Beauty of calligraphy illustrates spirituality of the Holy Quran – Khaleej Times

Each of the artists will write a part of the Holy Quran to complete their work using Al Thuluth script for the first time.

Thirty expert calligraphers from 16 Arab, Muslim and foreign countries have gathered at the Dubai Festival City to participate in the ninth edition of the Ramadan Forum for Quran Calligraphy.

Each of the artists will write a part of the Holy Quran to complete their work using Al Thuluth script for the first time. The event is designed to enhance the value of Arabic language and arts.

The event, which ends today, was overseen by Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan, Minister of Culture and Knowledge Development. The ministry will keep the full version of the Holy Quran signed by all the participants at the forum.

"The participation of calligraphers from more than 16 Arab, Islamic and European countries is a proof of the success of the forum, which combines the great spiritual value of the Holy Quran and the sophisticated creativity of Islamic artists and calligraphers," Sheikh Nahyan said.

"Over the past years, the Ramadan Forum for Quran Calligraphy ... reflected an exceptional case in the march of Arabic calligraphy and Islamic decoration, making the UAE the centre of the attention of international calligraphers. We can proudly say that the UAE, through such huge events, has paved the way for the development of the Arabic calligraphy and the revival of many scripts which today's calligraphers have forgotten about," he added.

reporters@khaleejtimes.com

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Beauty of calligraphy illustrates spirituality of the Holy Quran - Khaleej Times

Local Muslims observe Ramadan as a month of spirituality – The Patriot Ledger

"The community is together, everyone is around the table... I just love it.

It was just past 8 p.m. The sun had set and evening prayer at the Islamic Center of New England was about to get under way. A feast of rice and lamb would follow. Desserts, too.

I love it, said Fatema Mataoui, watching the busyness. Children played. Grownups talked. Laughter ensued. The community is together, everyone is around the table... I just love it.

Muslims are observing Ramadan, the holiest time in the Islamic calendar, when the faithful fast from sunrise to sunset. Typically, the fast runs from 3:30 a.m. and lasts until 8:30 p.m. This year, Ramadan began May 26 and ends on Saturday.june 24.

Some of those gathered at the June 10 meal, called an Iftar dinner, said they face Ramadan with a little bit of nervousness.

I never know if Ill have the fortitude to do it, to fast every night, said Mobeen Gajee of Weymouth. But it always works out. Ive been fasting for Ramadan for almost 30 years and it seems to always work out.

Seventeen hours with nothing to eat or drink is a test of will for many. Sara Tariq, of Braintree, said that she tries to maintain her everyday routine during Ramadan.

The point is to keep the routine you have and on top of that, you fast, said Tariq. You keep the routine instead of sitting on your bed all day watching Netflix.

Mouaad Lebeche, the youth director at the mosque, said he, like many others, uses Ramadan as a time for self-improvement.

Every year, I find something I dont like about myself and I try to improve that, said Lebeche. I work to be a better person.

In addition to spiritual renewal and prayer, the month of Ramadan is also a time for Muslims to strengthen their relationships with God and the community. Many faithful say thats important especially under the Trump administration.

One effect of the election is that it pushed Muslims to reach out more to neighbors, said Fatima Amin, of Quincy, a student at University of Massachusetts-Boston. Ironically, it helped people know each other more. People are actually getting to know each other by forming real human relationships instead of just through the TV and Internet.

Gajee said that news coming from Trumps administration, like executive orders banning travelers from seven Muslim-majority countries, has pushed him to focus more on acts of charity and outreach.

In some ways, you have a cloud hanging over your head wondering what the future holds, said Gajee, as his 3-year-old son, Mustafa, raced circles around him, giggling. But it makes you want to do more.

Sometimes, as with the June 10 dinner, the mosque holds interfaith events that bring together the community at-large. At the dinner, Quincy state Senator John Keenan sat next to Izhar Kazmi, the President of the Islamic Center of New England. Other non-Muslim South Shore residents joined the celebration. Lebeche said that he believes these types of events have made a difference.

Last year, I used to see people driving by, giving us the finger, Lebeche siad. Now, nothing. If anything, weve gone in the other direction.

For the worlds 1.6 billion Muslims, the month marks the revelation of the Koran to the prophet Mohammed. Kristina Brother is a new Muslim convert and as she observes her first Ramadan she said she feels accomplished at the end of every dawn-til-dusk fast.

I thought Id struggle with fasting, but every night I just think, I did it, I did what I intended to do. I feel good. said Brother.

Gajee said the end of Ramadan is bittersweet.

When it ends, you always kind of miss it, said Gajee.

Zane Razzaq may be reached at zrazzaq@ledger.com.

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Local Muslims observe Ramadan as a month of spirituality - The Patriot Ledger

About CSP | Graduate Programs in Christian Spirituality …

The program dates for Summer 2017 are:

The Master of Arts with a major in Christian Spirituality and the graduate Certificate in Spiritual Direction and Directed Retreat are summer-only programs of graduate-level courses. Solid academicstudy is combined with a personal appropriation ofthe Christian faith through prayer and worship. Theapplication of these aspects to one's life and ministry is stressed in both programs.

The primary value of Creighton University's graduate programs in Christian Spirituality is the integration ofthree elements:

The long-range goal of the program is to foster an apostolic spirituality which promotes the deep spiritual and moral renewal needed for Christians to respond appropriately to the many urgent issues facing humanity in the twenty-first century.

The courses are offered in four-week terms with two terms scheduled each summer. One may register for either term or both terms.

An eight-day, silent, directed retreat is held three times each year. All are welcome,though space is limited and registration is required. Participation in the Christian Spirituality Program at Creighton is not required to attend the retreat. The dates of the 2017 retreats are:

March 6-15, 2017

June 1-10, 2017

July 31-August 9, 2017

If you have questions orwould like materials mailed to you or a friend, please use our Request Information Form on this web site or email your name and mailing address to: csp@creighton.edu or phone toll free 800.637.4279 and ask for Colleen Hastings, Administrative Assistant.

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About CSP | Graduate Programs in Christian Spirituality ...

Christian Spirituality | Creighton University

The Master of Arts degree in Christian Spirituality and the Graduate Certificate in Spiritual Direction and Directed Retreats are a living synthesis of graduate-level study, personal prayer, shared faith and a commitment to apostolic work.

Thedegree and certificate draw faculty and students from all parts of the United States and several other countries.

The program's more than 800 graduates, including laity, religious, and clergy, attest that Creighton's Spirituality program applies to a wide range of ministries.

A major focus of the program is to preparestudents to provide spiritual direction and to give individually-directed retreats in the Ignatian tradition.

1. Graduates will demonstrate mastery of core content in the following fields: Scripture, Church Tradition and Christian heritage, Contemporary theology and psychology with an emphasis on Ignatian Spirituality. 2. Graduates will demonstrate pastoral program development skills, critical thinking, and effective disciplinary problem-solving in the field of Christian Spirituality and Ignatian Spiritual Direction. 3. Graduates will demonstrate an apostolic orientation directed toward more effective ministry skills especially toward preparation for giving spiritual direction and directed retreats in an Ignatian format. 4. Graduates will demonstrate competent, respectful and effective communication of Spirituality in written and oral English. 5. Graduates will demonstrate learned skills for lifelong deliberation and discernment. 6. Graduates will demonstrate effective intercultural competency required for meaningful Christian Ministry and Ignatian Spirituality.

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Christian Spirituality | Creighton University

What is the spiritual life? – Sri Chinmoy’s official site

Here we are all seekers, seekers of the infinite Light and the eternal Truth. What does this mean? It means that we have accepted the spiritual life soulfully and consciously.

The paramount question is, "What is the spiritual life?" The spiritual life is something that is natural and normal. It is always natural and it is always normal, unlike other things that we come across in our day-to-day multifarious activities. The spiritual life is normal and natural precisely because it knows its Source. Its Source is God the infinite Light and God the eternal Truth.

When we follow the spiritual life, we come to feel that a life of peace need not always remain a far cry. We come to feel that a life of love, the love that expands, need not always remain a far cry. Everything that fulfils us divinely and supremely, we can achieve and claim as our very own if we follow the spiritual life. Right now Peace, Light and Bliss in abundant measure we do not have at our disposal. But when we practise spirituality, when our inner cry, which we call aspiration, climbs up high, higher, highest, at that time Peace, Light and Bliss we get not only in abundant measure but in infinite measure. And we can achieve and treasure these divine qualities in the inmost recesses of our hearts. When we practise the spiritual life soulfully, devotedly and unconditionally, we try to bring to the fore the divinity that we all have. And this divinity is nothing short of our perfection.

Here we are all seekers. Each seeker represents the ideal and the real. The ideal is self-transcendence and the real is God's all-pervading Consciousness.

If we want to grow into the real and the ideal in us, we have to clean our mind thoroughly of the undivine thoughts that are constantly assailing us. And we have to empty our heart and fill it with infinite Light and Delight. Then God the Real and God the Ideal will be able to sing and dance in our aspiring being.

