do individually and collectively to bring about a positive tranformation in the world.
More. . .



EVENTS

ANH Events

The Convergence of the Heart of Heaven with the Heart of Earth, Human Forum in Guatemala, 3-5 September, 2009. More. . .

A thematic Forum on the Global Environment, Human Consciousness and the Media takes place in 2009 in Oxford.

Global Human Forum in San Diego: Read the latest update. . .



IN BRIEF

Ducks don't do anger
Ducks fight over a piece of bread and then they just swim away. It's not that anger is all wrong, it can be the expression of a passion for justice. But anger can also cause tremendous damage and hurt; it is described as a single match that can burn an entire forest.
Read the whole article on Intent.com


Active Resistance to Propaganda
Fashion designer Vivienne Westwood has written a manifesto which claims to ". . .penetrate to the root of the human predicament and offer the underlying solution." It reveals that in the pursuit of art the artlover becomes resistant to propaganda. The manifesto has been read all over the world and was dramatised by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2008.
More. . .


Microbusiness helps women weather crisis in Peru
Microenterprise is an escape valve for social tension at times of crisis, and microbusinesses do a better job of weathering the storm than bigger companies because they are used to overcoming difficulties – a positive effect that is further multiplied when it involves women.
Full story on IPSnews.net


Not just another slum
Beat the odds: that was what the residents of El Monarca decided to do, in order to turn their informal settlement on the outskirts of the Uruguayan capital into a real neighbourhood, with all the necessary infrastructure and services.
Full story on IPSnews.net


Living my Truth
Ten months ago Mark Boyle decided to live without oil. Three weeks into his experiment he began to realise just how addicted to oil, and the products of oil, we have become.
Full story on Resurgence.org


What are the top ten positive emotions?
Dr Barbara Fredrickson has proved that positive emotions help us to flourish. So what are the top ten positive emotions and how can we experience them more often?
Read the whole article on Intent.com


Nine spiritual ways to be green
You already recycle, turn your waste into compost and all your lightbulbs are low-energy. Ever feel like there might be something. . . deeper you could be doing?
Read the whole article on Intent.com

In Gratitude

In the brief life of our Alliance for a New Humanity, there have been several turning points in the history of the organization. Some of these carry a greater level of significance than others. 2003 will always be known as the year of Beginning, when a conversation became an entity; 2005, the year of Renaissance, when the entity found a voice; and now, 2009, the year of Transition, when the voice takes on new dimensions. Within transition lies great opportunity for growth and creativity built upon the devoted participation and contribution by Chairman, Roberto Savio and CEO, Jorge Colmenares. Please participate in these transitions within ANH by reading a letter written by Deepak Chopra and Roberto Savio.

We wish to express deep gratitude to everyone who contributed to our recent fundraising initiative. So many people contributed. Some through donations and others, through offering their time, skills and passion. The spirit of the Alliance is a collective representation of your participation within a vision.

Sharing your donations, time, skills, ideas, passion and determination enables us to move forward, engage more spirit and build upon that spirit. We encourage your full participation within this organization! Please share your ideas, your feedback, your passion with us; share stories of change, introduce us to initiatives of purpose, and organizations with great vision. Thank you for bringing such fullness to The Alliance for a New Humanity.

"Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos into order, confusion into clarity. . . It turns problems into gifts, failures into success, the unexpected into perfect timing, and mistakes into important events. Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today and creates a vision for tomorrow." Melodie Beattie

With love,
The Alliance for a New Humanity

www.anhglobal.org

TRANSFORM – BE THE CHANGE

Transform May's Be the Change event in New York turned global as people from all over the world – from Canada to India – joined in via a live webstream. Alison Rose Levy's glowing report in the Huffington Post says that the event gave people new hope that they too could make a difference.

"Deepak invited the assembly in the packed church to share their own stories of activism with each other. "The more we share our stories of change, the more we have the possibility of reaching critical mass," he said. As people turned around in their pews and dialogued with their neighbors, an exhilaration filled the air. 'Yes, we can!' is not a one-time slogan, but a daily reminder and renewal for the work ahead." More. . .

Transform Children's behaviour was one of the themes from the evening, with Deepak Chopra saying: "We can't change children's behavior by educating them. The only way to change your child's behavior is to change your own behavior." KarmaTube.org asks why is it that certain behaviors deemed tolerable in adults are suddenly shocking when exhibited by children? Their Children See, Children Do video prompts us to reconsider our responsibility to our children and to ourselves. More. . .

