Volunteer Work with Syrian Refugees Deepens Understanding of Sufi Spirituality – Duke Today

To strengthen his dissertation research on the Sufi spiritual movement, History doctoral student Daanish Faruqi traveled to Jordan and Turkey to help Syrian refugee communities through relief foundations operated by Sufi networks.

He was among 19 Duke students who received Graduate Student Training Enhancement Grants (GSTEG) in 2016-17 for training beyond their core disciplines. His faculty mentor was Engseng Ho. Recently he shared some reflections on his experience:

Both in Jordan (June and July 2016) and in shorter trips to Turkey (July 2016, and again in December 2016), I did considerable work with the Syrian refugee community under the auspices of SKT Welfare, a charitable organization founded and run by the Sufi spiritual movement that is the subject of my academic research.

During my summer in Amman I worked in SKTs office as a volunteer teacher, tutoring Syrian refugee students in English and offering administrative support to SKT leadership. The key outcome of this experience was the centrality of the spiritual dimensions of Islam in service of social justice, as an animating dictum behind the organizations charitable arm. This came full circle in my trips to Turkey, where I participated directly in food aid deployments in Reyhanli, near the Syrian/Turkish border.

What we offered was merely a drop in the bucket of the full needs of these communities, but offering even nominal aidand realizing the remarkable sophistication of SKT leaders and volunteers that culminated in putting together their aid apparatus, and in vetting and surveying entire communities to establish aid delivery quotasproved deeply edifying. Again, it made painstakingly clear the intimate connection between this groups spirituality and commitment to worldly service.

All of this will be central as I pursue my dissertation research. This experience will be crucial in helping better piece together the social and humanitarian dimensions of Islamic spirituality more broadly, and in understanding this movement that forms the basis of my dissertation in particular.

This internal funding mechanism from the Office of the Vice Provost for Interdisciplinary Studies encourages graduate students to step away from their core research and training to acquire skills, knowledge or co-curricular experiences that will give them new perspectives on their research agendas. Graduate Student Training Enhancement Grants are intended to deepen preparation for academic positions and other career trajectories.

See who received these grants for 2017-18, and read about other 2016-17 recipients experiences:

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Volunteer Work with Syrian Refugees Deepens Understanding of Sufi Spirituality - Duke Today

Spirituality in Therapy, Spiritual Counseling, Therapy for …

Spirituality,a search for transcendent meaning or the belief in some sort of greater existence outside of humankind, can be linked to religion, but the practice of spirituality is generally considered to go beyond religion and link individuals with something larger, such as the universe itself.

Boththerapistsandpeople seeking treatment mayhesitate to include spirituality or religion in the practice of therapy, due to the potential of differing beliefs and the possible controversy of the topic. But research suggestsa therapist's inclusion of an individual'sspiritual beliefs may assist in therapy and in the process of healing.

Spirituality is generally considered to be broader than any religion one might practice, as it takes into account cognitive and philosophic areas of thought as well as aspects of emotions and behavior. Some might describe spirituality as the attempt to understand one's nature or the meaning of one's existence, but spirituality is also linked to one's path to internal awareness and happiness. Many cultures and belief systems hold that one's spirit is the essence of one's existence, and thus, spirituality may also describe for some people their connection to each other and to themselves.

Though some may describe themselves as spiritual without adhering to the principles of any religion or even having any religious thought, for others, religion is the manifestationof their spirituality. This manifestation may involve the performance of ritualsin one tradition or in some combination of traditionswith varying degrees of commitment and involvement in that faith. Spirituality may also describe the attention peoplepayto their ownwell-being and that of others. For many, the practice of dance, yoga, meditation, or volunteer work, among others, are outlets in which to express spirituality.

An ethical therapist will not attempt to push personal beliefs on a person in therapy or otherwise attempt to change that individual's spiritual or religious beliefs. However, if it becomes apparent in therapy that a person's beliefs are causing unnecessarydistress or if the person expresses difficulty reconciling contradictions between personal values or goals and the constraints of spiritual or religious belief, the therapist or counselor may draw the individual's attention to this area.In this case, the therapist may put forth theeffort to assist the individual in the process of clarifying what is essential for that individual to achieve optimal well-being.

When a personobtains benefit from spiritual practices, a therapist can also assist in the process of more deeply understanding the person'sspiritual self. This does not involve any particular teaching on the part of the therapist, but rather, encouragement to inquire into the individual'snature, conscious mind, unconscious mind, surroundings, and so on. A person's choices and the motivation for and consequences of those choices might also be discussed, and a therapist may ask peoplein therapy who have expressed religious or spiritual beliefshow thosebeliefs impact choices they have made and what they believea higher power might want from them.

However, discussion of religion and spirituality in therapy, even to this extent, is still controversial, and many people believe the inclusion of religiously guided treatments may bring about more harm than good. Some research indicates discussions of spirituality and religion in therapy may be challenging for individuals coping with certain issues. However, because spiritual distress may manifest with both mental and physical symptoms, a therapist who addresses these topics may be able to provide greater healing and support.

For many, spiritual beliefs play a significant role in the ability to cope with adverse events in life. Spiritual practices may offer social and emotional support, help peoplefind meaning and purpose in life, provide comfort in times of grief, and provide ethical and moral guidelines that many choose to live their lives by. Individuals who gain strength from their spiritual faith may find it difficult to achieve progress and healing in therapy when unable to address and incorporateall dimensions of who they are.

Prayer, religious meditation, or some other aspect of spiritual connectionmay form part of an individual's self-care routine,as might church orvolunteer work in the community. Some individuals or families may be deeply committed to their faithandbase much of their lives around spirituality or religion. When a person who is religious or spiritual seeks treatment, sensitivity on the part of a therapistmay be beneficial to treatment because it may lead to a broader evaluation of the person seeking treatment and allow the therapist to explore a wider variety of treatment solutions. Therapists who are aware of therapeutic strategies based in spirituality, such as spiritual journaling or forgiveness protocols, may also be able to provide people in therapy with resources on these topics, whether or not they are able to address them personally.

Many 12-step programs base their principles on belief and trust in a higher power, though this power may not be named specifically. One recent study foundthe spiritual beliefs of people in therapy impacted their levels of worry, stress, and tolerance of uncertainty.Those participants who trusted in a higher power were found to be more trusting and to have lower levels of worry, stress, and intolerance. Other studies have determinedspiritual therapy may be helpful for those experiencing substance abuse.

Spiritual therapy is a form of counseling that attempts to treat a person's soul as well as mind and body by accessing individualbelief systems and using that faith in a higher power to explore areas of conflict in life. People who believe in a guiding higher power may find spiritual therapy helps them achieve a deeper connection with this power. Through spiritual therapy, aperson who is experiencing depression may finda moral conflict is present in some area of life. Anxiety may result when a person is unconsciously engaging in acts of self-sabotage. Spiritual therapy is only one method of uncovering and addressing areas of conflict and possible mental health concerns that may arise in life, but some people may find it to be a beneficial model.

This type of therapy may also involvecommuning with nature, meditation, music, and other non-traditional therapeutic practices, all of which may be employed in an effort to connect the body and mind with the soul and explore the deepest part of one's self. While spirituality is often categorized with religion, one's spirituality may have nothing to do with religion but be simply an awareness of the universe and one's connection to it. Often, individuals who describe themselves as spiritual state their desire to attain a feeling of harmony with the universeand pursue spiritual therapy in an effort to achieve this goal.

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Spirituality in Therapy, Spiritual Counseling, Therapy for ...

Regina woman says she needed spirituality while in solitary confinement – News1130

VANCOUVER A Regina woman who spent 3-1/2 years in solitary confinement cried Wednesday as she recalled how a spiritual ceremony led by a First Nations elder helped her through difficult times at a British Columbia prison.

BobbyLee Worm, 31, was testifying at a B.C. Supreme Court trial launched by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association and the John Howard Society of Canada over the use of indefinite solitary confinement.

Worm was sentenced to nearly six years in prison in June 2006 for armed robbery. She served time at the Edmonton Institution for Women before being transferred in July 2008 to the Fraser Valley Institution for Women in Abbotsford, B.C., where she occasionally participated in spiritual ceremonies.

Prison officials limited an elder to certain elements of a spiritual ceremony, she said.

The elder would still want to see me regardless of how they were telling her how to give me my spirituality because she knows how important it was to me to have that in my life at that time, Worm said through tears.

It helped me keep grounded and keep myself together in order to get through those times.

Justice Peter Leask stopped proceedings to give Worm a break from testifying about her experiences, which involved long stints in 23-hours-a-day isolation, including one term that lasted almost a year.

Worm told the trial she was handcuffed in her cell while an elder met with her through a food slot.

The constitutional challenge was filed in January 2015. The federal government tried to stop the trial, saying legislation introduced last month would impose a time limit on solitary confinement terms.

However, the two groups say a warden would still have the final say and cases such as the 2007 in-custody suicide of Ashley Smith of Moncton, N.B., could still happen. The judge rejected the governments argument.

Correctional Service Canada maintains that so-called administrative segregation is used when inmates are difficult to manage, their safety may be at risk in the general population, or if there is no reasonable alternative to maintain the safety and security of an institution.

The court heard 50 allegations were made against Worm at the Edmonton prison, stemming from damage to property, possession and dealing of contraband, fights, assaults and uttering threats.

Worm told court she once tried suicide and said in her affidavit dated June 1 that she understood through counselling in prison that her repressed anger led her to assault inmates, leading to more time in isolation.

Her parents were intravenous drug users and she also turned to similar drug use, eventually contracting hepatitis C, she said in the affidavit.

She wanted to complete her Grade 12 education in prison but sometimes refused to participate because she was overwhelmed by trying to learn while being restrained as a teacher spoke to her through a food slot, Worm told court.

When she saw a teacher in another room, Worm said she was led out of her cell in shackles and handcuffs and learning became challenging because her hands were cuffed from behind and she couldnt use a pencil.

I just got tired of everything that came with it, trying to get that, she said of a high school diploma.

Worm said she eventually earned privileges such as guitar lessons but was handcuffed during that time.

It would have been a good nightclub act, the judge said, to which Worm responded: Ill have to keep that in mind.

In 2013, she settled a lawsuit against the federal government, filed on her behalf by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, which said shed suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of abuse her during childhood and adolescence.

Correctional Service Canada is currently required to release prisoners from administrative segregation at the earliest possible time. The proposed law would establish an initial time limit of 21 days, with a reduction to 15 days once the legislation is law for 18 months.

Follow @CamilleBains1 on Twitter.

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Regina woman says she needed spirituality while in solitary confinement - News1130

Artists at 73 See in Montclair explore spirituality in abstraction – Montclair Local

Oracle by Keely McCool.

Abstract works at 73 See Gallery The Body Is Just a Metaphor by Monika Smerdel Earth Works by Keely McCool 73 Pine St. 73seegallery.com Artist talk Wednesday, July 26, 7 p.m. Closing reception Sunday, July 30, 3-6 p.m. Show runs through July 30. Noon-6 p.m. or by appointment. Gallery is closed Mondays.

By GWEN OREL orel@montclairlocal.news

Monika Smerdels paintings are full of color. Keely McCools sculptures are earth-toned and neutral (in fact, many are literally made out of earth). But the work of each artist complements the others, at 73 See Gallery through Sunday, July 30.