Here we are all seekers. We are all chosen instruments of the Supreme, our Beloved Supreme, the Eternal Pilot. We can prove this soulful statement of ours, not by words but by deeds, by our serving love and loving service.

Loving service. Our loving service can prove to the world at large that we are the chosen instruments of the Supreme, for the Supreme. When we love the Supreme soulfully, devotedly and unconditionally in our aspiring mind, we heighten our God-Height; and when we serve the Supreme soulfully, devotedly and unconditionally in our aspiring mind, we deepen our God-Depth.

Since we are the chosen instruments of the Supreme, our immediate necessity is God-realisation and our absolute duty is God-manifestation. In the fulfilment of our immediate necessity, we can become the torch-bearers of infinite Truth and the harbingers of God-Vision within us and without. In the fulfilment of our absolute duty, we discover that we are God-seeds and God-fruits. Let us offer our God-seed to the Supreme; let us place it at His Feet, so it may grow into a divine tree that can lift humanity to the highest transcendental Height. Let us also offer to the Supreme our God-fruit. Let us place our God-fruit at His Feet for His Manifestation, His total and complete Manifestation here on earth.

~Sri Chinmoy Northwestern University 1 7 December 1975

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What is the spiritual life? - Sri Chinmoy's official site

Spirituality Center | The Sage Colleges

The Spirituality Center offers a safe place for spiritual gatherings, religious ritual, healing, celebration, educational events and social justice activities. The Spirituality Center encourages the honoring, sharing and celebrating of the sacred in the diverse range of forms present in all the religious traditions represented in the Sage community.

The Spirituality Center is a place

The Spirituality Center fosters a spiritual community in which diversity is embraced. It is a place where communication is encouraged so that groups and individuals can learn from each other and work together to make a difference in our society.

The Spirituality Center offers you the opportunity to integrate a centered life with your social and educational life during your college career. If you are uncertain about your religious convictions or simply have many unanswered questions, the Sage Spirituality Center welcomes you as well. Should you desire it, individual spiritual counseling is available to assist you in deepening your personal and spiritual growth. In addition, there will be time for fun and just being together with friends!

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Spirituality Center | The Sage Colleges

Center for Spirituality | Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame, IN

The Center for Spirituality offers programs that promote the engagement between faith and reason and the connection between mind, body, and spirit. Spirituality at the Center is discussed as an academic discipline and as a way of life and includes individual and social dimensions of spirituality. We draw on intellectual resources in the Catholic and Christian heritage as well as how individuals practice faith in their daily lives to develop critical conversations around contemporary religious issues, especially as they relate to womens experience.

Opportunities for students include: annual fall and spring lecture series on designated themes such as faith in public life or sustainability; the Madeleva Lecture given annually by a prestigious female scholar of religion; and the Real Life Project in vocation, inviting women in small groups to discuss the ways in which faith intersects with their future careers.

32nd Madeleva Lecture NOW ONLINE!

A Hunger for Wholeness: Soul, Space, and Transcendence Ilia Delio, OSF, Villanova University

NEWS/ARTICLES OF INTEREST

Madeleva Lecturer Ilia Delio's recent article in National Catholic Reporter

NCR article about Fr. Bryan Massingale's recent lecture at SMC

Biblical Scholar Sandra Schneiders Celebrates Four Milestones Schneiders is a two-time Madeleva Lecturer. She has also been the main speaker for past Summer Seminars.

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Center for Spirituality | Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, IN

Enlightenment and spirituality on the fringe of Fieldays 2017 – Stuff.co.nz

THOMAS MANCH

Last updated10:17, June 18 2017

THOMAS MANCH

Amani, a Hare Krishna monk, was at Fieldays asking farmers to consider a greater purpose and a lifestyle that didn't exploit animals.

Enlightenment might not have been on the shopping list this Fieldays, but it was on offer.

On the fringes of Fieldays 2017, four soldiers of dharma and a flock of Christian students were asking the hard questions.

Amani, a Hare Krishna monk from Hamilton, could be found at an intersectionbetween tractor stalls asking,"Who are you?

THOMAS MANCH

Emerson Bredin from the Fellowship of Christian Farmers: "We're not here trying to force it on anybody we just talk to them about it."

"You might think you're a farmer, but that's a temporary designation," he said.

READ MORE: *Dare-to-wear acting prime minister opts for pink gumboots at Fieldays *Green Party finding firmer ground at Fieldays *Parking a car a second is the job of Fieldays volunteers *Fieldays 2017 brings promise of big crowds and robotic revolution

Seeking to spark interest in deeper thoughts, he was eager to sharethe monk's "simple living, high thinking" way of life.

"They're out here looking for gumboots, tractors, Swanndris this is a chance. Someknow there is something more to life than the day-to-day grind."

He is one of five monks who opened a new meditation centre in Hamilton three months ago. The monkswere at Fieldays to attract interest in their practice.

"This is where everyone is."

The Hamilton monks are vegan, a subject that wasn't broached with the meat- and milk-farming crowd.

"Veganismis a natural side effect. Once you understand who you are, you don't want to be exploiting others for your own sustenance."

The response from curious farmers was good, he said. Many had taken copies ofthe Hare Krishna text, the Bhagavad-gita.

Another book Amani recommended, Hiding in Unnatural Happiness, was out of stock.

A source ofspirituality more commonly seen in the hands of Fieldays punters were wooden walking sticks given out by the Fellowship of Christian Farmers.

The group, from the United States, had a stall in the Town and Country section manned by students from the Capernwray bible college in Cambridge.

Emerson Bredin, 18, said walking sticks were adorned withcoloured beads representing Jesus's love and sacrifice, God's gift of free will and forgiveness.

"We're not here trying to force it on anybody we just talk to them about it."

Bredin had read about issues with mental health and suicide faced by the rural communityand said the group offered something to farmers who were struggling.

"Coming from a farming background, I know that it is an isolated activity. You think, getting up to milk the cows, why am I here on Earth?"

The majority of people stopping to chat were Christian farmers, he said.

"Even the ones who aren't are at least giving us the time It's interesting hearing their stories; it's really nice when people open up."

Originally from Ontario, Canada, Bredin travelled to New Zealand for a course at the bible college.

"I wanted to get as far away from home as I could. I had problems with street fighting and drinking."

The Fellowship of Christian Farmers has maintained a presence at Fieldays for the past seven years.

-Stuff

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Enlightenment and spirituality on the fringe of Fieldays 2017 - Stuff.co.nz

Spirituality in Photography: seeing life through a new lens – Vatican Radio

The book 'Spirituality in Photography' by British Methodist minister Philip Richter, who'll be presenting the volume at Rome's Libreria Claudiana on Saturday June 17th - RV

(Vatican Radio) A picture is worth a thousand words. But what does it tell us about our spiritual life? Methodist minister Philip Richter sets out to answer that question in a new book entitled Spirituality in Photography: taking pictures with deeper vision.

A passionate amateur photographer himself, Rev Richter offers a wealth of tips on taking good photos with smart phones or professional cameras. But at the same time, he reflects on how to use those same skills in our search to make sense of contemporary society.

His short, yet deceptively simple volume, is part user manual for photographers, part prayer guide for those seeking a deeper, more meaningful relationship with God and with the world around us.

Richter is in Rome this week for a study tour and a book launch at the Libreria Claudiana in Piazza Cavour on Saturday morning. He dropped in to Vatican Radio to tell Philippa Hitchen more about his work

Listen

Richter begins by talking about his work as ministry development officer for the Methodist Church in England, which he has served for almost four decades.

His book, he explains, is designed both for those who go to a church, as well as for those who don't do religion but are nevertheless interested in spiritual questions.

He recalls that he has always had a passion for photography, since the days when he was photographed as a young boy holding an old box brownie camera. As a minister, he says, he didn't have money to buy expensive camera equipment, but the advent of digital photography has led to a democritisation of the medium.

Digital photography has also brought with it the trend of taking many pictures without a second thought, he says. One of the main goals of the book is to encourage people to think before they snap and reflect on how we frame a photo, extending that reflection to consider what we "include and exclude from the picture" in our own lives.

Photography and spirituality can inspire each other, Richter believes, citing the way that perspective in photography can help us develop a better sense of proportion in our busy lives. Rather than being constantly reactive to the latest text or email, he insists, its essential to shelve some things and deal with the really important things and people around you.

Richter also considers the way pictures can be photo-shopped in a creative way, yet its vital that we dont seek manipulate the truth. He encourages people to see things in a different light, taking advantage of the so-called golden hours just after sunrise and just before sunset.

At its heart, Richter says, the book is about encouraging people to slow down, to enjoy what they do, and to become truly attentive to the people and places that God has given you.