Transform

What could you do with $20,000 to make the planet greener? SunChips and National Geographic have joined forces to create the Green Effect, an initiative to inspire individuals to spark a green movement in their communities. Submit a description of your Green Effect idea by June 8, 2009 and you or your group could be one of ten finalists who will be awarded $20,000 to make their idea happen. More. . .

Transform

"The goals of creating a better world for all clearly cannot be reached with today's urban-industrial lifestyles or with existing material-financial aspirations," writes Ashok Khosla on the ANH site. "Today the environmental movement is at the forefront of the fight to redesign our consumption patterns and production systems. But that is not enough. It is those who are sensitive to the impacts of our lifestyles on our humanity who must ultimately take the lead. The job of ANH is to bring such insights – from traditional, indigenous wisdom to modern, science-base humanism – into the equation." More. . .

Check out the Transform area of the website. . .

To contribute to the Transform element: transform@anhglobal.org
To learn more about the Be the Change program: bethechange@anhglobal.org


SERVE – MAKE A DIFFERENCE

Serve For almost three decades, John Francis has been a planetwalker, traveling the globe by foot and sail with a message of environmental respect and responsibility (for 10 of those years without speaking). "How could that be?" he asks, "How could doing such a simple thing like walking and not talking make a difference?" Watch this funny, thoughtful talk with occasional banjo, presented by TED.com and find out. More. . .

Serve

Art Studio provides a safe, creative location for teaching artists working with urban youth in holistic art education programs that assist in career development. "We know that art changes lives for the better. By integrating age appropriate curriculums as project themes for mural painting, visual arts, photography, writing & spoken word, multi-media and publishing projects the students are inspired to excel." More. .. .

Serve

Gardens of Gratitude transformed the Westside of Santa Monica into an edible oasis last month, when volunteers came together to create 100 edible gardens in a single weekend. They also created a whole new community as new friendships reclaimed the neighbourhood. But as Daryn Kagan says, this is a miracle we can recreate in our own neighbourhoods. It's time to sow some seeds! More. . .

Check out the Serve area of the website. . .

To learn more about Make a Difference: makeadifference@anhglobal.org


CONNECT – SHARE YOUR PASSION

Connect

Last month we featured Global Spirit the unique 'internal travel' series on Link.tv that brings to light spiritual, mental and physical practices that help us to define who we are as human beings, our relationships to others — and to the world at large. The next program, The Spiritual Quest, which was made with the support of ANH and other partners, draws on personal experience and expert guests' extensive knowledge of various religious traditions, to illuminate the individual and universal dimensions of the Spiritual Quest. More. .. .

Watch the Spiritual Quest online here on 4th June, and then join us here for a dialogue with other ANH members about the film.

Connect

Esref Armagan, an artist born without eyes, has confounded scientists by his ability to draw in perspective and paint in colour by touch alone. "No-one can call me blind," he says. "I can see more with my fingers than sighted people can see with their eyes." More. . .

Connect

"A blessing is the bridge between heaven and earth": ANH member Ivan Scharbrough has just uploaded a movingly beautiful and inspirational video called The Gentle Art of Blessing which draws on writings by Pierre Pradervand, Sasha T Moore, and Understanding Oneness. More. . .

When ANH member Aurora Carlson received the recent email from Deepak Chopra calling for contributions to support the Alliance, she had the inspired idea to create an ANH Generosity Exchange. Her suggestion has provoked a very active dialogue on the ANH Forum. Read the responses and share your thoughts. . .

If you want to Make a Difference, start a group in your community today! To learn how to begin, and discover the tools and support we can offer, walk through our Group Kit and get started!

Check out the Connect area of the website. . .

To learn how you can start a group in your community: groups@anhglobal.org
For more information about our Human Forums: humanforum@anhglobal.org



MISSION STATEMENT

Our mission is to connect people, who, through personal and social transformation, aim to build a just, peaceful, and sustainable world, reflecting the unity of all humanity.


Phone: (787) 722-7728
To contribute to the TRANSFORM element: transform@anhglobal.org
To learn more about Make a Difference: makeadifference@anhglobal.org
For more information about our Human Forums: humanforum@anhglobal.org
To learn how you can start a group in your community: groups@anhglobal.org
To learn more about the Be the Change Program: bethechange@anhglobal.org
To learn more about the ANH Startfund: anhstartfund@anhglobal.org
Address: Alliance for a New Humanity, 400 Calle Calaf, PMB 460, suite 233, San Juan, PR, 00918, Puerto Rico
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