Smerdels show is titled The Body Is Just a Metaphor, while McCools is called Earth Works.

Both artists explore spirtuality in their work. Smerdels paintings explore light, said the artist. McCool hopes her work will encourage the viewer to delve inside themselves and connect to the material they see.

Smerdel, born in Poland, moved to the U.S. as a small child just before the fall of Communism. After briefly moving back with her family, she returned to the U.S., and now lives in Cranford.

McCool came to Montclair State University from Oregon to be near Manhattan. She ended up loving Montclair and settling here.

We caught up to both artists to ask them about their inspirations and goals. The interviews were conducted separately, but like their artwork, complement one another.

Local: Tell me how you got started as an artist.

Smerdel: My grandmother had a paint store in Poland, in the family for two generations. I used to go after school and just stare at the pigments. They were so vibrant and chromatic. I still think about it every day. Its what inspired me to become an artist. In Poland back in the day, paint didnt come in gallons. There were crates filled with pigments in them. A painter would walk in and say I need a green color and mix blue and yellow with linseed oil and other bases to create the paint.

McCool: Ever since I was a little kid I was taking my toys apart and resculpting them to something else, and creating different things. When there was show and tell at school I was drawing. I was always doing something creative, since I was little.

Local: Talk to me about the title of your show.

Smerdel: It has a lot to do with my study of the Bhagavad Gita. Ive been exploring spirituality more, and digging in more to my subconscious. The subconscious connects through light, and the title is the way I perceive light into the painting: its shining from underneath or applied on top.

McCool: (laughing) Its a good title because I have three series in this show. Having a general title was more feasible. My new work is called Impetus of Creation. Im interested in how humans create. Im concentrating on the flow of energy from consciousness, the subconscious, the super subconscious, from thought to form. Im referencing the physical world and the metaphysical world. This is my three-dimensional interpretation to try to incorporate this concept into being.

I also have my Basket Series, inspired by Japanese basketry. Its called Basket Series. Thats how minimal I am. The last one is the Organic Series, sculptures that I made with leaves. the foundation is always minimal. I took just leaves and found a way of folding them to incorporate my forms. People rake the leaves and Im here thinking noooooo!

Local: what inspires you?

Smerdel: Energy. Nature. Everything. I can look at something taking a walk and something will hit me. Everything is from within looking out. I can walk down the same street every day and see something different. I collect information for a few months before I start a new series. It could take up to a year before I start digging in. I have a photographic memory and feelings, and want tog e that out onto a canvas. Its very emotional, yet physical and visual state.

McCool: Im inspired by nature. I incorporate what Im inspired by. Most of my work is made out of mud and twigs. Mud becomes the foundation of my form. I add twigs to add texture and dialogue.

When Im just going out for a walk and see things on the ground, because Im so spatially inclined, I can see the forms, the natural materials spinning and forming into different sculptures. If I like it, I grab the material and go.

Also a current issue, and I collect words. Sometimes a word will mold itself into a form later. It might be the word impetus. If I could use just three right now they would be evolution, revolution, and unity consciousness.

Local: How do you want viewer to feel?

Smerdel: I like the viewers to experience whatever they need to experience through it. Everybody looks at things differently. One person might see a dog or a piece of fabric. Bright colors draw them in. People are attracted to color, just like children. Thats how you create energy in a painting, either through texture or color. It is two dimensional, not sculpture, which is three dimensional. [McCool] can go mellower, with three dimensional shapes that draw people to her work and the rawness of it.

McCool: I really want to make the viewer connect with the materials. Having a neutral palette means they connect with it, and have to go inside themselves to find the connection. Its more of an inward connection, an essence connection, soul to soul. I want the viewers to feel all that I feel, with what inspires me. Im trying to share it with everybody else.

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Artists at 73 See in Montclair explore spirituality in abstraction - Montclair Local

Old Glory flies where its spirituality is recognized – WND.com

This past Fourth of July there were at least three homes over which the American flag probably was not proudly flown.

We can be fairly certain one was that of former San Francisco 49er quarterback Colin Kaepernick. The highly paid professional football player refused to stand when the national anthem was played before his games as he proclaimed he would not stand to show pride in the flag of a country that oppresses black people. Interestingly, although black, while Kaepernick was abandoned by his own parents, he was raised by a most loving white family.

Kaepernickism proved contagious as other minority-group members sought to register similar disgust for America.

Sadly, one was a member of the Armed Forces. Last Sept. 19, Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Janeye Ervin refused to stand for the national anthem being played on a military base as the flag was raised for morning colors. Quickly punished for doing so, she, too, undoubtedly, did not fly the flag this past July 4.

Ervin, a reservist on active duty at the time, explained her rationale for disrespecting the flag to an interviewer, claiming she was making a statement about blacks being persecuted. She said, I just didnt want to stand at that moment. I cant stand for this song knowing that the song isnt for me, being black. The song doesnt represent me at all. To be honest, I never really thought about the flag my entire life. I had no reason to. Its just a flag.

The Navy would tolerate none of it. Ervin, an intelligence specialist, was stripped of her military security clearances, which she also needed for her civilian job. While civilians cannot be held to a standard demanding they honor their flag, military personnel, by virtue of having taken an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States, are. After all, we can hardly expect one to protect what one fails to respect.

Yet another house over which our flag did not fly July 4 was occupied by one choosing to disrespect it in a most egregious way that same day.

In the city of love where an iconic symbol of American independence for over two centuries the Liberty Bell hangs today, a young woman in Philadelphia undertook a most despicable act to dishonor the flag. Taking a selfie video, she then posted it on Facebook. In the privacy of her home, it showed the American flag spread out over her toilet as she smilingly urinated upon it. While Facebook eventually pulled the video, this classy lady, Emily Lance, seeking to further inflame those already offended, added the caption: F your nationalism. F your country. F your stupid fing flag.

While Lance provided no insights as to what her particular issue was with a country in which she had the right to perform such a perverted act, she, like Kaepernick and Ervin, obviously enjoyed her 15 minutes of fame, denigrating a symbol of democracy and freedom that the vast majority of us hold near and dear to our hearts.

For the rest of us, the flag is a symbol to which a certain sense of spirituality attaches, not only because of what it represents but due to a deep appreciation for those who have made the ultimate sacrifice to defend it.

A question arises of these anti-flag protesters, now that they have dishonored the flag: What now? While their acts briefly won them the national spotlight they sought, what have they done with it to further promote their cause?

Interestingly, while Kaepernick did eventually return to standing for the national anthem (perhaps recognizing things were not as bad as he initially thought), it appears he, Ervin and Lance have done nothing of a positive nature to help point America in the direction they seek.

It is a sad commentary of our times young people such as these three have opted to demonstrate their personal dissatisfactions by dishonoring a symbol that really should serve as a rallying point for us all. Granted, America is not perfect by any means. But we all belong to the same 326 million-member-strong family. And, just as in the case of ones personal family where a member may test others, we recognize that family bond exists and must be honored not dishonored. Accordingly, we work within it to resolve our differences while not offending the family name.

Earlier this month, Secretary of Defense James Mattis gave the graduation speech at West Point. He pointed out that a few miles outside of Washington, D.C., at the Antietam Battlefield Cemetery, is a statue of a Union soldier, standing at rest, overlooking his comrades graves. The statue is inscribed with the words, not for themselves, but for their country.

Mattis said, How simple that thought. So long as our nation breeds defenders who look past the hot political rhetoric of our day and rally to our flag, that Army tradition of serving our country will never die.

It is standing under our flag that enables us to engage in the hot political rhetoric of our day. But such rhetoric should never cause us to lose sight of the spirituality the flag holds. By dishonoring it, we dishonor not only ourselves but, more importantly, those who gave their all to defend it.

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Old Glory flies where its spirituality is recognized - WND.com

Regina woman says she needed spirituality while in solitary … – CTV News

Camille Bains, The Canadian Press Published Wednesday, July 19, 2017 4:59PM EDT Last Updated Wednesday, July 19, 2017 9:43PM EDT

VANCOUVER -- A Regina woman who spent 3-1/2 years in solitary confinement cried Wednesday as she recalled how a spiritual ceremony led by a First Nations elder helped her through difficult times at a British Columbia prison.

BobbyLee Worm, 31, was testifying at a B.C. Supreme Court trial launched by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association and the John Howard Society of Canada over the use of indefinite solitary confinement.

Worm was sentenced to nearly six years in prison in June 2006 for armed robbery. She served time at the Edmonton Institution for Women before being transferred in July 2008 to the Fraser Valley Institution for Women in Abbotsford, B.C., where she occasionally participated in spiritual ceremonies.

Prison officials limited an elder to certain elements of a spiritual ceremony, she said.

"The elder would still want to see me regardless of how they were telling her how to give me my spirituality because she knows how important it was to me to have that in my life at that time," Worm said through tears.

"It helped me keep grounded and keep myself together in order to get through those times."

Justice Peter Leask stopped proceedings to give Worm a break from testifying about her experiences, which involved long stints in 23-hours-a-day isolation, including one term that lasted almost a year.

Worm told the trial she was handcuffed in her cell while an elder met with her through a food slot.

The constitutional challenge was filed in January 2015. The federal government tried to stop the trial, saying legislation introduced last month would impose a time limit on solitary confinement terms.

However, the two groups say a warden would still have the final say and cases such as the 2007 in-custody suicide of Ashley Smith of Moncton, N.B., could still happen. The judge rejected the government's argument.

Correctional Service Canada maintains that so-called administrative segregation is used when inmates are difficult to manage, their safety may be at risk in the general population, or if there is no reasonable alternative to maintain the safety and security of an institution.

The court heard 50 allegations were made against Worm at the Edmonton prison, stemming from damage to property, possession and dealing of contraband, fights, assaults and uttering threats.

Worm told court she once tried suicide and said in her affidavit dated June 1 that she understood through counselling in prison that her repressed anger led her to assault inmates, leading to more time in isolation.

Her parents were intravenous drug users and she also turned to similar drug use, eventually contracting hepatitis C, she said in the affidavit.

She wanted to complete her Grade 12 education in prison but sometimes refused to participate because she was overwhelmed by trying to learn while being restrained as a teacher spoke to her through a food slot, Worm told court.

When she saw a teacher in another room, Worm said she was led out of her cell in shackles and handcuffs and learning became challenging because her hands were cuffed from behind and she couldn't use a pencil.

"I just got tired of everything that came with it, trying to get that," she said of a high school diploma.

Worm said she eventually earned privileges such as guitar lessons but was handcuffed during that time.

"It would have been a good nightclub act," the judge said, to which Worm responded: "I'll have to keep that in mind."

In 2013, she settled a lawsuit against the federal government, filed on her behalf by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, which said she'd suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of abuse her during childhood and adolescence.

Correctional Service Canada is currently required to release prisoners from administrative segregation at the earliest possible time. The proposed law would establish an initial time limit of 21 days, with a reduction to 15 days once the legislation is law for 18 months.