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Spirituality in Photography: seeing life through a new lens - Vatican Radio

Spirituality Center offers nature workshop – La Crosse Tribune

Children ages 4 to 12 and their adult family members are invited to explore the wonders of the natural world during a new outdoor event offered by the Franciscan Spirituality Center.

Sacred Family: Mindful in Nature will take place from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 12, at Pettibone Lagoon. Local writer and educator Jan Wellik will lead the workshop. Activities include reading and writing nature poems, creating outdoor art collages and mindfulness exercises.

"As the mother of a young child myself, I know that sacred time together as a family is precious and rare. Yet isnt it the core of life, the heart of what matters most? Wellik said.

The cost is $25 for one adult and child, $5 for each additional person. Register by Aug. 4 at http://www.fscenter.org or by calling 608-791-5295.

Jan Wellik of Onalaska has brought her love of nature and writing together for several programs at the FSC. She is a mom, college instructor, founder of the Eco Expressions nature writing program and the author of the Nature Writing Field Guide for Teachers.

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Spirituality Center offers nature workshop - La Crosse Tribune

A Drumbeat for Help Awakens the Spirituality of Yangon – Indo American News

Added by Indo American News on June 16, 2017. Saved under Community, Current Stories, Headlines, Travel Tags: Baytown, Clear Lake, Cypress, Desi news, Greater Houston, Houston, Houston Desi news, India, Indian American community, Indian News, Indians in America, Indo-American News, Katy, NRI, pearland, Shwedagon Pagoda, south asia, South India, Sugar Land, Texas, USA, Yangon

Shrines dot the 1,420 ft perimeter of the pagoda

By Jawahar Malhotra

YANGON, MYANMAR: We had just left the Jana Mon Ethnic Cuisine restaurant on Nandawon Street, a short taxi ride away north of the towering Shwedagon Pagoda site and were walking back past the residential area, a little past 9:30 at night. The restaurant, which serves ethnic Mon food, is a favorite of the local expatriate community and has been written up in the local press. It is a tiny place with six tables, a modern, hip ambiance and a snappy menu of food from the Mon state, which lies just east of Yangon, bordering the Andaman Sea.

The gilded Shwedagon Pagoda is lit up at night and can be seen from anywhere in the city

The restaurant is a walk up with a warm glow of light emanating from its perpetually open door, and is located down a small dimly lit lane that leads to six-story tall residential apartments and clusters of two-story homes surrounded by brick walls. As with most other parts of the city, the buildings have a tired, worn out look, with dark patches of weather-beaten stains on the dull whitewashed walls and drying laundry hung off balconies.

A small shop catering to basic items had a few customers, a few people sauntered by in rubber flip-flops and a group of little kids played near their parents in the light of an occasional streetlight. Some cars were parked on one side of the road, but traffic was sparse so we walked till the end of the lane to catch a cab. A woman in a long printed sarong, blouse with mid-arm sleeves, an angular headwrap and flip-flops approached on the far side, a bundle tied in a long cloth slung across one shoulder, a child on her hip.

The South Entrance hall to the Shwedagon Pagoda complex

She stopped in a small clear spot, let the child down to scamper, sat on her haunches, pulled out a small drum and started to play a low-tone, monotonous beat. After a punctuated silence, she beat the same notes again and repeated it as she waited. My son Jeremy, who had been living in Yangon for the past year (and had become equally comfortable in flip-flops), explained that this was the way people beckoned for alms when they were destitute. The low pounding beats traveled down the street and sure enough, a few people walked up to her and handed her some loose change or bowls of food.

All across the city, the same ritual is repeated daily, but not to the point of annoyance, as poor people sit on their haunches, and beat a drum like a sign of their last resort to get by or eat. It is a practice that is rooted in the Buddhist monks way of begging for alms, of throwing themselves at the mercy of the world when all else fails. And in a deeply spiritual society, the plea is quickly responded to.

The Jana Mon Ethnic Cuisine restaurant is located just north of the Shwedagon Pagoda area

On a Saturday night, remarkably cool for mid-March, the Shwedagon Pagoda complex is packed with people who throng to pay homage to their personal mini-shrine in a ritualistic slow walk around the main, central towering 99 meter (325 ft) tall gold-gilded stupa. They come by the family-loads, up the four entrances aligned to the directions of a compass, built onSinguttara Hill, 168 ft above the rest of the city. The complex is located to the west ofKandawgyi Lake, and dominates the Yangon skyline. Down the western entrance which has been outfitted with escalators for those who cannot climb the stairs, at the base, just outside the gates, on U Wisara Road, you can get a roaming taxi to whisk you off into the surrounding dimly lit city.

You enter through a long, wide covered hall, each with its own distinctive name and function , walking up flights of short stairs, past the stalls and stores selling religious artifacts and to a ticket booth where foreigners pay 10,000 kyat ($8) and are asked to dress modestly. Those with more exposed skin can buy cheap shawls for 3,000 kyat ($2.50) to drape across their arms and shorts, and there is a place to drop off your shoes, or you can carry them in a plastic bag. The marble slabs feel cool to your barefeet as you walk clockwise, starting from the eastmost shrine, around the 1,420 ft perimeter of the base of the pagoda. In one courtyard, there is a banyan tree grown from a sapling transplanted here from the original one Buddha taught under in Bodhigaya, India and people sit by its boughs to meditate.

As dusk descended and the floodlights came on, the gilded stupa lit up in the brilliance and a throng of foreign tourists stand armed with their cellphones and cameras to catch the spectacle of the soaring stupa with festive streams of triangular flags strung across its lower curve and a large flag-shaped vane at the very peak. In the Eastern Devotional Hall, a group of devotees pray in lilting harmony at the shrine to the Buddha, oblivious of the people and commotion behind them. This is the echo of the spirituality that holds them to give to those who beat a drum across a city that is seeing such massive changes as it transforms.

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A Drumbeat for Help Awakens the Spirituality of Yangon - Indo American News

Marcus Wainwright on going solo at Rag & Bone, spirituality and Instagram – Evening Standard

All exposed brickwork and piping, on first impression Marcus Wainwrights office might seem just like any other Meatpacking District loft. Look a bit closer, though, and you soon start to see the spoils of 15 very successful years spent in fashion. There are framed letters of congratulations from former President Barack Obama, from American Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and from Ralph Lauren. There is a handwritten card in which Cate Blanchett gushes that she is such a devotee. On the floor, among stacks and stacks of books (to be honest its a bit of a tip), is the Royal typewriter that provided Wainwrights label, Rag & Bone, with its signature lowercase font.

Wainwright himself is sitting behind his heavyset dark wood desk having his photo taken. Until last year, there was another desk just like his in here, and these photos would also have featured another man his business partner David Neville, a fellow Brit who he first met aged 14 at Wellington College (a boarding school near Reading), and who joined the company in 2005 as co-director. But although Neville still retains his shares and seat on the board, in mid-2016 he left the building to invest in other ventures (including one with his wife, renowned make-up artist Gucci Westman, who is launching her own skincare line).

Thus Wainwright has now taken on the commercial side of Rag & Bone as well as the creative, heading up a team of 300 and a global empire of 36 stores. He is now both the creative director and sole CEO of a brand that reportedly generated more than $300m (235m) in revenue last year, and which is still growing all the time. Witness the huge new flagship store that has opened this week on the corner of Beak Street and Great Pulteney Street in Soho: a five-storey late-Victorian building that will serve as its European HQ, and in which Wainwrights friend Stanley Donwood the British artist best known for creating Radioheads album covers has painted a vast black and white London skyline mural.

Its a bit of a headf***, he admits when asked how hes coping day to day with overseeing such big steps alone. He used to run the business side of things, I always used to run the creative side of things. Now I have to run everything. That took a bit of getting used to. Im getting the hang of it I think, although I still cant really read a spreadsheet. Why did the band split up? It was the end of an era. We achieved a lot together and it was just one of those things, Wainwright shrugs. David decided that he wanted to go off and do some other stuff and I felt like I could take Rag & Bone in a singular direction. To illustrate the duality of his new position, there is a drawing table off to one side lined up with his sketchbooks containing years of ideas, designs and doodlings, some of which have been embellished in places by his kids. So Wainwright can literally roll between the two roles on his swivel chair.

The nonchalant air of artful dishevelment about Wainwright and his workspace is very much the pervading Rag & Bone aesthetic. Born in Greece before moving to Bangladesh and Switzerland with his diplomat parents, he had no formal training as a fashion designer but grew up with an appreciation for bespoke tailoring. From the age of 16, his grandmother would pay for him to have a suit made each year for his birthday. Later he spent more than a year in a denim factory in Kentucky learning the rudiments from lifelong artisans before the place went out of business. All this is weaved into Rag & Bones various lines: ready-to-wear womens, mens, jeans, shoes, accessories. We ended up with a lot of American workwear with English tailoring details; general construction points that are taken from English cues and applied to American clothes.

