Building a Sense of Community

Author: Dawn Rubbert

From the New York Times “”Humanitarian Design Project Aims to Build a Sense of Community” by Alice Rawsthorn, October 23, 2011.  Seems a good story of peace…

On her first day as a teacher at the Bertie Early College High School in Windsor, North Carolina, Emily Pilloton asked the students to name the last thing they had made themselves.

“It could have been something as simple as cookies for their moms, but some of the students couldn’t remember ever making anything,” she recalled. “They’d never held a hammer or taken an art class. Half of them didn’t even know how to read a ruler.”

There were 13 students in the class, all 11th graders. Some came from middle-class families, and others lived in poverty, including a 17-year-old who was struggling to raise a 4-year-old child. They had all signed up to spend three hours a day on Studio H, an experimental design course run from a converted car body shop near the school.

The course started in August last year and ended this month with the opening of the Windsor Super Market, a farmers’ market housed in a wooden pavilion that the students had designed and built themselves.

Click here to read the full article...

Travel to Burundi, Kenya & Rwanda with AGLI

Author: Dawn Rubbert


2012 African Great Lakes Initiative (AGLI) Workcamps:
BURUNDI, KENYA & RWANDA
Saturday, June 23 to Saturday, July 28

• AGLI accepts volunteers of all ages: workcampers have been as young as 8, as old as 84.
• Workcampers have included an entire family of five (the Amoses) and one with four from NY state; you can travel as an individual or with friends.
• The goal is for each team to include 6 international (non-African) and 6 local workcampers plus professional builders.
• Physical & Skill requirements: Good health and willingness to do manual labor.
• Construction skills and experience are not necessary.

1) Burundi Workcamp – Mutaho

Host Partner: REMA – A group of about 50 women (Hutu, Tutsi, and Twa) from Mutaho Friends Church led by Pastor Sara Gakobwa. The name means be comforted, do not get discouraged. Click here for more…
Location: Mutaho, Burundi – Northeast of Bujumbura near Gitega
(the second largest city in Burundi)
Objective:  The Workcamp Peace Team will build guest rooms for the Mutaho Women’s Group Center.
Housing: Workcampers will stay with local host families.

2)  Rwanda Workcamp – Gisenyi

Host Partner: Gisenyi Friends Church
Location: Gisenyi, Rwanda
(on the northern edge of Lake Kivu, just across the border from Goma, Congo)
Objective: Workcampers will complete work on the offices and bathroom.
Housing: Workcampers will stay in the Peace Center dormitory.

3)  Kenya Workcamp – Lugari

Host Partner: Lugari Yearly Meeting
Location:
Lugari District is close to the Uganda border with Kenya with a perfect view of Mt Elgon. This is a 350 acre farm owned by Lugari Yearly Meeting and a former Farmers Training Center.
Objective:
Workcampers will rehabilitate one or more buildings; cleaning, painting, minor repairs.
Housing:
Workcampers will stay at the site which is much like camping. It is cold at night so there is usually a nightly campfire.

For More Info: contact Dawn Rubbert via dawn@aglifpt.org or go to www.aglifpt.org
Help spread the word!  Download AGLI 2012 Workcamps flyer here

AVP Soars with Youth in Turbo Division – Report from Kenya – August 23, 2011

Author: David Zarembka, Coordinator
African Great Lakes Initiative of the Friends Peace Teams

Dear Friends,

Yesterday Getry Agizah, coordinator for Friends Church Peace Teams (FCPT), Gladys Kamonya, my wife, and I met with thirty-one youth apprentice AVP facilitators who are conducting workshops in Turbo Division. Here in Africa “youth” means anyone under thirty-five years of age.

Hot-spot Turbo Division is where AGLI and FCPT have been putting a lot of effort since the 2008 post election violence. Our goal now is to prevent renewed violence during the August 2012 election campaign. There are seven locations in Turbo Division and we started by doing two basic AVP workshops in each location. This was followed by one advanced workshop in each location. Lastly, there was a three day Training for Facilitators at the newly renovated Lugari Yearly Meeting Peace House for forty-five of the best participants who are now apprentice AVP Facilitators.

Then the apprentice AVP facilitators – with the help of a lead facilitator – conducted four basic apprentice workshops in each location. Altogether over 1400 youth in Turbo Division have now participated in an AVP workshop.

What did we learn about these apprentice workshops with the new youth facilitators during our visit?

In each location the first apprentice workshops were difficult. The apprentice facilitators had to recruit participants to attend the workshops with a goal of 25 participants. Since AVP does not pay the customary sitting allowance for attending a workshop, potential participants were reluctant to come. The first workshop usually then had only sixteen to twenty participants. The inexperienced facilitators were naturally quite nervous.

Over time word got out so that by the third and fourth workshop, the facilitators were having too many participants. Those who were invited would bring along a friend or two and soon there were up to sixty youth wanting to participate. The new facilitators did not want to send people away, but doing an experiential workshop with so many participants destroys some of the essence of the workshop. In Rwanda, AVP facilitators once thought that they could put thirty participants in a workshop, but soon realized that AVP lost some of its effectiveness — they returned to workshops with twenty participants.