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Regina woman says she needed spirituality while in solitary ... - CTV News

Religion and Spirituality Events: 7/19 – Cecil Whig

Low-cost, local events happening this week. To be included, your event must be family friendly, cost less than $25 per person and take place in Cecil County as well as adjoining areas within a 20-minute drive. Please submit the event title, time, address to accent@cecilwhig.com. Once approved by an editor, the event will be listed until its completion date. It will run in the print edition as space allows. You can also submit to a separate online calendar at cecildaily.com.

YOGA, 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Ongoing $15 drop-in. Multi-level for everyone. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296.

CLUTTERERS ANONYMOUS, 6 to 7 p.m. at Janes United Methodist Church, 213 N. Walnut St., Rising Sun. Clutterers Anonymous is a 12-step program to help people solve their problems with clutter/hoarding. There are no dues or fees. Contact Martha H. 443-350-1483.

YOGA, 7 p.m. weekly classes at Cecil County Arts Council, 135 E. Main St., Elkton. Intro class is free. Then pay $10 per class or buy five classes for $45. Classes are designed for new and experienced yogis. Contact class instructor Sarah Mester at smester@comcast.net.

IMPROVE MENTAL HEALTH, 7 p.m. at 229 E. Main St., Elkton. Panic, fear, anxiety, depression. Attend a free weekly meeting with Recovery International.

FREE LUNCH, 12 to 1 p.m. every Friday at Elkton Presbyterian Church, 209 E. Main St. provided by Elkton Community Kitchen. All are welcome. For more information contact elktoncommunitykitchen@gmail.com.

SMART RECOVERY, 10 to 11:30 a.m. at Janes UMC in Rising Sun. This meeting is for those recovering from the disease of addiction. This is an open support group that meets every Saturday.

SATURDAY EVENING SERVICE, 5 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church, 105 N. Bridge St., Elkton. Will recur every week at this time.

PUPPETS AND PEACH ICE CREAM, 6 p.m. at Harts UMC Amphitheater, 3203 Turkey Point Road in North East. Puppets and music performance by Jack Foreaker. Free admission. Refreshments will be on sale, including Harts famous Turkey Point Peach Ice Cream.

BUFFET BREAKFAST,7 to 10 a.m. at Oxford United Methodist Church, 18 Addison St. in Oxford PA. $7 for adults, $3 for children 3-10. Call 610-932-9698 for more information.

OUTDOOR WORSHIP, 9:30 a.m.grain or shine outdoor interdenominational service at Elk Neck State Park hilltop shelter, 4395 Turkey Point Road (Route 272, 9 miles south of NEUMC). Gil Nagle.

PARISH SUNDAY SCHOOL, 9:45 a.m. at Zion UMC in Cecilton. Recurs weekly.

DEBTORS ANONYMOUS, 6 to 7 p.m. at Janes United Methodist Church, 213 N. Walnut St., Rising Sun. Debtors Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women who help each other solve their problems with debt. DA is a 12-step program. There are no dues or fees. Contact Martha H. 443-350-1483.

NARANON MEETING, 7 p.m. at Bethel Lutheran Church, North East. Hope and Peace every Monday. Contact Lorri: 443-250-0909.

WOMENS NA MEETING, 7 p.m. at Bethel Lutheran Church, North East.

YOGA 4 SENIORS, 9 to 10 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Pre-registration is required. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296. $12 per class if all six are pre-paid or $15 drop-in.

SENIOR MEETING, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at St. Stephens Parish Hall in Earleville. Anyone 55 or older is invited to attend. Come and meet your neighbors. No membership fee. Lunch is served. Come for the fellowship, speaker, see what events we are planning. Questions call 410-275-8150. Recurs weekly.

MENS YOGA CLASS, 11 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Pre-registration is required. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296. $12 per class if all six are pre-paid or $15 drop-in.

COMMUNITY ARTS AND CRAFTS, 1 p.m. free instruction at St. Stephens Church, 10 Glebe Road, Earleville. Ongoing drawing and painting classes for beginner or serious artists. bspelled123@gmail.com. http://www.communityartandcrafts.com. Call Jerry at 410-275-2945.

TOPS, 5:30 p.m. at Rosebank UMC, Rising Sun. Nonprofit weight-loss support group, meets weekly. $6 monthly fee. First meeting free. topsrosebank@gmail.com.

NARANON, 7 p.m. every Tuesday at Elkton United Methodist Church. A Nar-Anon adult support meeting for those with addicts in the family.

MEDITATION, 7 p.m. every Tuesday with Three Roots Wellness at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Learn basics of meditation practices and how to make it useful in your everyday life. Donation based. Registration is required email to angela@threerootswellness.com.

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Religion and Spirituality Events: 7/19 - Cecil Whig

Spirituality, family roots drew THZ’s new rabbi to Mount Holly – Jewish Community Voice

By JAYNE JACOVA FELD Voice staff

Standing in front of Temple Har Zion were (from left), Joel Berenbaum holding Galya Bracha, Joels mother Myra, and Rabbi Tiferet Berenbaum. Although raised without a strong religious foundation, Rabbi Tiferet Berenbaum knew from an early age that she would grow up to be a person talking about God. The big unknown was which of the world religions she would embrace.

When I was seven, I remember putting on my dads bathrobe, flipping over a table, and giving a sermon to my stuffed animals about God and loving God. I made sure they were quiet because that was the way they were supposed to be for the sermon, recalled the new spiritual leader of Temple Har Zion in Mount Holly. My parents thought I was insane.

Her parents, both black Southern Baptists who had settled with their only child in Brookline, Mass., were spiritual, if not church going. Nonetheless, they were always supportive of their daughters religious journey. By Christmas morning of sixth grade, there was only minimal eye rolling when Berenbaum insisted on giving a prepared sermon before the presents under the tree could be unwrapped.

It was my first full-on Dvar Torah, she said.

Berenbaum discovered Judaism not long after that. That was in middle school when the flood of invitations to her friends bnai mitzvah gave her excuses to go to services.

From the first bat mitzvah I went toit was so mesmerizingI remember wanting all of it, she recalled. I wanted to wear a tallit and to kiss the Torah as it came around. The kid who was behind me, who shall remain nameless, he was like, you arent Jewish; you cant do these things.

Still, Berenbaum wasnt put off for long. Judaism returned to the forefront when the passing of her boyfriends father exposed her to Jewish mourning rituals at age 18.

Saying Kaddish for his father was my first adult experience with Judaism, said Berenbaum, 34. I fell back in love just like I was at the bat mitzvahs. The Torah service was wonderful. The concept of Torah study, and Shabbatthey were all things I had glommed onto myself without actually knowing they were part of Judaism.

By the summer between her freshman and sophomore year at Tufts University, while pursuing a degree in clinical psychology, Berenbaum devoured every book on Judaism in her public library.

Fortunately, coming out to her mother as a Jew turned out to be not such a big deal. I said, Mommy, I think Im Jewish, she said. My mother responded, we always knew you were Jewish.

Back at Tufts, she picked up a second major in Judaic studies and started the process of conversion. From there, Berenbaums story becomes more conventional. She taught Hebrew School in the Boston area for two years before embarking on rabbinic school at the Hebrew College in Newton, Mass. Six years later, in 2012, Berenbaum, the second black woman to be ordained as a rabbi in the United States, took a job as spiritual leader of Congregation Shir Hadash, a small Reconstructionist congregation in Milwaukee.

With the move to Har Zion, self-described as an egalitarian, Jewish Renewal-oriented synagogue in the Conservative tradition, Berenbaum feels a sense of homecoming. Its not just her comfort level with Renewal, a trans-denominational approach to revitalizing Judaism with old and new practices. Both her parents were raised in Burlington Countythey ended up in the Boston area where her father, who was blind, attended the Perkin School for the Blind. Also her husband Joel, who is currently studying to be a special education teacher at Alverno College while staying at home to take care of the couples six-month-old daughter Galya Bracha and lemon beagle Clint, is from Elkins Park, PA.

Replacing Rabbi Richard Simon, who led THZ for 32 years, she said is an awesome responsibility.

I know Im standing on a really strong spiritual foundation, she said. Even just being in the building, I can feel the spiritual footprint he created.

Laura Markowitz, THZs new president, said Berenbaums background, experiences and very essence seemed a great match for the synagogue that mixes traditional liturgy with the incorporation of drums, keyboards, chanting, dancing and meditation.

She just seemed to fit as a person who knows who she is, said Markowitz. Her love of text, of study, of Jewish liturgy and of song came through every time we spoke to her.

As for Berenbaum, she already feels she is surrounded by family at THZ. She looks forward to helping congregants continue their journey and to spread the love of Judaism to all who are open to it.

I fell in love with Judaism; I think its the coolest thing since sliced bread, she said. I just want to be able to show this amazing religion to anyone who lets me. Im really one of those lucky people who gets to do what I love to do.

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Spirituality, family roots drew THZ's new rabbi to Mount Holly - Jewish Community Voice

Womanism – Wikipedia

Womanism is a social theory based on the discovery of the limitations of the Second-wave feminism movement in regards to the history and experiences of black women, and other women of marginalized groups.[1] Writer, poet, and activist Alice Walker is credited with coining the term "womanist"[citation needed] Since Walker's initial use,the term has evolved to envelop varied, and often opposing interpretations of conceptions such as feminism, men, and blackness.[2]

Womanist theory, while diverse, holds at its core that that both femininity and culture are equally as important to the womans existence. In this conception ones femininity cannot be stripped from the culture that it exists within.[2] At first glance this seems similar to the thought process of third wave feminism, which embraced the concept intersectionality. How they differ is the valuation placed on intersectionality within the theoretical frameworks.[3] Womanism espouses that the culture of the woman, which in this case is the focal point of intersection as opposed to class or some other characteristic, is not an element of her femininity, but rather is the lens through which femininity exists.[4] As such a womans Blackness is not a component of her feminism, instead her Blackness is the lens through which she understands her femininity. In discussing womanist theory one must acknowledge the racism that was perceived by black women in the feminist movement. This perception fuels two different conceptions of Womanisms relationship with feminism. Some Womanists believe that the experience of Black women will not be validated by Feminists to be equal to the experience of White women because of the problematic way that some feminists treated blackness throughout history.[5] As such they do not see Womanism as an extension of Feminism, but rather as a theoretical framework which exists independent of Feminist theory. This is a move from the thought of Black Feminists who have carved their own space in Feminism through academia and activism.[6] However, not all womanists hold this view of Feminism. The chronological first conception of Womanism can be captured through Alice Walkers quote womanism is to feminism as purple is to lavender[7] Under this description the theories are intimately tied with Womanism being the broad umbrella that Feminism falls under.