It was love that originally brought Wainwright to America. He had quit a lucrative but soul-destroying telecoms job in London, rented out his flat in Stockwell and gone backpacking to Mexico where he met his now wife, Glenna Neece, who was working there as a model. He followed her back to New York. Today they live in a $6.75m (5.3m) house in Cobble Hill Historic District, a family-friendly part of brownstone Brooklyn, with their three kids, Noah, 10, Henry, eight, and Cate, five, who are all at a local private school. Neece is now a herbalist who practises reiki. Is he into all that too? Not per se, but I drink what she gives me, he says. And Im getting spiritual in my old age. I meditate.

To complete the idyll, the family also has a weekend retreat in the Hamptons: a converted barn with a pool in Bridgehampton. I have a Land Rover that I drive on the beach, which I love, he says. We used to go every weekend until my kids starting playing sport. Weekend soccer kills you! Just recently, however, Wainwright enjoyed a rare weekend. I took time for myself, he says. He went to Seattle for a business meeting and then stayed on his own. I just drew, walked around, ate sushi, drank beer. Then I went to a Radiohead concert. Hes friends with the band. I get to go and sit in the dressing room, so its pretty fun.

For someone who claims to not be a social guy, Wainwright certainly rubs shoulders with an interesting set of creative types with whom he collaborates on various projects. Hes made short conceptual films using parkour or interpretive dance and held portrait photo exhibitions in place of runway shows. His latest enterprise was to fund a quirky short film called Hair, which debuted at Robert De Niros Tribeca Film Festival in April a five-minute two-hander set in a Williamsburg barbershop between Hollywood actors Bobby Cannavale (Vinyl) and John Turturro (The Night Of). The entire wardrobe is Rag & Bone. It was completely ad-libbed, there was no script and they could wear whatever they wanted, says Wainwright. Its pretty funny.

Wainwright says he hates Instagram and has never been on Facebook. Its just a way of communication that I dont think is healthy, he says. [Other designers] seem very focused on the Instagram crowd. Im not going to spend a million dollars in eight minutes, which is what a show costs. Its a disgusting waste of money when no one gives a s***. Ill think, How can I spend that million dollars in a really authentic and inspiring way? Film is perfect for that.

Sounds like a smart business decision. It seems life as a solo artist is treating Wainwright just fine thus far. And how is Neville getting on? I dont know how he is doing with his venture. I spoke to him last week but I didnt ask. He was skiing hes been skiing twice, which isnt very fair. I can imagine its quite a big change for him. Its a big change for me, he laughs.

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Marcus Wainwright on going solo at Rag & Bone, spirituality and Instagram - Evening Standard

Finding Spirituality On 2 Wheels – Wisconsin Public Radio News


Wisconsin Public Radio News
Finding Spirituality On 2 Wheels
Wisconsin Public Radio News
Spirituality is different for all people. Some people find solace in a house of worship or scripture. Others may find deeper meaning in meditation and in nature. And some people may keep a distance from spirituality altogether but find joy and purpose ...

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Finding Spirituality On 2 Wheels - Wisconsin Public Radio News

Top Right Menu – America Magazine

In December 2016, when thousands of Native Americans, environmental activists and their supporters were camped on the high plains of North Dakota hoping to stymie an oil pipeline mapped beneath the drinking water source of the Standing Rock Sioux reservation, Chief Arvol Looking Horse, a Lakota spiritual leader, addressed a massive interfaith prayer service. People from Native American nations across the United States had traveled to camp at Standing Rock and on nearby land, the most comprehensive gathering of native people since before the Indian wars of the 1870s. Indigenous people from Hawaii, Norway, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Mexico and Honduras arrived at the camps and hoisted their flags beside those of 300 American tribes.

Brayton Shanley, a Catholic peace and environmental activist who lives in an intentional community in rural Massachusetts, has a shock of white hair and the robust energy of someone who spends a great deal of time outdoors. At the end of November, he drove to North Dakota in a truck filled with straw bales, offered as insulation on the windswept, winter prairie. Joe Fortier, S.J., a former entomology professor at St. Louis University, who for the past 15 years has lived and ministered on the Colville Indian Reservation in Washington State, arrived the day before, changing out of his usual clothes and into a clerical collar, so people would know a Catholic priest was supporting the protest. Father Fortier, a self-effacing man whose gentleness belies the depth of his convictions, felt compelled to align himself with the people gathered at Standing Rock.

The camps had become a place to take a stand for the right to clean water and against its privatization, contamination and degradation. But they were also a site of pilgrimage, a place of profound prayer where Lakota women walked to the Cannonball River each morning to enact a water ceremony and where chants in the Lakota language, called to the rhythm of round drums, rose from the camp at dawn and Lakota elders tended a sacred fire all day and night. Water is life, they said. Defend the sacred.

On this biting cold December day, when fingers went numb if exposed to the air for more than a few minutes, more than 1,000 people gathered for a three-hour prayer service in which a rabbi, a Buddhist monk, various Protestant clergy and Father Fortier each offered prayers before the fire that Lakota elders had been tending throughout the protest. They spoke of their faiths common commitment to caring for the earth and their common belief in the sacredness of the physical world. Looking Horse spoke of the threat to clean water at Standing Rock as only one of millions of attacks on the integrity of the earths elements. Fighting back would take a particular kind of power, he said. We will be victorious through tireless, prayer-filled and fearless nonviolent struggle. Standing Rock is everywhere.

A few months into the Trump administration, oil is flowing through the pipeline and the historic encampment has been dispersed. The oil industry won. But Looking Horse may yet have been correct. The explicitly religious and imagination-grabbing protest at Standing Rock has inspired similar encampments and other forms of protest in defense of clean water across the country. From Pennsylvania to Texas, Florida to New Jersey and in South Dakota, Ohio, Massachusetts and Canada, newly emboldened water protectors have taken to the land in hopes of disrupting oil and natural gas pipelines they consider dangerous. For many of these protectors, defending access to clean water is a project rich in religious and spiritual meaning. They draw inspiration from Laudato Si as well as indigenous religious practice.

The tribal leadership of the Lakota Sioux is pursuing lawsuits against Energy Transfer Partners, the Texas-based company behind the Dakota Access pipeline. Some of the Lakota and other indigenous people who were part of the Standing Rock protests have reconvened at a prayer camp on the Cheyenne River Reservation downriver in South Dakota.

A coordinated campaign

On May 9, the Treaty Alliance Against Tar Sands Expansion, a coalition of 121 indigenous groups from the United States and Canada, launched a coordinated divestment campaign against the banks funding the Dakota Access pipeline and crude oil pipelines snaking from Canada to Mexico. Religious congregations organized under the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility are engaged in shareholder activism, urging major banks to withdraw from financing the Dakota Access pipeline and demanding that corporations from Coca-Cola to Campbell Soup adopt specific policies respecting water and the rights of local communities to consultation. The Sisters of Charity of Halifax presented a shareholder resolution at the May 11 general shareholder meeting of Enbridge, an energy transportation company with a 27.5 percent share in the Dakota Access pipeline. The resolution called for the company to address social and environmental risks in its acquisition deals, particularly those involving indigenous people. The resolution was rejected by shareholders, but the company committed to broader disclosure in the sustainability report it produces each year. The Jesuit Committee on Investment Responsibility has been working with large agribusiness companies that trade on the New York Stock Exchange to convince them to adopt sustainable water management practices and join the United Nations CEOWater Mandate, an initiative to engage businesses in water stewardship and sustainable development goals.

Cities, counties, public employee pension funds and individuals have withdrawn $5 billion from companies invested in the Dakota Access pipeline in an echo of the the divestment movement against South African apartheid in the 1980s. Major investment banks in Norway, the Netherlands and France have sold their shares of loans to Energy Transfer Partners. The Jesuits, women religious, Catholic Workers and others have joined or deepened their involvement in water protection efforts. They draw links between the environmental battles of indigenous people in the United States and those elsewherenotably in Honduras and in the Amazon region, where several environmentalists have been killed by corporate security forces and assassins linked to the national military forces.

We are here

In Conestoga, Pa., a farm field along the route of a natural gas pipeline has been transformed into a quiet protest site. On weekends, area residents gather to sing, pray and make art. They have been pushing for three years for their municipal governments to ban the proposed pipeline, citing instances of natural gas explosions and tainted drinking water. They attempted legal maneuvers to escape eminent domain to no avail, explained Mark Clatterbuck, a Conestoga resident and professor of religion at Montclair State University. He and his wife, Melinda, a Mennonite pastor, have been central actors in the pipeline opposition. Out of options, in February, Lancaster Against Pipelines, an association of local citizens, launched the Lancaster Stand in this placid corner of the county famous for its gently undulating farmland and its Amish community. If were not careful we could lose the countryside and then what would we have? Thats whats at risk, said Tim Spiese, the Lancaster Against Pipelines board president, as he stood in the unplanted corn field before a large whitewashed barn with the words Welcome to the Stand painted in block letters on its side.