So what did they do? In some cases, they were able to send some of the youth home with the understanding that they could come to the next workshop. In the case where there were sixty participants, they divided into two workshops — but there was only the same food for the twenty-five that were planned. The food budget had to be stretched, but as with the loaves and fishes this seemed to work. In another case, when the fourth workshop had too many participants, those who were invited agreed to donate food for an extra workshop for those who were unable to attend. When Getry visited this extra workshop on the last day, she found that at 5:00 PM they were still going strong (and wanting more) even though they had not eaten for the whole day! Getry provided a soda and some bread for the participants.

They have called these additional workshops “voluntary workshops” in that the participants bring the food, obtain the meeting space, and home stays for the facilitators (who meet each night to debrief and plan for the next day’s activities). AGLI/FCPT only provides the lead facilitator and the materials for a cost of about $50 per workshop. Already by the time of our meeting, the apprentice facilitators had conducted two voluntary workshops and had eleven more planned. I expect that they will arrange for even more after this.

I asked them if they were getting only youth who had not participated in the violence. There answer was a resounding “no.” A good number of the participants had confessed that they had participated in the violence and at least one admitted to killing someone. One basic AVP workshop turns these violent youth around and they have committed themselves to being peaceful during the upcoming election cycle.

A number of older people thought that there should be workshops for older people. They felt that they also needed AVP. At least one older person thought that he should be trained as an AVP facilitator.

Roughly half the facilitators and half of the participants were women — a difficult goal to reach in the African context.

September 21 is World Peace Day as proclaimed by the United Nations. In Turbo Division there is going to be a celebration with a walk from each direction. The AVP youth leaders have been asked to participate and organize those youth who have taken AVP. We will see how they respond and what activities they will plan.

In summary, AGLI/FCPT took a most difficult area to work on violence prevention. When we began, many people were negative about the response we would receive in Turbo Division. On the contrary, the response has exceeded even my usually optimistic forecast. My conclusion is: “People are often violent because peacemakers have not made the necessary effort to reach and teach them.”

If you would like to sponsor a voluntary AVP workshop, send $50 to Friends Peace Team/AGLI, 1001 Park Avenue, St Louis, MO 63104 with a notation of “AVP in Turbo, Kenya.”

Thanks,
Dave


David Zarembka, Coordinator
African Great Lakes Initiative of the Friends Peace Teams
P. O. Box 189, Kipkarren River 50241 Kenya
Phone in Kenya: 254 (0)726 590 783 in US: 301/765-4098
Office in US:1001 Park Avenue, St Louis, MO 63104 USA 314/647-1287
Webpage: www.aglifpt.org Email: dave@aglifpt.org

Quaker Havana Work Camp 2011

Author: Hope Bastian Martinez (reprinted by Dawn Rubbert with permission)

Curious about Cuba? Want to meet a group of progressive semi-programmed friends in Havana? Interested in learning about Quakerism in Cuba and sharing wider Quaker perspectives in Havana Monthly Meeting’s first ever Work Camp?!

Potential hosts: Martin Luther King Center and Havana Monthly Meeting (Quakers)

There’s lots of interest in Cuba in the US, especially among progressive young people and I would like to create an experience for US Quakers to learn about Cuba and participate in meaningful exchange and service with members of the Quaker community in Havana. At this point this project is a “wouldn’t it be cool if…” dream being worked out between myself and the young pastor of Havana Monthly Meeting. We are starting from the idea that Quakers in the US have a lot to learn and a lot to share with folks in Cuba, and the Meeting there is excited about the possibility of receiving a group.

Luckily, due to very recent changes, US religious groups may now freely visit religious communities in Cuba without going through onerous licensing procedures. As a group of Friends we would spend 1-2 weeks getting to know Cuba and Quakers in Havana through shared worship, workshops, and service. This work camp is being planned collaboratively with members of Havana Monthly Meeting and will be designed around the skills and interests of US and Cuban participants.

We will try to keep the cost of the trip as low as possible to cover airfare, lodging and meals in a simple and inexpensive dorm/church housing, local travel, interpreters (if participants don’t speak Spanish), etc. We would also each do fund-raising through our Monthly and Yearly Meetings to cover the cost of whatever service projects we would do with Havana Monthly Meeting friends.

If this sounds like something you might be interested in please get in touch with me! (Editor’s Note: or leave a comment here on “How Do You See Peace?” and we’ll be sure to pass it on!) In your e-mail please let me know little bit about yourself, your interests in visiting Cuba, etc.

Name:
E-Mail:
Phone:

1. Please tell us about your Quaker connections: Are you a member/attender of a Quaker meeting or church? Where?

2. What makes you interested in visiting Cuba?
 
3. Have you traveled internationally before? Where to? Tell us more about the purpose of the trip(s).
 
4. What experiences, knowledge, skills, etc. do you have that you would be willing to share with Friends in Havana? Could you lead workshops on Quaker topics, or topics of interest to Friends?
 