Author and poet Alice Walker first utilized the term "womanist" in her work, In Search of our Mother's Gardens: Womanist Prose. She explains that the term womanist is derived from the southern folk expression "acting womanish."[8] The womanish girl exhibits willful, courageous, and outrageous behavior that is considered to be beyond the scope of societal norms. She then goes on to say that a womanist is:

According to Walker, while feminism is incorporated into womanism, it is also instinctively pro-humankind. The focus of the theology is not on gender inequality, but race and class-based oppression.[10] She sees womanism as a theory/movement for the survival of the black race; a theory that takes into consideration the experiences of black women, black culture, black myths, spiritual life, and orality.[11] Walker's much cited phrase, "womanist is to feminist as purple is to lavender", suggests that feminism is a component beneath the much larger ideological umbrella of womanism.[8] Walker's definition also holds that womanists are universalists. This philosophy is further invoked by her metaphor of a garden where are all flowers bloom equally. A womanist is committed to the survival of both males and females and desires a world where men and women can coexist, while maintaining their cultural distinctiveness.[8] This inclusion of men provides Black women with an opportunity to address gender oppression without directly attacking men.[12] A third definition provided by Walker pertains to the sexuality of the women portrayed in her review of "Gifts of Power: The Writings of Rebecca Jackson". Here, she argues that the best term to describe Rebecca Jackson, a black Shaker who leaves her husband and goes on to live with her white Shaker companion, would be a womanist, because it is a word that affirms the connection to the world, regardless of sexuality.[10] The seemingly contrasting interpretations of womanism given by Walker validates the experiences of African-American women, while promoting a visionary perspective for the world based on said experiences.[8]

The short story "Everyday Use" by Alice Walker illustrates the voice of a black rural middle class woman through the relationship that a black woman shares with her two daughters Dee and Maggie.[13] Dee is spoiled and believes that her education and experiences make her better than her mother and her sister. On the other hand, Maggie envies her sister for her the beauty and arrogance that always gets her what she wants.[13] Historically, it has been very common for people of color to have their stories told by Caucasians. However, Walker attempts to break this tradition by having a black rural middle class woman tell the story of her relationships with her two daughters. An important part of the story occurs when the mother in "Everyday Use" states, "You've no doubt seen those TV shows where the child who has "made it" is confronted, as a surprise, by her own mother and father, tottering in weakly from backstage Sometimes I dream a dream in which Dee and I are suddenly brought together on a TV program of this sort".[13] Here the mother reminisces about a family experience that she has witnessed on television that she wishes she could have for herself. A heart-warming scene similar to the one that the mother witnessed on television does not take place when her daughter Dee comes to visit. Instead when Dee comes to visit the mother a rough, awkward tension-filled encounter slowly unfolds. Walker employs this story and its context to illustrate that a majority of womanism is characterized by black women telling their stories.

Much of Alice Walkers progeny admits that while she is the creator of the term, Walker fails to consistently define the term and often contradicts herself.[14] At some points she portrays Womanism as a more inclusive revision of Black feminism as it is not limited to Black women and focuses on the woman as a whole. Later in life she begins to regret this peace seeking and inclusive form of Womanism due to the constant and consistent prejudice inflicted upon Black women, specifically, whose voices had yet to be validated by both White women and Black men.[15]

Clenora Hudson-Weems is credited with coining the term Africana Womanism. In 1995, the publication of her book, Africana Womanism: Reclaiming Ourselves sent shockwaves through the Black nationalism community and established her as an independent thinker.[16] Hudson-Weems rejects feminism as the theology of Africana women, that is to say women of the African diaspora, because it is philosophically rooted in Eurocentric ideals.[10] She further asserts that it is impossible to incorporate the cultural perspectives of African women into the feminism ideal due to the history of slavery and racism in America.Furthermore, Weems rejects Feminisms characterization of the man as the enemy. She claims that this does not connect with Africana women as they do not see Africana men as the enemy. Instead the enemy is the oppressive force that subjugates the Africana man, woman, and child.[5] She claims that feminisms masculine-feminine binary comes from a lack of additional hardship placed on women by their circumstances (i.e. race and socio-economic) as Feminism was founded to appeal to upper-class White women.[5] She also distances the Africana woman from Black feminism by demarcating the latter as distinctly African-American which is in turn distinctly western.[17] She also critiques Black feminism as a subset of feminism needing the validation of White feminists for their voices to be heard. She claims that Feminism will never truly accept Black Feminists, but instead relegate them to the fringes of the Feminist movement. She ultimately claims that the matriarchs of the Black Feminist movement will never be put into the same conversation as the matriarchs of the Feminist movement. A large part of her work mirrors separatist Black Nationalist discourse, because of the focus on the collective rather than the individual as the forefront of her ideology. Hudson-Weems refutes Africana womanism as an addendum to feminism, and asserts that her ideology differs from Black feminism, Walker's womanism, and African womanism.[18]

Chikwenye Okonjo Ogunyemi is a Nigerian literary critic. In 1985, she published the article "Womanism: The Dynamics of the Contemporary Black Female Novel in English", and described her interpretation of womanism. She asserts that the womanist vision is to answer the ultimate question of how to equitably share power among the races and between the sexes.[1] She arrived at her interpretation of the term independently of Alice Walker's definition, yet there are several overlaps between the two ideologies. Rather than citing gender inequality as the source of Black oppression, Ogunyemi takes a separatist stance much like Hudson-Weems, and dismisses the possibility of reconciliation of white feminists and black feminists on the grounds of the intractability of racism.[10] She uses a few examples of how feminists write about Blackness and African Blackness specifically to make salient the need for an African conception of womanism. These critiques include the use of Blackness as a tool to forward feminist ideals without also forwarding ideals related to blackness, the thought that western feminism is a tool which would work in African nations without acknowledging cultural norms and differences, and a co-opting of things that African women have been done for centuries before the western notion of feminism into western feminism.[19]

It is also important to note that Ogunyemi finds her conception of Womanisms relationship with men at the cross roads of Walkers and Hudson Weems conceptions. Walkers expresses a communal opportunity for men while acknowledging how they can be dangerous to the womanist community.[14] While Hudson-Weems conception refuses to see the Africana man as an enemy, disregarding the harm that Africana men have imparted on to the community.[20] Ogunyemi ultimately says that these need to be combined where African men are uplifted in the community to have womanist thought, however are positioned in the community so as to not able to assert themselves in mediums that they do not know of[19]

Womanism has various definitions and interpretations. At its broadest definition, it is a universalist ideology for all women, regardless of color. A womanist is, according to Walker's 1979 story Coming Apart, an African-American heterosexual woman willing to utilize wisdom from African-American lesbians about how to improve sexual relationships and avoid being sexually objectified. In the context of men's destructive use of pornography and their exploitation of Black women as pornographic objects, a womanist is also committed to "the survival and wholeness of an entire people, male and female"[21] through confronting oppressive forces. Walker's much cited phrase, "womanist is to feminist as purple is to lavender" suggests that Walker considers feminism as a component of the wider ideological umbrella of womanism.[12] It focuses on the unique experiences, struggles, needs, and desires of not just Black women, but all women of color in addition to critically addressing the dynamics of the conflict between the mainstream feminist, the Black feminist, the African feminist, and the Africana womanist movement.[22] However, there is Black nationalist discourse prevalent within womanist work and for this reason scholars are divided between associating womanism with other similar ideologies such as Black feminism and Africana womanism or taking the stance that the three are inherently incompatible.[16]

The Black feminist movement was formed in response to the needs of women who were racially underrepresented by the Women's Movement and sexually oppressed by the Black Liberation Movement.[23]Black feminist scholars assert that African-American women are doubly disadvantaged in the social, economic, and political sphere, because they face discrimination on the basis of both race and gender.[24] Black women felt that their needs were being ignored by both movements and they struggled to identify with either based on race or gender. African-American women who use the term Black feminism attach a variety of interpretations to it.[25] One such interpretation is that Black feminism addresses the needs of African-American women that the Feminism Movement largely ignores. Feminism, as Black feminist theorist Pearl Cleage defines it, is "the belief that women are full human beings capable of participation and leadership in the full range of human activitiesintellectual, political, social, sexual, spiritual, and economic".[12] With this definition, the feminist agenda can be said to encompass different issues ranging from political rights to educational opportunities within a global context.[12] The Black feminist agenda seeks to streamline these issues and focuses on those that are the most applicable to African-American women.

Clenora Hudson-Weems's Africana womanism arose from a nationalist Africana studies concept. In Africana Womanism: Reclaiming Ourselves, Hudson-Weems explores the limitations of feminist theory and explains the ideas and activism of different African women who have contributed to womanist theory.[26] At its core, Africana womanism rejects feminism because it is set up in a way as to promote the issues of white women over the issues of Black women. Hudson-Weems argues that feminism will never be okay for black women due to the implications of slavery and prejudice.[10] She further asserts that the relationship between a Black man and a Black woman is significantly different from the relationship between a White man and a White woman, because the white woman battles the white man for subjugating her, but the black women battles all oppressive forces that subjugate her, her children, and the black man.[10][27] She further asserts that racism forced African-American men and African-American women to assume unconventional gender roles. In this context, the desire of mainstream feminism to dismantle traditional gender roles becomes inapplicable to the black experience. Unlike womanism,[16] Africana womanism is an ideology designed specifically with women of African descent in mind. It is grounded in African culture and focuses on the unique struggles, needs, and desires of African women. Based on this reasoning, Africana Womanism posits race- and class-based oppression as far more significant than gender-based oppression.[10]

In her introduction to The Womanist Reader, Layli Phillips contends that despite womanism's characterization, its main concern is not the black woman per se but rather the black woman is the point of origination for womanism. The basic tenets of womanism includes a strong self-authored spirit of activism that is especially evident in literature. Womanism has been such a polarizing movement for women that it has managed to step outside of the black community and extend itself into other non-white communities. "Purple is to Lavender" illustrates this through experiences that Dimpal Jain and Caroline Turner discuss.[28] Some scholars view womanism as a subcategory of feminism while others argue that it is actually the other way around. Purple is to Lavender explores the concept that womanism is to feminism as purple is to lavender, that feminism falls under the umbrella of womanism. In "Purple is to Lavender", Dimpal Jain and Caroline Turner discuss their experiences as non-white women in faculty.[28] They experienced a great deal of discrimination because they were minorities.[28] Jain is south Asian, while Caroline identifies as Filipino (Jain & Turner, pp.6770). They go on to describe the concept of "The Politics of Naming" which shapes the reason for why they prefer womanism as opposed to feminism (Jain & Turner, pp.7375). Jain states: "I knew that the term feminism was contested and that I did not like how it fit in my mouth. It was uncomfortable and scratchy, almost like a foreign substance that I was being forced to consume as the White women continued to smile with comforting looks of familiarity and pride" (Jain & Turner, p.68). Here Turner makes it well known that she feels as though feminism is something that is forced upon her. She feels like she cannot completely identify with feminism. It is also important to note Jain's statement that, "The crux of the politics of naming is that names serve as identifiers and are not neutral when attached to social movements, ideas, and groups of people. Naming and labeling become politicized acts when they serve to determine any type of membership at a group level" (Jain & Turner, p.73). This statement illustrates that if an individual identifies with feminism they may do so for particular reasons. However, those reasons may not be evident to the general public because of the connotation that the word feminism brings with it in terms of social movements, ideas, and groups of people. Individuals want something to identify with that expresses and supports their beliefs holistically. They want something that they can embrace to the fullest without any hint of regret. Similarly, Alice Walker even states: "I don't choose womanism because it is "better" than feminism...I choose it because I prefer the sound, the feel, the fit of it because I share the old ethnic-American habit of offering society a new word when the old word it is using fails to describe behavior and change that only a new word can help it more fully see" (quoted in Jain & Turner, pp.7778).