On a Saturday in early April, two dozen people, most in their 50s and 60s, are gathered inside a large army tent. Seated on low benches made from cement blocks and long 2-by-8 boards, they are shaking painted maracas and beating rhythm sticks as two women with guitars lead the group: We are here standing strong in a ripe old place/ Solid as a tree/ silent as a rock/ We are here in a ripe old place. The back wall of the tent is rolled up, open to the breeze, framing the Lancaster County hills in spring: budding trees and green fields. More than 300 people have completed training in nonviolent protest at the camp. Committees meet to plan civil disobedience, to sort food donations and devise a rainwater collection system.

In May, Regina Braveheart, a Lakota woman who survived the massacre at Wounded Knee in 1973 and was part of the prayer at Standing Rock, visited the Lancaster Stand to urge the activists on and share stories. For Kathleen Meade, a case manager in a brain trauma rehabilitation center, who like many of her neighbors relies on well water, participating in the Lancaster Stand has meant forming deep friendships and standing up for what she values. We just so pride ourselves on the land here. Its horse people and dairy farmers, outdoors people and Amish. Whats unique is that Lancaster County is Republican, and this unites a lot of us, the idea that the government cant just come and take your land, she said as she stood in the afternoon sun in the breezy field, gazing across the round hills. Its just amazing how the existing structure is set up for the corporations, not the people.... We realize that were up a creek and if we dont do something soon, were out of luck.

Mr. Clatterbuck and other Lancaster people visited the camps at Standing Rock in the fall and were struck by the prayerful attitude, the deeply spiritual stance of the Lakota leaders. They noticed how it affected other activists. The language thats used is the language of the sacred, said Mr. Clatterbuck, who edited a volume on Native American and Christian interaction this year called Crow Jesus: Personal Stories of Native Religious Belonging, published by University of Oklahoma Press. All of these kinds of religious streams are feeding in together. The way religious language is fueling the resistance right now, religion becomes relevant again.

So many people in conservative and bucolic Lancaster County, hardly a hotbed of protest, have been drawn to the Stand because it represents something deeper than the defense of property values or landowner rights (important as those might be), Mr. Clatterbuck said. Instead, they see a moral imperative to protect the place they call home, to care for the their corner of creation.

Pope Francis instructed the same embrace of the integrity of creation in Laudato Si, writing that access to clean drinking water is a fundamental human right and that humans need to live in concert with the earth.

Saving a fragile system

Cherri Foytlin is not Catholic, but she takes Pope Francis words to heart. I couldnt understand how people can pray to God, praising his creation, and then not do everything they can to care for it. Its like saying Picasso is a great artist and then ripping up his paintings, she said. The oil that moves through the Dakota Access pipeline will eventually finish its journey in Louisiana, where Ms. Foytlin lives. A former newspaper writer, she has been working for environmental justice in the Louisiana wetlands since BPs Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010. While reporting on the spill, she saw that many bayou crawfishermen, who have made their living in the swamps of Louisiana since their ancestors were expelled from French Acadia, had their livelihoods destroyed, and she saw how the oil company lied about and covered up the extent of the damage. The miasmic grandeur of the sleepy bayou, with its ancient cypress trees, which began growing when Christ walked beside the Jordan, and its drooping moss, in whose humid tangle migrating birds seek rest, were under grave threat, she realized.

These systems are quite fragile, really. I think how quickly we can lose that, she said. Pipelines have criss-crossed the bayou country for a generation, ferrying oil and natural gas to refineries on the coast, a significant component of Louisianas economy. But Ms. Foytlin believes this latest one, the Bayou Bridge Pipeline, is too dangerous. And it only anticipates 12 permanent jobs. The proposed pipeline channels through bayous already damaged by previous infrastructure, which has chewed away at the swampland and degraded its ability to absorb storms. The loss of Louisiana wetlands was one of the reasons Hurricane Katrina and more recent flooding elsewhere in the state have been so devastating. The company constructing the Bayou Bridge Pipeline was fined in early May by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for spilling several million gallons of thick chemical-laced mud into Ohio wetlands, during drilling for a separate pipeline there. The slurry, which is used to make underground space for laying pipes, suffocated plants and aquatic life in the wetland that helps filter water for nearby farmland. Ohios environmental protection agency expects it will take years to restore the wetland.

With Bold Louisiana, a community organizing group she directs, and a network of environmental, homeowner, crawfishermen and indigenous groups, Ms. Foytlin is trying to inform Louisianans of the threat to their water and their wetlands. The groups are leafleting at New Orleans Jazzfest and protesting at the state capital. They are sending postcards to their elected officials and raising money through bake sales. Ms. Foytlin, who is a member of the Cherokee Nation and originally from Oklahoma, visited Standing Rock to show her support and be part of the historic gathering of indigenous people. More recently she traveled to the Two Rivers camp near Marfa, Tex., where protesters were trying to stop a pipeline that would flow under the Rio Grande, carrying U.S. natural gas for export. That camp was broken up in April and that arm of the pipeline, another Energy Transfer Partners project, was completed.

I wanted to let them know that what they were doing was important, Ms. Foytlin said, adding that the power of the Standing Rock prayer camps continues to reverberate. People felt activated and connected spiritually in the water and the land, she said. Standing Rock continues. People are eager to put it to bed, but its not over. These little people are still together and that has power. An amalgam of groups, Ms. Foytlins among them, plans to launch a protest camp deep in the bayous in late June, when they expect the state to give Energy Transfer Partners final approval permits for the pipeline. On rafts built from repurposed plastic bottles and water barrels, with art and music and a deep love for their unique southern Louisiana waterways, theyll make a watery stand. The camp is called Leau Est La Vie, or Water Is Life.

Our common home

On the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, people are still digesting the experience of Standing Rockand carrying on the work, said Peter Klink, S.J., the vice president of mission and ministry and former president of the Jesuit Red Cloud Indian School on Pine Ridge. At the height of the protests, the girls basketball team at Red Cloud wore Water Is Life slogans on their jerseys. Lakota people from Pine Ridge joined the encampment and some took central roles in promoting the divestment campaign. What we need to continue to nurture is: How are we going to care for our common home, Mother Earth? Im not sure we can close our eyes to what we are doing on a daily basis, Father Klink said. A consumerist, acquisitive culture is ultimately driving the environmental crisis, he believes. If we dont check that machine, that sense that what we have is never enough, that becomes the motor of destruction of our common home.

During the Standing Rock encampment, the Jesuit Conference of Canada and the United States issued a statement in support of the Lakota peoples right to sovereignty and clean water. Tashina Rama, who is executive director of development at the Red Cloud Indian School and daughter of Dennis Banks, co-founder of the American Indian Movement, testified on the Dakota Access pipeline threats to water at a February briefing for members of Congress organized by the Jesuit conference. Rama walked to a microphone in the briefing room and placed a few printed pages on the podium, then addressed the crowd in the Lakota language, identifying herself by way of her lineage and her ancestors. She named her parents, her grandmothers, her grandfathers. Switching to English, she spoke of the central need for access to clean water, invoking the sentiment found in Laudato Si that indigenous people must be consulted on projects that affect them, and she mourned the destruction of the Standing Rock camps, including one she stayed in with the female members of her family.

Ms. Rama underscored the value of water by invoking the Sun Dance, a Lakota ceremony that spans four days in June, when select members of the community dance all day in the blazing Badlands of South Dakota. There is little relief with no clouds or breeze. Our lips are cracked and our mouths dry because whatever water we had in our bodies was gone by the second day of dancing, she told the congressional staff. Our ancestors prayed in this way and they passed it down to us; we are taught that through this sacrifice the Great Spirit will hear our prayers. For four sacred days we give ourselves to the Sun. Our bodies are dying and we know that with that first drink of water when the Sun Dance is over, that water is life. I was raised to pray in this way, and I find it to be a humbling way to connect with the Great Spirit, our Creator God and to give of myself so my children and my family can be healthy. We owe it to ourselves and our descendants to protect what remaining lands we have, the lands where our ancestors roamed and the sacred sites where they are buried so they can have these ceremonies to pass on to their children and so on.

Forming right relationships

The Canadian and U.S. Jesuits see a link between protecting water and the defense of human and cultural rights. We see common environmental and human rights challenges from extractive industries facing indigenous people around the world, explained Cecilia Calvo, the senior adviser on environmental justice to the Jesuit Conference. And a common thread really is water. Of particular concern is what Ms. Calvo terms the criminalization of environmental and human rights activists who stand up for their rights. In Honduras, 123 environmental activists, most of whom protested against energy or mining companies, have been killed since a U.S.-supported coup in 2009, according to Global Witness. Similarly, environmental activists in the Amazon region face death threats. The worldwide association of Jesuits has taken on the defense of the Amazon region as a congregation-wide priority, calling it the lungs of the planet.