5. On the other hand, what would you like to learn about from Havana Friends?
 
6. Complete the sentence: My trip to Cuba would not be complete without…
 
7. Do you speak Spanish? Would you need an interpreter to participate fully in the exchange?
 
8. When would you be available/interested in traveling? Please list several times when you might be available for example: “any time in the summer” or “during my winter break December 21-January 6” Preference for one or two week trip?
 
For more info or to send in an application: havanaquake2011@gmail.com.

More about us: My name is Hope Bastian Martinez. I’m a graduate student in cultural anthropology at American University and a member of Tallahassee Monthly Meeting (Southeastern YM). I visited Cuba for the first time in 2000 with a group of young people from SEYM. In 2004-2005, I lived in Havana where I collaborated with the Martin Luther King Center and a US NGO hosting study delegations to show US citizens first-hand the effects of US foreign policy in Cuba. From 2008-2009, I worked in Cuba as an editor for a public-health journal and next fall I will be in Havana again as the resident director of American University’s undergraduate study abroad program. Since 2004 I have worshiped with members of a small but vibrant Monthly Meeting in Havana and want to help create connections between Quakers in the US and Havana.

Kirenia Criado Pérez, is the Pastor of Havana Monthly Meeting, a theologian and coordinator of the Theological and Pastoral Reflection and Training Program of the Martin Luther King Center in Havana. Originally from Puerto Padre, Las Tunas she studied at the Evangelical Seminary of Theology in Matanzas, Cuba before settling in Havana. Kirenia is a trained AVP facilitator and has led workshops for young people in Brazil.

Travel to Burundi or Rwanda with AGLI

Author: Dawn Rubbert

If you want to travel quickly, walk alone.
If you want to travel far, walk with others.
~
Traditional African Proverb


2011 African Great Lakes Initiative (AGLI) Workcamps:
BURUNDI & RWANDA
Saturday, June 25 to Saturday, July 30

• AGLI accepts volunteers of all ages: workcampers have been as young as 8, as old as 84.
• Workcampers have included an entire family of five (the Amoses) and one with four from NY state; you can travel as an individual or with friends.
• The goal is for each team to include 6 international (non-African) and 6 local workcampers plus professional builders.
• Physical & Skill requirements: Good health and willingness to do manual labor.
• Construction skills and experience are not necessary.

1) Burundi Workcamp – Kamenge

Host Partner: Friends Women’s Association (FWA)
Location: Kamenge, Burundi – On the outskirts of Bujumbura
Objective:  The Workcamp Peace Team will work at the FWA Clinic which primarily serves HIV+ women and their children. Details are still in the planning stages but most likely the team will build a security wall around the plot behind the clinic which where there will be a dormitory for patients so that, in due time, the Clinic can become a full hospital. Learn more about the clinic.
Housing: Workcampers will stay in an apartment at the Friends Center in downtown Bujumbura.

2)  Rwanda Workcamp – Gisenyi

Host Partner: Gisenyi Friends Church
Location: Gisenyi, Rwanda
(on the northern edge of Lake Kivu, just across the border from Goma, Congo)
Objective: plan in process – The 2010 Workcamp Peace Team began construction of a conference hall; this may be completed or a new project begun. Each afternoon, Workcampers will also help local residents improve their English.
Housing: Workcampers will stay with local families.

For More Info: contact Dawn Rubbert via dawn@aglifpt.org or go to www.aglifpt.org
Help spread the word!  Download AGLI 2011 Workcamps flyer here

ILYM Winter Retreat: Non-Violent Communication

Author: Dawn Rubbert

 

Having been exposed to the principles of Non-Violent Communication and the work of Dr. Marshall Rosenberg, who created this method, I am looking forward to the retreat next weekend (Feb 20-22, 2009). I have learned enough about the principles to recognize that in order to use peaceful communication one must practice. The world in which we live does not generally support this kind of communication, it does not come naturally. Rather it must be cultivated and intentionally developed. One needs to practice so that skills will increase and come more easily with less thought as time goes on. Non-Violent Communication is sometimes called “Compassionate Communication”. It is one way to be proactively peaceful in our world. Language is more powerful than we tend to realize, especially on a daily level.

 

Just try getting through a day without using words that, in some context, refer to violence. I think, from my experience, that you will be amazed. Do you ride in elevators? What word do you use to tell someone what to do to the buttons? Perhaps you say something like “hit” seven for me . . .

 

Who has not encountered a situation where language separated them from someone else? Misunderstandings about what words mean? Surely you have heard the famous story about England and the United States being separated by a common language.

 

So, I am thrilled to have an opportunity to deepen my understanding, be with others who are learning, and have a safe Quaker “family” with whom I can practice. They say that practice makes perfect . . . We could all use a more perfect world and I must start/continue that venture by working on myself.