For a majority of black women feminism has failed to accurately and holistically describe them as individuals to the world that surrounds them. They feel as though it takes something new that is not already bound to a predetermined master in order to capture this new movement. Womanism is something that Alice Walker can completely identify with without having second thoughts; it feels natural to her. Feminism does not. When distinguishing between feminism and womanism it is important to remember that many women find womanism easier to identify with. In addition, a key component of a womanist discourse is the role that spirituality and ethics has on ending the interlocking oppression of race, gender, and class that circumscribes the lives of African-American women.[29]

Womanist literature and activism are two areas that are largely interpolated, with each having a considerable effect on the other. A major tenet of Womanist literature and activism is the idea that Black activists and Black authors should separate themselves from the feminist ideology. This stems from assertions by Kalenda Eaton, Chikwenye Okonjo Ogunyemi, and numerous other Womanist theologians that the goal of a Womanist should be to promote the issues affecting not just Black women, but black men and other groups that have been subjected to discrimination or impotence.[30] In the words of Chikwenye Okonjo Ogunyemi, a white woman writer may be a Feminist, but a black woman writer is likely to be a Womanist. That is, she recognizes that along with battling for sexual equality, she must also incorporate race, economics, culture, and politics within her philosophy.[31] In Kalenda Eaton's, Womanism, Literature and the Black Community, black women writers are portrayed as both activists and visionaries for change in the Black Community following the Civil Rights Movement. She interweaves the historical events of African-American history with the development of Afro-Politico Womanism in a bid to create a haven for Black female activism within the black community.[31] This Afro-Politico Womanism veers from the traditional feminist goal of gender equality within a group and rather seeks to fight for the men and women whose civil rights are infringed upon. While Eaton takes the stance that Black women were largely excluded from the more prominent positions within the Black Movement, she argues that black women activists had the greatest effect in small-scale grassroots protests within their communities.[32] Using various characters from Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon, Alice Walker's Meridian, Toni Cade Bambara's The Salt Eaters, and Paule Marshall's The Chosen Place, the Timeless People as symbols of the various political agendas and issues that were prevalent within The Black Movement, Eaton draws upon the actions of the protagonists to illustrate solutions to the problems of disgruntlement and disorganization within the movement. Often the main task of these literary activists was to empower the impoverished massesdefined by Eaton as mainly Southern African-Americans, and they used the black middle class as a model for the possibility of social mobility within the African-American community.[31] A common theme within Womanist literature is the failure of Black women writers to identify with feminist thought. Womanism becomes the concept that binds these novelists together.

Spirituality concerns the desire for a connection with the sacred, the unseen, the superhuman, or the nonexistent.[10]Patricia Hill Collins offers this definition:

Whereby religion is an institutional mechanism, spirituality is a personal one. Unlike religion, spirituality cannot be abandoned or switched. It is an integral component of one's consciousness.[10] Womanist spirituality has six identifying characteristicsit is eclectic, synthetic, holistic, personal, visionary, and pragmatic. It draws from its resources and uses the summation of said resources to create a whole from multiple parts. Although it is ultimately defined by self, it envisions the larger picture and exists to solve problems and end injustice.[10] Emilie Townes, a womanist theologian, further asserts that womanist spirituality grows out of individual and communal reflection on African American faith and life. She explains that it is not grounded in the notion that spirituality is a force but rather a practice separate from who we are moment by moment.[33]" In a blaze of glory: womanist spirituality as social witness. Nashville: Abingdon Press. One of the main characteristics of womanism is its religious aspect, commonly thought of as Christian. This connotation paints the picture of spiritual black womanists being "church going" women that play a vital role in the operation of the church. In William's article Womanist Spirituality Defined she discusses how womanist spirituality is directly connected to an individual's experiences with God.[34] For instance, Williams declares, "the use of the term spirituality in this paper speaks of the everyday experiences of life and the way in which we relate to and interpret God at work in those experiences".[34] However, this connotation is disputed in Monica Coleman's Roundtable Discussion: "Must I Be a Womanist?" where she focuses on the shortcomings of womanism that result from how individuals have historically described womanism.[35] This holistic discussion of womanism is the result of a roundtable discussion. Coleman, who initiated the discussion, describes her thoughts on why she prefers black feminism as opposed to womanism, and she also discusses the limited scope that womanist religious scholarship embodies.[35] Coleman offers deep insight into the spiritual aspect of womanism when she declares that, "Intentionally or not, womanists have created a Christian hegemonic discourse within the field".[36] Here Coleman explains that the majority of womanists have painted the spiritual aspect of womanism to be spiritual in terms of Christianity. A specific example of this occurs in Walker's "Everyday Use", in the instance when the mother suddenly gains the courage to take a stand against her spoiled daughter as she declares, "When I looked at her like that something hit me in the top of my head and ran down to the soles of my feet. Just like when I'm in church and the spirit of God touches me and I get happy and shout".[13] This could be categorized as an example of the spiritual aspect of womanism because of the mention of relation to the Christian God. However, Coleman provides a counter example to this assumption when she states: "How, for example, might a womanist interpret the strength Tina Turner finds in Buddhism and the role her faith played in helping her to leave a violent relationship?"[36] Here Coleman pokes a hole in the pre-conceived notions of womanist scholarship. Coleman believes that the notorious sector of spirituality that womanism is most known for referring to is limited in its scope. Womanist religious scholarship has the ability to spread across a variety of paradigms and represent and support radical womanist spirituality. Considering womanism as a whole, it is also important to understand how it relates to feminism.

Womanist ethics is a religious discipline that examines the ethical theories concerning human agency, action, and relationship. At the same time, it rejects social constructions that have neglected the existence of a group of women that have bared the brunt of injustice and oppression.[30] Its perspective is shaped by the theological experiences of African-American women.[30] With the use of analytic tools, the effect of race, class, gender, and sexuality on the individual and communal perspective is examined. Womanist ethic provides an alternative to Christian and other religious ethics while utilizing the elements of critique, description, and construction to assess the power imbalance and patriarchy that has been used to oppress women of color and their communities. The publication of Katie Cannon's The Emergence of Black Feminist Consciousness was the first to directly speak on womanist ethics. In this article, Cannon argues that the perspectives of Black women are largely ignored in various religious and academic discourses. Jacquelyn Grant expands on this point by asserting that Black women concurrently experience the three oppressive forces of racism, sexism, and classism.[30] Black feminist theory has been used by womanist ethics to explain the lack of participation of African-American women and men in academic discourse. Patricia Collins, credits this phenomenon to prevalence of white men determining what should or should not be considered valid discourse and urges for an alternative mode of producing knowledge that includes the core themes of Black female consciousness.[30]

A major ongoing critique about womanist scholarship is the failure of many scholars to critically address homosexuality within the black community. Walker's protagonist in Coming Apart uses writings from two African-American lesbians, Audre Lorde and Louisah Teish, to support her argument that her husband should stop consuming pornography. She posts quotes from Audre Lorde above her kitchen sink. In Search of Our Mother's Garden states that a womanist is "a woman who loves another woman, sexually and/or non-sexually", yet despite Coming Apart and In Search of Our Mother's Garden, there is very little literature linking womanism to the lesbian and bisexual issue. Womanist theologian Renee Hill cites Christian influences as the cause of the lack of sympathy towards heterosexism and homophobia.[37] Black feminist critic Barbara Smith blames it on the Black community's reluctance to come to terms with homosexuality.[12] On the other hand, there is an increase in the criticism of heterosexism within womanist scholarship. Christian womanist theologian Pamela R. Lightsey, in her book Our Lives Matter: A Womanist Queer Theology (2015), writes, "To many people, we are still perverts. To many, the Black pervert is the most dangerous threat to the American ideal. Because the Black conservative bourgeoisie has joined the attack on our personhood, Black LGBTQ persons cannot allow the discourse to be controlled such that our existence within the Black community is denied or made invisible."[38] An additional critique lies within the ambivalence of womanism. In Africana womanism and African womanism, the term is associated with black nationalist discourse and the separatist movement. Patricia Collins argues that this exaggerates racial differences by promoting homogeneous identity. This is a sharp contrast to the universalist model of womanism that is championed by Walker. The continued controversy and dissidence within the various ideologies of womanism serves only to draw attention away from the goal of ending race and gender-based oppression.[16]

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Womanism - Wikipedia

In new school, Byzantine spirituality meets Montessori method … – The Tidings

Denver, Colo., Jul 16, 2017 / 04:01 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- With the goal of encountering children on a more personal level to meet their academic and spiritual needs, a Montessori school influenced by the Byzantine Catholic tradition is opening in Denver, Colorado.

Pauline Meert, who co-founded Sophia Montessori Academy along with Irene O'Brien, said the two wanted to combine Montessori and Catholicism because it just made so much sense. Meert said the school aims to help children fulfill their God-given potential, and that the Montessori message really makes that possible for each child, not just for a classroom as a whole, but for each individual.

Students in Montessori schools work in periods of uninterrupted time ideally three hours having the freedom to choose from an established range of options. The Montessori Method uses hands-on techniques in presenting concepts to individual children, rather than a group oriented, lecture-based approach to learning. The student's involvement in his or her own work then gives the teacher the freedom to spend time with each child and cater to each of their needs.

Sophia Montessori of Denver is in its final stages of its development, pending licensing and a few business inspections. But classes for children aged between three and six are expected to start in the fall of this year, and both Meert and O'Brien hope the school, currently with 11 families enrolled, will grow in number and into the high school level.

When asked about the origin of the school's idea, Meert discussed her connection to children and her dream helping bring about a childs full potential. She began her Montessori training in high school, and later envisioned Catholic teaching and the Montessori Method together. Meert said the school has been four years in the making, but that she added the Byzantine spirituality aspect within the past year after she became a parishioner at Holy Protection Parish in Denver.

The Byzantine faith is going to be the foundation, she said, noting that the day will begin with a form of the Jesus prayer. Montessori schools often begin the day with the silence game, in which children learn how to be calm and quiet in a time period of about 30 seconds to two minutes. Many schools have interpreted this freely, but she expressed a desire to tie this into the Byzantine's Jesus Prayer.

The beauty about being Byzantine is that we do that through the Jesus prayer: Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, Have mercy on us, your children, she said, You know because its kind of hard to call them sinners right away. The school will also have the kissing of icons and will teach according to the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd. The Catechesis of the Good Shepherd is a very hands-on way of teaching the children about who Jesus is in time and space: through the parables, through infancy narratives, and through learning the nomenclature of the church.

Children want to be a part of the world of adults and understand the liturgy, she said, and so the teachers aim to give them direct experiences related to the tabernacle and liturgical seasons. If we just tell them to be quiet and read a book during mass and during liturgy then we are not meeting their needs. They just want to know, they just want to be a part, they want to be welcomed by the church.

She said many people would be surprised at the theological discussions she's had with four-year-olds as well as the harmony created in the classroom. The environment is surprisingly peaceful and calm, even though there are 20 three-to-six year-olds together. Meert also described the trust needed to allow children the freedom to make choices within prescribed limitations. Three year-olds can do so much! she said.

Meert defined this freedom as not the freedom to do whatever you want, butthe freedom that Saint Thomas Aquinas talks about having freedom within responsibility, within boundaries and within awareness of other people. In her interview with CNA, she also voiced her hope to establish afternoon classes for homeschooled kids and support for parents.