On March 17, Zebelio Kayap Jempekit, a member of the Awajun Wampi indigenous people of Peru, walked into the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in Washington, D.C., carrying with him the pleas and alarm of thousands of Amazonian people. Part of a team representing a coalition of indigenous and church groups across nine Amazon countries, called Red Eclesial Panamazonia, Mr. Jempeki urged the commission to take action to preserve the rights of indigenous people to protect their ancestral lands and water. The delegation, which included Archbishop Pedro Ricardo Jimeno, S.J., of Huancayo, Peru, was hosted by the Jesuits, the Sisters of Mercy, the Maryknolls and other U.S. Catholic groups, and visited Georgetown University and Catholic University. Jempekit, speaking in Spanish and wearing a traditional headband of deep red and brilliant yellow flowers, told the commission that oil extraction had destroyed the drinking water and fishing in his home and spoke of a mining project that made water undrinkable and killed the fish in the river his people relied on. He has received death threats because of his work.

We see that not only in our own backyard are people facing environmental degradation and struggling for access to clean water, but around the world this is multiplied, said Ms. Calvo, who in early May attended the Pan-Amazonian Social Forum in Peru, which brought together people working on water and other environmental and social issues across the region. The threats to water are a call to examine our own economy, our lifestyle and what path do we want to be on, Ms. Calvo said. Those issues animate the Jesuit Conferences work in the United States as well. In the past few months, they have signed on to letters urging the Trump administration not to weaken elements of the Clean Water Act that regulate surface mining rules, to commit to the Paris climate agreement and to continue the Green Climate Fund, which helps the developing countries most affected by climate change. We recognize that water is a fundamental component of all life and that stewardship of water is part of our call to care for Gods creation, they wrote in a letter opposing an executive order that directed the Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to withdraw from an aspect of the Clean Water Act which protects waterways and fish habitats.

Religious work on water moves in many streams, from the Religious Organizations Along the River, a coalition of groups in New Yorks Hudson Valley advocating against fracking and for Hudson River cleanup, to WaterSpirit, a retreat center on a bluff overlooking the Atlantic run by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace on the New Jersey shore. There, laypeople, Catholic and not, visit to deepen their connection to the most basic of elements, the water that flows through their bodies, washes the shore, bathes them in baptism and made possible the emergence of their earliest single-celled ancestors. WaterSpirit endeavors to link the spiritual aspect of water with the practical, corporeal concerns of caring for creation. The center has led group study workshops on Laudato Si and brought high school students to the shore to pray and catalog the plastic debris they find on the beach. The message is a mystical one, with its feet planted in the sand: You are part of this water of life.

In Pennsylvania, the Adorers of the Blood of Christ, an order of sisters, have for several years been resisting the efforts of Williams Transco, a natural gas company that plans to drill through their land in West Hempfield Township in Lancaster County. In February, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission gave the company final approval to build on private land, including that of the Adorers. The sisters vehemently denounce the decision, said Sister Janet McCann, the U.S. regional councilor for the order. The pipeline would be a violation of the congregations land ethic, explained Sister Sara Dwyer, peace and justice coordinator for the community. The land ethic, a statement of the sisters theological and ecological beliefs adopted several years ago after contemplation of the religious dimensions of environmental crisis, commits them to respect the Earth as a sanctuary where all life is protected and to establish justice and right relationships so all creation might thrive, explained Sister Dwyer. In the land ethic statement, the sisters vow to seek collaborators to help implement land use policies and practices that are in harmony with our bioregions and ecosystems.

It is in fealty to that statement that the Adorers have decided to put their prayers where their feet stand. Their neighbors at Lancaster Against Pipelines, the people praying and building community in Conestoga, asked to erect an open-air chapel on the Adorers field that the gas company covets. It will serve as a place of prayer for people of any faith, a physical mark linking spiritual and physical resistance to industry that threatens water and earth. The chapel will be dedicated at a ceremonyJuly 9, attended by leadership of the Adorers, Lancaster Against Pipelines and supporters. It may not stand for longthe laws favor the energy companys right to take what land it wantsbut for Sister Dwyer and others, tireless, prayer-filled and fearless nonviolent struggle is worth standing for.

Eileen Markey is an independent reporter and the author of A Radical Faith: The Assassination of Sr. Maura (Nation Books). She lives in the Bronx.

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Top Right Menu - America Magazine

Spirituality At Workplace – BW Businessworld

All around us are the signs of a society under stress. Though to a certain extent, stress in the workplace is desirable but chronic and prolonged stress can affect our mental and physical health. Organisations are forced to be more productive, and profit generating. Long working hours, tight deadlines and unrealistic workload in a highly competitive world can cause mental stress. When stress exceeds our ability to cope, workplace environment affects our personal health and family life. Workplace stress when it's left unchecked can contribute to health problems such as high blood pressure, heart diseases, obesity and diabetes. In fact, the Centre for Diseases Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA found that nearly 90 per cent of all illnesses and diseases are stress-related. Some of these illnesses are spreading very fast in working class. Across the corporate world, it is increasingly realised that combining stress management with spirituality can be a very effective tool not only to enhance productivity and overall performance in the workplace but also for self-growth and learning for individuals working in the organisations. Spirituality helps us in knowing our true self, discover our deeper identity and bringing awareness to the meaning and purpose of life. More and more people working in public, as well as private entities, find spiritual practices like meditation, breathing exercises, yoga and prayer in the workplace very effective in managing their stress level.

By practising such exercises, we can cultivate inner peace and be more focused and present during troubled times. In a way, spirituality involves us in getting touch with our inner self. It is also nurtured by our relationships with others. A workplace where workers and executives find time to engage themselves in some spiritual practices can easily bring about transformational changes leading to increased productivity and profitability in the organisation. Through spirituality, we can surely create a better, more satisfying and healthy workplace.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in the article above are those of the authors' and do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of this publishing house. Unless otherwise noted, the author is writing in his/her personal capacity. They are not intended and should not be thought to represent official ideas, attitudes, or policies of any agency or institution.

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Spirituality At Workplace - BW Businessworld

Letter: OD crisis needs a dose of spirituality – Kelowna Capital News

Some youth are deprived of hope because they do not know about the love that God has for them

To the editor:

It is indeed sad, and frightening to read the article about drug overdoses not slowing down in spite of all the efforts to contain the epidemic. Sometimes countries fall into moral decay and need a good dose of spirituality to bring them back to health.We know how secular society has become. It is not cool to talk about God or his commandments. Some youth are deprived of hope because they do not know about the love that God has for them.

Dr. Corneil wants to know how much society will invest in treating this epidemic. A good place to start is in the home with parents who model and passionately live their faith and pass it on to their children.

Rosemary Lalonde, Kelowna

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Letter: OD crisis needs a dose of spirituality - Kelowna Capital News

London: A Taste of Ignatian Spirituality – Independent Catholic News

DeMazenod House retreat centre by Tower Hill is presenting a day retreat exploring Ignatian inspired contemplation and meditation, followed by creative expression of poetry and a variety of artistic medium. The aim of the day is to explore a different approach to enhancing our relationship with God creatively and intuitively.

St Ignatius stresses the importance of the physical senses and feelings - gifts God has given us - in tapping more deeply into our understanding of God and those deeper realities ourselves. And while Ignatian prayer is best known as the prayer of the interior imagination, of the minds eye, it can also be activated from the exterior visual sense, through art. (IgnatianSpirituality.com)

The day is Saturday 24 June 2017 at DeMazenod House, 62 Chamber St, Tower Hill London E1 8BL. Arrive at 10.30am for an 11am start, finishing at 4pm with Mass celebrated by Fr Oliver Barry OMI. Reconciliation will be available.

The day will be facillitated by JudyAnn Masters, who can be reached at judyannmasters@gmail.com for more information. Bring a packed lunch. Teas, coffees and all art supplies are provided. Contact the retreat centre at 020 7702-3544 or JudyAnn to reserve a place. Suggested donation 12.

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London: A Taste of Ignatian Spirituality - Independent Catholic News

Tyler’s Rose City Summer Camp program merges academics, spirituality and fun – Tyler Morning Telegraph

Hundreds of children flooded into the hallways, dancing their hearts out as Education Commissioner Mike Morath got his first glimpse of a day in the life of students at Rose City Summer Camps at Dixie Elementary School.

Its so great to be in Texas classrooms watching teachers pour love into our kids, he said.

Morath has been traveling to Texas school districts ahead of changes to STAAR test results and has tried to work in campus visits to get to know the families he is serving.

Tyler ISD partners with the Mentoring Alliance to offer the camps each year. The faith-based nonprofit seeks to help grow students spiritually and academically.

Program director Matthew Honeycutt said the program uses STAAR test results to help tailor the learning plans for attendees.

From our side, its about getting to learn about the gospel of Jesus Christ, but we also get to help fight summer regression, he said.

Honeycutt said the program focuses on intentionality. Everything they do with students is targeted. This year, they have transitioned away from worksheets that might not interest students to more engaging project-based learning.