We want to give parents tools and support. Some of the Montessori approach is common sense, but sometimes it's a little trickier and parents just need extra support (or) someone to bounce ideas off of, she said. We really want to be that support with those tools, and create a community that is often missing in our life.

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In new school, Byzantine spirituality meets Montessori method ... - The Tidings

In new school, Byzantine spirituality meets Montessori method – Crux: Covering all things Catholic

DENVER, ColoradoWith the goal of encountering children on a more personal level to meet their academic and spiritual needs, a Montessori school influenced by the Byzantine Catholic tradition is opening in Denver, Colorado.

Pauline Meert, who co-foundedSophia Montessori Academyalong with Irene OBrien, said the two wanted to combine Montessori and Catholicism because it just made so much sense.

Meert said the school aims to help children fulfill their God-given potential, and that the Montessori message really makes that possible for each child, not just for a classroom as a whole, but for each individual.

Students in Montessori schools work in periods of uninterrupted time ideally three hours having the freedom to choose from an established range of options.

The Montessori Method uses hands-on techniques in presenting concepts to individual children, rather than a group oriented, lecture-based approach to learning. The students involvement in his or her own work then gives the teacher freedom to spend time with each child and cater to each of their needs.

Sophia Montessori of Denver is in its final stages of its development, pending licensing and a few business inspections. Classes for children aged between three and six are expected to start in the fall of this year, and both Meert and OBrien hope the school, currently with 11 families enrolled, will grow in number and into the high school level.

When asked about the origin of the idea for the school, Meert discussed her connection to children and her dream helping bring about a childs full potential. She began her Montessori training in high school, and later envisioned Catholic teaching and the Montessori Method together.

Meert said the school has been four years in the making, but that she added the Byzantine spirituality aspect within the past year after she became a parishioner at Holy Protection Parish in Denver.

The Byzantine faith is going to be the foundation, she said, noting that the day will begin with a form of the Jesus prayer.

Montessori schools often begin the day with the silence game, in which children learn how to be calm and quiet in a time period of about 30 seconds to two minutes. Many schools have interpreted this freely, but she expressed a desire to tie this into the Byzantines Jesus Prayer.

The beauty about being Byzantine is that we do that through the Jesus prayer: Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, Have mercy on us, your children, she said, You know because its kind of hard to call them sinners right away.

The school will also have the kissing of icons and will teach according to the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd.

The Catechesis of the Good Shepherd is a very hands-on way of teaching the children about who Jesus is in time and space: Through the parables, through infancy narratives, and through learning the nomenclature of the church.

Children want to be a part of the world of adults and understand the liturgy, she said, and so the teachers aim to give them direct experiences related to the tabernacle and liturgical seasons.

If we just tell them to be quiet and read a book during mass and during liturgy then we are not meeting their needs. They just want to know, they just want to be a part, they want to be welcomed by the church.

She said many people would be surprised at the theological discussions shes had with four-year-olds, as well as the harmony created in the classroom. The environment is surprisingly peaceful and calm, even though there are 20 three-to-six year-olds together.

Meert also described the trust needed to allow children the freedom to make choices within prescribed limitations. Three year-olds can do so much! she said.

Meert defined this freedom as not the freedom to do whatever you want, butthe freedom that Saint Thomas Aquinas talks about having freedom within responsibility, within boundaries and within awareness of other people.

In her interview with Catholic News Agency, she also voiced her hope to establish afternoon classes for homeschooled kids and support for parents.

We want to give parents tools and support. Some of the Montessori approach is common sense, but sometimes its a little trickier and parents just need extra support (or) someone to bounce ideas off of, she said.

We really want to be that support with those tools, and create a community that is often missing in our life.

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In new school, Byzantine spirituality meets Montessori method - Crux: Covering all things Catholic

In new school, Byzantine spirituality meets Montessori method … – Catholic News Agency

Denver, Colo., Jul 16, 2017 / 04:01 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- With the goal of encountering children on a more personal level to meet their academic and spiritual needs, a Montessori school influenced by the Byzantine Catholic tradition is opening in Denver, Colorado.

Pauline Meert, who co-founded Sophia Montessori Academy along with Irene O'Brien, said the two wanted to combine Montessori and Catholicism because it just made so much sense.

Meert said the school aims to help children fulfill their God-given potential, and that the Montessori message really makes that possible for each child, not just for a classroom as a whole, but for each individual.

Students in Montessori schools work in periods of uninterrupted time ideally three hours having the freedom to choose from an established range of options. The Montessori Method uses hands-on techniques in presenting concepts to individual children, rather than a group oriented, lecture-based approach to learning. The student's involvement in his or her own work then gives the teacher the freedom to spend time with each child and cater to each of their needs.

Sophia Montessori of Denver is in its final stages of its development, pending licensing and a few business inspections. But classes for children aged between three and six are expected to start in the fall of this year, and both Meert and O'Brien hope the school, currently with 11 families enrolled, will grow in number and into the high school level.

When asked about the origin of the school's idea, Meert discussed her connection to children and her dream helping bring about a childs full potential. She began her Montessori training in high school, and later envisioned Catholic teaching and the Montessori Method together.

Meert said the school has been four years in the making, but that she added the Byzantine spirituality aspect within the past year after she became a parishioner at Holy Protection Parish in Denver.

The Byzantine faith is going to be the foundation, she said, noting that the day will begin with a form of the Jesus prayer.

Montessori schools often begin the day with the silence game, in which children learn how to be calm and quiet in a time period of about 30 seconds to two minutes. Many schools have interpreted this freely, but she expressed a desire to tie this into the Byzantine's Jesus Prayer.

The beauty about being Byzantine is that we do that through the Jesus prayer: Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, Have mercy on us, your children, she said, You know because its kind of hard to call them sinners right away.

The school will also have the kissing of icons and will teach according to the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd.

The Catechesis of the Good Shepherd is a very hands-on way of teaching the children about who Jesus is in time and space: through the parables, through infancy narratives, and through learning the nomenclature of the church.

Children want to be a part of the world of adults and understand the liturgy, she said, and so the teachers aim to give them direct experiences related to the tabernacle and liturgical seasons.

If we just tell them to be quiet and read a book during mass and during liturgy then we are not meeting their needs. They just want to know, they just want to be a part, they want to be welcomed by the church.

She said many people would be surprised at the theological discussions she's had with four-year-olds as well as the harmony created in the classroom. The environment is surprisingly peaceful and calm, even though there are 20 three-to-six year-olds together.

Meert also described the trust needed to allow children the freedom to make choices within prescribed limitations. Three year-olds can do so much! she said.

Meert defined this freedom as not the freedom to do whatever you want, butthe freedom that Saint Thomas Aquinas talks about having freedom within responsibility, within boundaries and within awareness of other people.

In her interview with CNA, she also voiced her hope to establish afternoon classes for homeschooled kids and support for parents.

We want to give parents tools and support. Some of the Montessori approach is common sense, but sometimes it's a little trickier and parents just need extra support (or) someone to bounce ideas off of, she said.

We really want to be that support with those tools, and create a community that is often missing in our life.

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In new school, Byzantine spirituality meets Montessori method ... - Catholic News Agency

Getting on the list – Beliefnet

Many of us make lists.

We read in The Message, God, who gets invitedto dinner at your place? How do we get on your guest list? Ps. 15:1

I can interpret this to mean, invite yourself!

We can invite our self to eat spiritual truths, to share spiritual truths and love.

Thats what my husband does, in a way.

Yesterday, we were traveling by car and I was driving. With too many ideas in my head, I asked my husband, Doug, to make a list of all the things I need to do this month.

He located paper and pen and began listing. It wasnt until this morning that I noticed what he wrote

Circled in the green line it says, Give Doug hug and kiss. It also mentions Bryans birthday, a person we are very proud of. I think God is proud of us when we do the best we can and improve each day.

I also appreciate the rest of the Psalm 15

Walk straight,act right,tell the truth. 3-4Dont hurt your friend,dont blame your neighbor;despise the despicable. 5Keep your word even when it costs you,make an honest living,never take a bribe. Youll never get blacklisted if you live like this.

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Getting on the list - Beliefnet

Venus Raj faces public to present thesis, reveals stories of hometown’s unshakeable spirituality – Inquirer.net

When beauty queen Venus Raj was requested to present her Masters thesis to members of the academe and the public, like any other student, she was hesitant. I was really scared. Tapos na ako, graduate na ako (Im done with school, Ive graduated), she quips.

But the Miss Universe 2010 fourth runner-up graciously accepted, and ever the professional, arrived ten minutes ahead of schedule for the lecture at Ateneo de Manila University, hosted by the Department of Sociology and Anthropology. And despite having previously faced millions of people worldwide on television, she admits to the relatively smaller university crowd, Im really nervous. I think this is more difficult than competing in an international pageant.

Beauty queen Venus Raj presents her masters thesis to students and members of the public in Ateneo de Manila University. Image: INQUIRER.net/Nia V. Guno

The nervousness didntshow, especially when she speaks of her personal experience with spirituality and resilience, which is the topic of her thesis.

I really experienced what it was like to be displaced because of a typhoon, or what its like to pack your things and go to your neighbor because they had a concrete house and your house would be devastated after, the 29-year-old masters graduate shares. We know that because our house is just made of light material. And when it rains outside, it rains inside the house.

One moment from her childhood struck her about what it means to be resilient: One night, we were all sleeping Because of very strong thunder, I woke up in the middle of the night. I saw my mom in the corner. She was holding an umbrella and then she was just praying. I thought, wow, my moms also scared. That gave me the assurance that you can be scared, you can feel the emotion that you want to feel but dont forget that theres someone who is bigger than your emotions.

That triggered me to be comforted and to have that peace even in the midst of the storm. So that gave me the interest to this study, to see how my fellow Bicolanos would respond to the research.

Her paper titled Disaster Resilience and Spirituality delves into how fisherfolk in her hometown of Bato, Camarines Sur cope after a disaster and how their spirituality is linked with their resilience.

The most recent disaster was Typhoon Nina which devastated the province last December 2016, during Christmastime.

Defining spirituality

The Bicol native spoke passionately about how typhoons impacted communities in her hometown. Image: INQUIRER.net/Nia V. Guno

Rajinterviewed 17 fisherfolk, both men and women, and did two focus group discussions. It helped that she was from the area as they were able to share their experiences in the Bicolano tongue.

She shares that her major, major findings (her joke) surprised her, as she didnt expect that there would be a difference between the way men and women viewed spirituality.

Because spirituality has no direct translation in the local language, one of the ways she strived to get a definition was to ask for their source of strength.

For men, they would instantaneously say family. They also said the Lord or my own strength and capabilities, revealsRaj. Women on the other hand linked their strength first to God, and second to family.

Their learnings post-disaster also varied: The men would say, we always have to be prepared. If something happens to you or your family, get back up again and continue with your life.

But women would always say, I learned in this situation that you should always put the Lord first. Love other people, love your neighbor and then really strive for your family, shares Raj.

From these firsthand interviews, she defined spirituality in their context as about relationships. Its my vertical and horizontal relationship with other people. Its my relationship with God and relationship with other people, my neighbors.

Inspiring collaboration throughspirituality

In terms of disaster resilience, she proposed tapping into spirituality to build resilient communities, as this appeared to be the key to compassion and eventually, moving them to action as one.

Spirituality can be that flame in their hearts that will inspire them to collaborate and work with other people towards a common goal, which is disaster resilience, she explains.

The MA in Community Development graduate says that spirituality should be included in disaster risk reduction management for more people to be involved. Image: INQUIRER.net/Nia V. Guno

Its significant because values like love, compassion, reduces discrimination and allows them to look beyond their situation.Hindi na tayo kanya-kanya. Magkakasama tayo rito(We are no longer individuals. We are all in this together.).

She adds, When people are inspired to serve, its easier to organize them. And when they are organized, its easier to serve other people.

Spirituality helpsbuild back better

She also emphasizes the importance of spirituality in disaster risk reduction management (DRRM) handled by the local government and those involved in community development.

Spirituality is also an approach and a strategy to build back better, says Raj. Since the respondents recognize the value of it in their lives, it would be worth considering cultivating and developing its strength and potential in DRRM.

One of these is how fast a community can recover from a disaster. In DRRM, spirituality promotes faster rehabilitation in coping up when people are emotionally stable and spiritually strong. If they know I can do this, I have hope, I can overcome this situation, its easier to promote faster rehabilitation, she explains.

Raj laments that there have been no professional psychosocial interventions in her province after hazards hit them. After every typhoonprobably this is just in my town, in our provincethere was never really a time that I remember that someone came to us and said, Kamusta po kayo?(How are you?)So how do you feel now?Walang ganun akong na-experience(I never experienced something like that.).

She witnessed how this affected her fellow Bicolanos: When I did my data gathering, they were really telling stories naminsan, andami nang oras na kinain(sometimes, so much time was taken up).They wanted to share their stories with other people. And you can tell its still fresh, some of them would cry,parangmay painpa din talaga(there is still so much pain) that you know they were not able to share with any other people, she explains.

Including spirituality in disaster resilience plans

She hopes that disaster risk reduction management could be better understood by the fisherfolk who tend to ignore typhoon warnings. In my town, they dont understand when [the government] says, Its signal no. 5. They just think, Oh, its just the same as the last typhoon, and they dont go to the evacuation center.

To encourage people to take part in disaster resilience programs, the local government and social workers need to tap into the importance people put into relationships: I feel if a project is relationship-based, if you have that relationship with your neighbors, I think thatmagagamit natin siya(its something we can use)instead of imposing on them.

Given that spirituality resounds strongly among members of a community, receiving input from faith-based organizations may help in planning for DRRM. Probably [the local government] can find an audience in the faith-based organization and present their plans to get suggestions on the spiritual side, she explains.

The Bicolana plans to give a copy of her work to the local government and present it to them. However, she wouldnt force them to use it, even if she views the findings as important to the community. Wala pa ako salevelnareally pushing something to be part of a policy,pero sana, sana, if they feel that its really importantand I feel that its importantsana(hopefully) they would use it.

Raj with Dr. Emma Porio, chairperson of Ateneo de Manila Universitys Department of Sociology and Anthropology, and attendees of Rajs lecture. Image: INQUIRER.net/Nia V. Guno

Raj finished her MA in Community Development at the University of the Philippines Diliman. The lecture is part of a class with Dr. Emma Porio under Ateneo de Manila Universitys Asian Peacebuilders Scholarship. JB

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Venus Raj faces public to present thesis, reveals stories of hometown's unshakeable spirituality - Inquirer.net

Christian tattooer fights stereotypes, criticism from both directions – East Valley Tribune

Matt Geiogamah has tattoos on the knuckles of his right and left hand that spell out PRAY HARD.

That he does, as owner of Salt & Light Tattoo in Chandler and founder of theAlliance of Christian Tattooers.

His manner is peaceful and his words are peppered with Bible references. He said hes called to live his life that way as a follower of Christ and as a tattoo artist.

But that doesnt mean its a smooth road.

Oh my goodness, all the controversies, Geiogamah said.

There are two different sides. Theres a non-believing tattoo community and their perception of Christians. And I have received a lot of criticism inside the church over tattoos.

We get judgmental letters fromChristians, saying Youre going to hell.

His response?

I know a lot of Christians who have dedicated their tattoos to God. Theyre not dishonoring Him, but dedicated to glorifying God.

There are Christians that are adamantly against it, not encouraging at all. But as a follower of Jesus, its not what goes into you, or on you. Its what comes out of you. Jesus said that.

The Chandler native has been an artist for a long time, working in mediums such as charcoal, oil, watercolor and photography. He has been tattooing since 2001. He had a tattooing apprenticeship in high school, then dropped out to finish the apprenticeship.

I wasnt going to graduate anyway, he confessed.

In 2013, Geiogamah set a Guinness World Record with the most tattoos created on the most people by a single artist in a 24-hour period. He inked 821 people.

All proceeds from the event were donated to Streetlight USA to help stop child sex slavery.

Geiogamah says hes been a believer for 9 or 10 years. He attends CentralChristian Church in Gilbert.

I grew up outside the church and outside the influence of the church, he said. I didnt talk about God. I was an agnostic.

He went through what he said was a lot of drug and alcohol abuse. He said hesuffered depression and anxiety in his early teens.

Hes not afraid of talking about histroubles,including his recovery from alcoholism.

Its a pretty common story,Geiogamah said.

On New Years Day 2017, he posted a reflection on his struggle with alcohol on Facebook.

Im sitting in church right now grateful that God has delivered me from the bondage alcohol had me in. I am not saying alcohol is evil but I am saying there is a reason the Bible tells us not to get drunk. Its not good for us, it only leads to trouble and despair.

God wants better for us becauseHe loves us.

Now at 33, he has made Christ the center of his life. He and his wifeNatilie live in Mesa and have a son, Isaiah, 2. Geiogamahs Chandler shop at 1989 W. Elliot Road, Suite 9, has been open 5 years. He knows his shop isnt a typical tattoo place.

The majority (of shops) are not Christian. That was my goal, to bring a Christian presence in a shop. But also to welcome all non-believing clients, to be a positive influence and example.

On the one hand, I want to advance the Christian community, but I dont want to scare anybody else away. Its a two-edged sword. I dont want people to not feel welcomed.

However, Geiogamah places a limit on what he images will create, based on his faith.

According to the Salt & Light website:

We do not do any tattoos involving racism, gang affiliation, false gods,astrology, witchcraft, or any religious beliefs or practices that go against the teachings and followings of Jesus Christ. We love all people but are forbidden, because of our own religious beliefs, to create certain images. We thank you for understanding.

He elaborates: We arent saying you cant do it or shouldnt do it, just not with us.

There are other challenges for him. He acknowledges it could be a struggle tattooing women who are partially dressed.

I have to keep holy in mind, not let it get the best of me, he said.

I look it at it like a doctor. You do your work, thats it.

He said his wife understands his situation.

My wifes cool because shes a massage therapist. Its a very similar situation dealing with half-unclothed people.

It takes a level of trust, he said. We have a strong view of Biblical marriage.

After leaving tattooing for a while, he came back with a renewed sense of purpose.

I wanted to be a light, to bring other Christian tattooers together, he said.

At the time, I knew one otherChristian tattooer. I invited him over, with no plan. Before I knew it, five others joined us.

Thus, the Alliance of Christian Tattooers was born in September 2011.

We draw, paint, talk about God.

We want to be a positive influence, Geiogamah said. Once we put it on social media, it spread all over the U.S., and the world.

The group meets every Wednesday night for prayer, fellowship and Bible study. It also puts on charity events to raise money for various causes.

In the meantime, Geiogamah hopesfellow Christians can move past the criticism to support him and others like him.

We could be doing a lot better things with our time than bickering, he said.

Information: Salt & Light Tattoo: 480-621-8819, saltandlighttattoo.com. Alliance of Christian Tattooers: allianceofchristiantattooers@gmail.com, allianceofchristiantattooers.com.

Contact Ralph Zubiate at 480-898-6825 or rzubiate@timespublications.com.

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Christian tattooer fights stereotypes, criticism from both directions - East Valley Tribune

Spirituality Has Helped Ajinkya Rahane Live in the Present – News18

PTI | Updated: July 15, 2017, 8:51 AM IST

Ajinkya Rahane. (Getty Images)

For Rahane, more than technical, there were mental adjustments that were really very necessary. Asked to elaborate, Rahane said: "By instinct, I am an attacking batsman but the pitches in the West Indies required a different mindset. It required patience and at times not get enticed to go for the big ones. Discretion was necessary in shot selection.

"And when we talk about discretion, that's where the mind comes into play to be able to think clearly what are the shots that I am going to play in a particular situation, on a particular kind of pitch," he said.

For him, what made the knocks special was the pitches in the West Indies which weren't exactly batting friendly with the ones in Port of Spain and Antigua creating difficulties.

"Actually the 62 that I got in the first ODI (abandoned due to rain), gave me a lot of confidence. It was my comeback match. I wanted to have a good knock under my belt. Once I got those runs, the second match was even better when I scored that century. The pitches were sluggish in nature and each pitch was so different from one another," he stated.

The soft-spoken Rahane said that not for once did he feel insecured because he was coming in place of a rested Rohit Sharma, who is again expected to open the innings during the Sri Lanka ODIs.

"This is a great phase in Indian cricket where we have so many top quality players competing for a place in the Indian team. It's always good to have competition. As far as I am concerned, I have never ever been insecure in my life."

Although he doesn't want to look too far ahead, Rahane is game about batting at any slot in the limited overs version. "Actually my spiritual guru tells me one thing. It is very important to live in the present, irrespective of whether you are playing or not. The biggest lesson of life for me is to keep things simple.

"As far as batting order is concerned, when you are playing for India, if the coach and the captain tells you to perform a particular duty, you do it. So if I am told to bat at a particular position, I will perform to the best of my abilities," he said with an air of confidence.

On the upcoming Sri Lanka tour, Rahane said that like every Test series, he does his homework and it will be no different this time around.

"I have a few plans for the series and I am working towards it. Obviously, you don't reveal your strategy. Also the Zimbabwe series will not be an indicator that Sri Lanka will be an easy prey for the Indian team. They have some quality players and as opposition, we need to respect them," he concluded.

First Published: July 15, 2017, 8:51 AM IST

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Spirituality Has Helped Ajinkya Rahane Live in the Present - News18

SPIRIT MATTERS: Spiritually, the world is our oyster – MyWebTimes.com

The beginning of June marked three years since I started writing Spirit Matters.

During that time, I have received a great deal of feedback from many of you, and I am deeply grateful for that.

I appreciate you taking the time to read my sometimes rambling thoughts, and I am touched that some of the things I have to say touch you.

As I've spoken to some of you, a common question is, "Where do you come up with your subject matter?"

That's a good question.

My goal in writing this column each week is to get down to the marrow of our existence through looking at the world around us and the experiences we each have, to find that which unites us as humans walking together on this planet.

Sometimes that takes the form of reflections based on my own religious background, with the hope that even for those of you who might come from a different background than I can somehow find something to relate to through my stories.

Other times my observations derive from personal experiences. For example, I know I've written about the death of my dad and the aftermath ad nauseum. For those of you who yawn when you see yet another column about that, I am sorry.