Honeycutt said data from last summer showed they were able to cut reading loss over the break in half and expected losses in math actually became improvements.

Students at the camp are separated into cabins made up of two large tents set up in the classroom. Eight students are assigned to each cabin, with one teacher and two camp staff members per class. The camp staff is comprised of high school and college students.

Throughout the day, as students transition to other activities, the halls become a dance party with music and fun to keep their energy levels high.

Three Lakes Middle School teacher Susi Savage joined the team this year after being told she was sure to have a good time and get to make a real difference with the students.

Learning is supposed to be a joy, she said. I substituted last year and I just loved the energy.

Savage also enjoys engaging with students on a more personal level and finding lessons they connect with.

Its much more hands on and creative, she said. I get to find more things the students are interested in.

One recent lesson was on how Guam solved a snake infestation on a small island when the snakes had no natural predators. She said the students were enraptured as they learned how the government eventually solved the problem.

Savage said she would love to see these effective lessons implemented in her teaching year round. She said small touches such as letting the students have fun during transitions helps keep them in the right mindset to engage and learn.

As a school, why dont we do these things? Why dont we have music on and why dont we dance? she said. If lifts your spirits and puts you in the right attitude.

Rose City Summer Camps run weekly from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday at Dixie Elementary School and Three Lakes Middle School. The program costs $99 per week, which includes daily breakfast, lunch and snacks. The Mentoring Alliance does offer financial assistance to parents who qualify.

For more information, visit rosecitysummercamps.com

Twitter: @TMT_Cory

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Tyler's Rose City Summer Camp program merges academics, spirituality and fun - Tyler Morning Telegraph

A new way of thinking about evolution and spirituality developed behind bars – KALW

Gary Shepherd has spent more than half of his 45 years incarcerated his entire adult life. In that time hes become a self-taught scholar and a self-described spirit warrior, putting into action a deeply-held belief in the power of altruism and cooperation. All of this springs from Shepherds study of evolution. Its made him what he calls an evolutionary.

It doesnt mean just evolution, Shepherd says of the term. It means revolutionary, because theres a spirit of action and theres change.

Shepherd is incarcerated in the East Unit at the Arizona State Prison Complex in Florence. Through years of good behavior, hes worked his way up to the honor dorms, the coveted place to live in East Unit. In the center of the yard, surrounded by what look like army barracks, is a cluster of double wide trailers lined up end to end. There Shepherd has his own room and a door he can close and open whenever he wants. But its still prison: the yard is surrounded by two layers of chain link fence, both topped by concertina wire.

The Road to East Unit

Shepherd had been a heavy drug user as a teenager, and he was no stranger to the law. But his real trouble didnt begin until 1991, when he was 20 years old. Hed done a little time for burglary and he was on parole, which he promptly violated. When his parole officers tried to arrest him at a mall in Tucson, he fired a gun into the ground to create a distraction. At the time, the offense carried a mandatory sentence of life in prison.

[Its] so much time when I didnt hurt anybody, nor did I intend to hurt anybody, Shepherd says. To me, that seemed instinctively very wrong.

After only a month in prison, Shepherd tried to escape, assaulting two guards in the process. That earned him a year in solitary confinement inmates call it the hole.

I would just walk back and forth and just think, What happened in my life? What really went wrong? Whats wrong with the system? he remembers. It just seemed so bizarre to me. It seemed like the problem was much bigger even than me.

Figuring out this problem, despite its immensity, became Shepherds lifeline. He started reading voraciously, trying to make sense of everything that had happened to him. He wasnt studying case law or learning a vocation like many prisoners do. Instead, he devoured books on anthropology, history, biology, philosophy. He was trying to understand how the whole world works.

Then from an unexpected source, came an epiphany. Watching TV one day, Shepherd saw a PBS special on early hominids and how they evolved into modern humans.

It completely changed me, he says. Its almost like a light went on and I felt like thats absolutely where we came from, and it was a fact. And it was very quickly that I foresaw the purpose of life. It almost gave me like a faith.

A spiritual scavenger

Shepherds parents werent religious, and he says he didnt have much of a moral framework growing up. Since hes been in prison though, hes become a spiritual scavenger, gathering concepts and practices that can help him survive.

Early on in his sentence, in solitary, a Sikh chaplain taught Shepherd the basics of meditation: how to control his breathing and clear his mind. Later, that led him to look into other mindfulness practices. He started learning yoga and tai chi from books and mail-order DVDs. He read books on Eastern philosophy.

He says Sun Tzus The Art of War is his favorite, because it provides practical advice on how to survive in a violent situation for example, everyday life in prison.

Its not like most people think, Shepherd says. They hear that word war so they automatically think violence. [The idea is actually] to do the most with the least, to resolve problems before they occur, and ultimately to try to make conflict altogether unnecessary.

Shepherd hasnt always been so cool and collected. His nickname in prison is Scrappy, and not for nothing. When he first got to prison, he fought anyone who interfered with him, even guards. But as his worldview began to shift, Shepherd used this reputation and the concepts he was learning to take on a kind of philosophical crusade.

If he saw a potentially violent situation unfolding, hed intervene, often putting his life at risk to confront fellow inmates who were on the verge of hurting or killing someone else.

In a very respectful way, I would let them know that that wasnt going to happen, he says. And that it wouldnt be allowed to happen without there being a response.

Shepherd also started debating his fellow inmates about things like the origin of life challenging their beliefs, or in some cases introducing them to the idea of evolution for the first time. Surprisingly, people were interested, even seeking him out to hear what he had to say.

It almost [made] me an authority figure on certain things, he says. They looked to me almost like a leading personality because of my knowledge.

Wading into an evolutionary debate

The concept he tried hardest to impress on his fellow inmates was something called group selection, a subcategory of natural selection. This is where Shepherd is wading into a somewhat controversial scientific debate.

The traditional view is that evolution depends on the strength or intelligence of individual animals, and that competition between those individuals is the main driver of natural selection. But some scientists theorize that cooperation is equally, or even more important than competition, and that natural selection happens at the group, as well as the individual level. For humans, that means groups of people who work together can survive to procreate those who fight amongst themselves eventually die out. Groups that cooperate with other groups fare even better.

As crazy as it sounds, Shepherd says he would pitch this idea to the gang leaders in prison, in an effort to get them to be more community-minded.

These conversations werent just about convincing his fellow inmates to be more peaceful, they came from a deep-seeded belief Shepherd holds about the nature of evolution. In his studies, he had come across the writings of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, a 20th-century Jesuit priest who theorized that evolution is a conscious process, that the universe wants to perfect itself, and that humans can actively participate through the choices we make. It was, and still is, a fringe concept in the mainstream science world, but it fit perfectly with Shepherds image of himself as an evolutionary spirit warrior.

Im filled with this sense of injustice, and unfairness, and I didnt like to see prisoners mistreated by other prisoners or getting hurt, when I feel like we should be focusing on working together more as a team, he says.

Altruism is what Shepherd really found in the science a sense that we have to take care of each other in order to succeed as a group, whether its a small group of prison inmates or the whole species. And thats what he means when he says that evolution gave him a sense of purpose.

By way of explanation, he quotes Matthew 6:33: Seek ye first the kingdom of God and all these things shall be added unto you.

Spreading the word

Over time, Shepherd found more ways to live out this sense of purpose that hed found. Around 2003, 12 years into his sentence, he got together with a couple of other inmates and started a peer education program they called B-Free. They would teach basic skills in the prison, health and hygiene, and tips for survival after release. The prison gave them an office to work out of, and a little bit of pay, about $3 a day.

Shepherd also saw the classes as an opportunity to educate fellow prisoners on his developing blend of science and philosophy.

We would start with the Big Bang, he says. Wed go through quantum realms. Ill talk about what creates cultural evolution, Ill get into the evolution of our morals, multi-level selection.

Shepherd was also sharing his own special blend of yoga and mindfulness practices, including something he calls poet-chi. Its basically the tai chi he learned, but he adds stream-of-consciousness ruminations on evolution and spirituality to go along with the movements.

Colleen Fitzpatrick-Rogers worked as a substance abuse counselor in the state prison complex in Florence. Shes retired now, but she knew the guys running the B-Free program, and she would help them get materials or information they needed for their classes. She also invited Shepherd to teach yoga and mindfulness to her addiction groups.

When I brought somebody like Gary Shepherd in front of my class, and he spoke to these inmates, they listened, she says. It was new to them. You dont have some guy talking to you and doing yoga and teaching you in a crack house.

Fitzpatrick-Rogers says that Shepherd commanded respect from other inmates partly because he lived by his philosophy. He practiced what he preached. And also because doing so had so clearly changed his life.

He just found what he needs, as far as peace inside of him, she says. And not many people outside even ever get that.

The Work

Troy Froehlich was profoundly influenced by Shepherds ideas, and his friendship. He worked with Shepherd on the B-Free program until he was released in 2014, having served a total of 24 years for bank robbery and assaulting guards in jail. He says the things he learned from Shepherd helped him find inner peace, too.

Whenever it looks like it may be a stressful situation, or something that could raise an anxiety in me, says Froehlich, I just realize that Im a part of evolution, that this is the way its supposed to be. I look around and I think, Wow, this is wonderful.

Froehlich lives in Tucson now, just an hour and a half down the road from the prison where he met Shepherd, who he calls his best friend. Hes been fixing up his little rental house, which he shares with a shy black mutt he rescued from the street. He named her Scrappy, after Shepherd.

Like Shepherd, Froehlich experienced an awakening in solitary, after which he started studying history, psychology, religion, and melding it all into something that worked for him. He gravitated toward Joseph Campbells comparative mythology, and started observing the Jewish Sabbath as a mindfulness practice. When he met Shepherd one day in the chow hall, they instantly recognized each other as kindred spirits. For the next ten years the two collaborated every day on what they call the work.

As soon as he would come up with a concept, he would come down to my room immediately and start sharing it with me, says Froehlich. We would walk laps on the yard, discussing evolutionary possibilities.

Shepherd says that he and Froehlich clicked because they shared an extreme form of altruism, both willing to risk their own safety to prevent violence in the prison, and to stand behind the concepts of cooperation and fairness they believed in so fervently.

We became like one unit, Shepherd says. If you dealt with either one of us youd have to deal with us both as one. And I would lay down my life for him and hed lay down his life for me.

Froehlich was granted parole. Shepherd helped him with his speech for the parole board and before he left, Shepherd made him a handwritten manual on how to function in the outside world. It was based on everything theyd learned and taught to other inmates for ten years. The manual was the only possession Froehlich took with him.

I didnt tell Gary this, says Froehlich, but when I got into the staff vehicle at the prison, you know, four oclock in the morning Im just sitting there and a tear rolled out of my eye.

He says that even though he had his own epiphany before meeting Shepherd, its really Shepherds influence that turned his life around.

It is entirely possible that without slowing down my brain and starting to accept these concepts that we talk about and knowing that theres a different way, he says, I may have just continued on the life that I was living before, which led me to bank robbery. Why would I change?

Widening the circle

These days, Shepherds community is expanding beyond those hes met in prison. Last year, with help from Fitzpatrick-Rogers, he reached out to David Sloan Wilson, a professor of evolutionary biology in Binghamton, New York. Wilson is a central player in the evolutionary altruism field, and Shepherd had read his book The Neighborhood Project, which argues that people can improve their communities by using evolutionary theory as a guide for cooperative behavior.

By the first letter, or exchange of a few letters, it was clear that in some ways, what we were doing was quite similar, says Wilson.

The two men struck up a kind of academic friendship, talking on the phone every week. Wilson even recorded one of their conversations and published the transcript in his online evolution magazine, This View of Life.

In the meantime, he was sending Shepherd more books, becoming Shepherds evolutionary mentor.

Im his instructor in a sense, if he was a college student, says Wilson. But of course, hes much more voracious and passionate than almost any of my actual students.

Wilson doesnt quite agree with some of Shepherds ideas, like the one about a ubiquitous force thats deliberately trying to improve itself through evolution.

Gary has been influenced by lots of trends, including Eastern religious and spiritual traditions, says Wilson. Its just part of human nature to hold beliefs that are false in the scientific sense of the word, and the reason that we do is that those beliefs are useful. Those are the beliefs that help us get by.

As for Shepherds belief that we have the ability, even the obligation, to help evolution along Wilson says thats not so far-fetched.

The reason that science often doesnt function in the same capacity as a religion is that it merely tells you what is. It doesnt tell you what to do, he says. Its up to academic science actually, to catch up to Gary in an interesting way, as to is there some sense in which a person, or people, or all of us as a society, can be agents of evolution.

I asked Wilson whether Shepherds journey is itself an example of cultural evolution a whole school of thought developed in an isolated environment, like an academic Galapagos Island.

Most novelties arise in isolated populations, he answered. Thats where new things happen. [Shepherd has] come up with something that hangs together for himself. Then of course, whether it spreads and survives in other contexts remains to be seen.

Shepherds whole goal in life now is for his ideas to spread and survive.

He says that if hes ever able to get out of prison, hell link up with Froehlich and continue with the work. Hes thought about starting a business creating internet courses that explain in simple terms, the ideas theyve spent all these years developing.

Shepherd is also working with a lawyer from the Arizona Justice Project to see if his sentence could be appealed. The law that mandated his life sentence was changed shortly after he went to prison, and that may provide a way for him to get out sooner. If that doesnt happen, Shepherds first chance for parole isnt until 2028.

Because he can't control when or whether he gets out, Shepherd doesn't think about it too much. But he does look forward to joining a community on the outside that shares his beliefs, and his sense of purpose.

I can find people like David to be around, and these other people that I consider to be the most intelligent and altruistic people in the world, that are a force for positive change, he says. And I want to help them and make sure theyre secure, and their families are secure, and that we can do all that we can to make them successful. And I want to barbecue and eat with them. I just want to be part of that whole family, you know?

I asked Shepherd whether, given the unfairness he saw in his sentencing, he regrets ending up in prison. He answered, without hesitation, No.

Im glad that it happened to me, he explains. Because I wouldnt be who I am without the experience. But more importantly, I have found what I believe to be the truth of where we came from, and why were here, and what we need to do in the future. And the feeling of fighting for that and contributing to that, I wouldnt trade it for anything. Everything that happened to me was worth it.

Comments? You can reach us at The Spiritual Edge at thespiritualedgeradio@gmail.com.

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A new way of thinking about evolution and spirituality developed behind bars - KALW

Seeking Spirituality – New Delhi Times

By Dr. Pramila Srivastava

In modern times, seeking spirituality is an extraordinary phenomenon with the given splurge of books in stores on various mystical practices. The many contradictory perspectives pose a dilemma for todays seeker: What to believe? The question becomes all the more complicated with an influx of media and them broadcasting the number of spreading religious gurus and their ethics, adding another question: Whom to follow? This becomes all the more complex with us believing everything that we hear, read, and see as the gospel truth. When in such a situation, we must keep a genuine sense of inquiry: How will this teaching affect me and others? Is it leading me to greater kindness and understanding? Am I reaching a state of higher peace and freedom?

We need to understand that not all journeys to spiritual enlightenment are as exotic as Elizabeth GilbertsEat, Pray, Loveexploration or Buddhas quest from dis-attachment to tree. Initial enthusiasm causes us to practice and follow all. But, we need to realize that each of these undertakings, teachings of books, maps, and beliefs, are a mere signpost pointing towards what someone received. In order to make spiritual practice come alive for oneself, we must discover within ourselves our own way of becoming conscious, to live a life of the spirit. Acting to be spiritual is not becoming spiritual. We try and seek an outer form of perfection, which we believe is leading us to spirituality. However, in doing so we are merely acting spiritual. It is our very search for perfection outside us that causes our suffering, said Buddha. One should never seek perfection, for a very perfect moment or thing too will change or lose its shape moments later. Therefore, it is the freedom of the heart that we seek and which should seek us for its the real spiritual experience.

Liberation arises when we are able to deal with non-perfection without anxiety. The world is not supposed to be perfect according to our ideas. People come and go with ideas to change and perfect the world, yet liberation is rarely found in doing so. Whether we seek illumination in a community, through different states, or in our everyday lives, we will never come to it for we seek perfection. Spiritual enlightenment arises when we are able to see ourselves, the world around and the beings within with same compassion and honesty.

There are several questions which become important for a person seeking spirituality: What ideas do we hold of ourselves, and of others? Are these images/ideas who we really are? Is this our true nature? Realising these or nearing to solve these questions aid in spiritual awakening too. Liberation comes not from trying to improve oneself body or personality. Instead it is a process in which we discover a different way of seeing the world, rather than viewing things with our usual images, ideas and perspectives. This leads us to a radical way of being where we learn to see with the heart, which loves, rather than with the mind, which compares and defines. So, in order to achieve this one needs to let go of oneself, indulge in knowing more and more, aspire wisdom, challenge your body and soul to grow through meditation and yoga, broaden ones vision. Letting yourself to be free to know everything and be curious about everything. When you empower yourself to explore outside of your comfort zone and take action to experience new things, you find yourself on an eternal exploration a journey led by spiritual breadcrumbs that guides you to another enlightening experience, and then another.

Finally, the only rule to seeking ones spirituality is that you read all, see all, hear all, but make your own rules to enlightenment. It cant be the same for all. Discover things that serve your soul, make your spirituality sing, make you feel liberated, and follow them. Listen to yourself, listen to your soul. Free your consciousness, and most essentially, remain open to all, judgemental of none, and soak every experience that life throws at you in the way of your spiritual journey.

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Seeking Spirituality - New Delhi Times