Still, grief is something to which we can all relate. And as I have navigated the strange terrain I've encountered after losing a parent, I trust that perhaps you can find some comfort through my experience as well.

I can't say I have a checklist of ideas written down about which to write. Sometimes, I wish I did, as I worry that what I say from week to week is too repetitive. The way I see it, when you are writing about spiritual topics, the world is your oyster. There is no limit to finding a spiritual meaning in any encounter or experience we may have. To that end, the more life experience you have, the better. And I must admit in the whole scheme of things, I don't have much.

Still, my passion is spirituality. And for me, most of that spirituality has been discovered and lived within the Catholic tradition. It is what informs me, but I know and I appreciate and I long for finding common ground among all of us, insofar as that is possible. Which is why I am also greatly edified by prayers and practices of people in other traditions.

It is not any one particular religion or faith tradition I am tied to as much as it is the Breath that underlies them all.

I look forward to continuing to write this column each week and in doing so, evolving spiritually and drawing closer with each of you to the Ultimate Reality through whom we live and move and have our being.

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SPIRIT MATTERS: Spiritually, the world is our oyster - MyWebTimes.com

Philip Richter, author, Spirituality in Photography – Church Times

I started taking photos as a child with a box Brownie camera. I then got into black-and-white photography, and doing my own developing, fascinated by the images appearing in the developing tray.

It was too expensive to do much serious photography as a Methodist minister, until digital photography democratised the medium and reawakened my passion. Ive gradually built up my skills as an amateur photographer through taking courses, belonging to a camera group, and reading, as well as a lot of trial and error.

Ive been a circuit minister, higher-education chaplain, and Vice-Principal of STETS [Southern Theological Education and Training Scheme], and enjoy working in ecumenical contexts. Im now part of the central ministry-development team for the Methodist Church, creating Worship: Leading and preaching, the new local preachers and worship-leaders training course.

Spirituality in Photography is about my passion for photography, with its capacity to help you deepen your vision and grow spiritually. Ive tried to write for a general readership and avoid religious jargon. Interestingly, people seem to be buying it not just for themselves, but also for young people they know.

Im encouraging people to slow down, look at their surroundings, and only then take their camera out.

Increasingly, Im being more careful about what Im taking thinking before I press the shutter. I take fewer photographs than I used to. Also, one needs the humility to know that even the best photographer in the world cant always capture what theyve felt and seen. The eye is the best camera youve got, and all is not lost if your photographs go wrong.

Selfies: a sign of the times, perhaps? If youre at a tourist site, youre in danger of being hit by people taking selfies. Its a way for people to express their identity in relation to their friends on social media, to say theyve been somewhere. If people find that helpful, then Im not over-concerned. But its not serious photography. Maybe people think that if you dont put up multiple photos of yourself each day, doing interesting things, you might not truly exist.

Id like to encourage people to put up the important things, the things that really matter. If you just shower people with images, what impact is it having? And Id like people to ask a passer-by to take their picture. Maybe theres an issue about the security of your equipment, but I dont think thats a real problem.

Absolutely anyone can take good photographs. The old stereotypes of who gets involved in photography are rapidly breaking down, and my own camera group includes men and women of all ages. You can certainly take excellent photos with a smartphone. Its the person behind the camera that makes the difference: their ability to visualise the photo, and respond to what they see.

Review your photos, and decide which ones you want to share, but dont jettison the others, because you might come back to them later and see different things in them. Transfer them to a computer to sort them out and classify them, and flag up the ones that are most important to you.

Some pictures may be important and meaningful to you alone, and may help your prayer and contemplation, but you may want to share some more widely. There are various competitions you can enter, to get them into the public domain, even if youre not interested in winning. Join a camera group or start a group inspired by my book, to share pictures in a church or in the wider community.

Its important to print some out. You might have a whole load stored in your hard-drive, but sometimes that can be lost, which is devastating, and anyway, its valuable to create something tangible that you can see in different lights, copy as a gift, and keep for years to come.

No, I dont show people how to help their camera to lie. . . In fact, I suggest that people should use post-production tools such as Photoshop or Lightroom sparingly. But all cameras have their limitations, and sometimes you need to tweak your images in post-production to convey what you saw and felt when taking the photo.

Cultivating the art of really seeing does help spiritual growth. Its helped me become less absorbed in my own projects, and less blinkered. Its helped to open my eyes to Gods presence in different places and people. It enables me to look more intently and lovingly at Gods creation and sometimes the way its been abused.

Enter our 'Life and Soul' photography competition by capturing the worship or community activities taking place at your church

Ive noticed in my local camera group that even people who may not be churchgoers seem to enjoy spending time under the night sky, taking photos of star trails and the Milky Way. Its quite difficult not to feel a sense of awe and wonder in that context.

I look for photos that convey a mood or feeling. I want something that grabs my attention: an image that is simple, not simplistic, giving me space to explore and discover meaning.

Two photographers stand out for me: Martin Parr, for his gentle irony, humorous juxtapositions, and saturated colours; and Ansel Adams, with his soaring, awesome, finely detailed landscapes. Interestingly, Parr was first introduced to photography by his Methodist local preacher grandfather.

I cant remember when I was first conscious of God. From childhood, God has always been there.

My sense of God hasnt just been in religious situations, although, as a Methodist, singing fine hymns has lifted me into Gods presence. I especially enjoy finding God in awesome moments, at the top of a mountain or contemplating the vastness of the night sky in places with little light pollution. Im increasingly appreciating God in people, friendship, and community.

My favourite sound is of wind rustling the leaves of trees.

Wally, one of my Sunday-school teachers, was a printer and a committed trade-unionist. He was the greatest influence on my life. He showed me that faith could be a world-changer as well as a people-changer, and helped me see the connection between personal faith and social action. He died a long time ago, but he still inspires me.

Photography makes me happy and being creative; good food and wine; time with the family; projects that successfully chip away at injustice and give people dignity and hope.

People who are arrogant and behave as if others didnt matter or even exist make me angry.

I pray most of all that I will be able to see the best and bring out the best in everyone I meet; and to live more thankfully and appreciatively.

The small acts of kindness that people often show to complete strangers give me hope.

Id choose Thomas Merton as my companion if I found myself locked in a church. He discovered a passion for photography late in his tragically short life, and used his camera as a tool for contemplation. His images reveal an eye for simplicity and wholeness.

Philip Richter was talking to Terence Handley MacMath.Spirituality and Photography is published by DLT, 9.99 (CT Bookshop 9). For details of a summer photography competition, visit http://www.spiritualityinphotography.com/competition.

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Philip Richter, author, Spirituality in Photography - Church Times

Combine spirituality with science for sustainable development: Bhatkar – Times of India

NAGPUR: The world is sitting on a bomb waiting to explode as people continue to exploit nature to the hilt for the sake of science and technology. A situation is not far away when we will have growth but less jobs as those will be replaced by technology," said Vijay Bhatkar, chancellor of Nalanda University, on Wednesday.

"The idea of sustainable development through scientific approach should be to reach the unreached and empower the voiceless which can be done only when spirituality is combined with science," Bhatkar. He was speaking after inaugurating a three-day international conference on 'Recent trends in science and technology sustainable development through scientific approach', organized by Shivaji Science College, Congress Nagar, to mark its golden jubilee.

Arunkumar Shelke, president, Shri Shivaji Education Society, Amravati, SP Kane, VC, Nagpur University, and SN Pathan, former VC, were present.

The objective of the conference is to give exposure to students, research scholars and teachers in the region to recent advancements in various allied branches of science and technology. It will explore the avenues of empowering researchers to face the challenges of the advancing era. The conference is being held in collaboration with 16 organizations from across Asia, which includes Regent's International College, Thailand, Birla Institute of Technology, UAE, OISCA International, Japan, and several other colleges from the neighbouring regions.

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Combine spirituality with science for sustainable development: Bhatkar - Times of India

Euthanasia, dignity, and spirituality lite – Religion News Service

EDITORS NOTE:This article originally appeared in Sightings, a publication of the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School. Sign uphereto receive Sightings in your inbox on Mondays and Thursdays.

Those (of us) who value the ethical but are not ethicists have good reason to pay attention to those philosophers, theologians, and, yes, ethicists, whose vocation dignity, and spirituality lite it is to deal with values, whether these have to do with ordinary problems and dilemmas or with extraordinary ones, such as matters of life and death. These are not, and cannot be, right all the time, or in agreement with each other much of the time, but they gain credibility in the eyes and minds of ordinary and extraordinary people when they follow their vocation and subject themselves and each other to criticism.

Few problems or issues are more troubling than those code-named euthanasia. When The New York Times (May 25) placed a story about euthanasia on page one and followed through on more pages, there were many reasons for the public to take special note. The story, At His Own Wake: Celebrating Life and the Gift of Death by Catherine Porter, was attention-getting enough, for it followed the career toward death of a particularly engrossing candidate for euthanasia, John Shields, a former Roman Catholic priest who, in the language of the church, left the faith. Among those who read the story of the end of his trail was Gilbert Meilaender of Valparaiso and Notre Dame universities. From their fields in Indiana, this professor has figuratively walked with people in the valley of the shadow of death and reflected on its realms.

He did not think much of the Times piece, and said so in an important response in Commonweal (June 30). Assuming that fewer people read that Roman Catholic magazine than read the Times, well commend both articles to all but concentrate on the little-magazine response. For the title of his article on Porters account of Shieldss end, Meilaender came up with Pathos, Bathos, and Euthanasia: Clearly intended to elicit pathos the account is, by my lights, drowning in bathos. He does not admire the euthanized John Shields nor those who chose to orchestrate and choreograph the homemade rituals, drawn from countless different (and incompatible) cultural and religious traditions

Meilaender scores Porter and the Times for seeking sympathy for Mr. Shields, but sees the article as a puff piece aimed at evoking support for one side of a complicated moral argument. Not humble, Shields became a spiritual cosmologist, who announced, I come forth at this precise moment to contribute my unique gifts to the great unfolding. Not quite Hegelian, thinks Meilaender, who may be sympathetic to Shields, but not to his way of coping with always terminal amyloidosis, as he profited from Canadas newly legalized medical assistance in dying.

The whole scheme of the Canadian law, the self-advertising of Shields, and the awe-full account by Porter and the colleagues whom she quotes, is based on a concept of self-determination, which Meilaender effectively critiques. For this critic the virtue of compassion, which motivates support for euthanasia, has a shape and has limits: the imperative that governs this virtue is not minimize suffering, but maximize care. The self-invented rituals patched together by Shields and executed after his death lead Porter to create traditions which are not likely long to survive; this sort of spirituality lite cannot sustain us in the face of death.

Meilaender ends with a particular and particularized Christian affirmation and response, arguing that in the face of a culture intent on teaching that to experience decline and loss of capacities is to lose dignity, we need to insist that each of us, whatever our capacities, is equidistant from eternity, and that no one for whom Christ was content to die can lack human dignity. Christianity is not the only anti-bathos-faith, but it is representative of values unlikely to be surrendered by those in any community or tradition who celebrate dignity more than advertised self-affirmation. One suspects.

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Euthanasia, dignity, and spirituality lite - Religion News Service