Moving Through Sorrow by Remembering Hope and Beauty

Today was an intense day. The family and I spent the day in the Peace and Justice Memorial and Museum and the Rosa Parks Museum in Montgomery, Alabama, as part of our Civil Rights tour.

On sacred ground you walk through hanging, rusty, metal rectangular boxes – hundreds of them – each representing a county or parish of states in which lynchings have occurred and each with names engraved of those thousands of our beloved siblings who lost their lives to this terrorist tactic. It is hugely painful, yet cleansing to participate in this recognition and repentance of our sins.

We are deeply moved and reminded of the love and beauty and hope that so many have worked and suffered for – I took this picture of a small tree with a nest cuddled in its branches and just putting out some new buds in the shadow of the memorial as a reminder that even in the darkest moments, there is the intrinsic hope, beauty, and renewal of life that we in the north celebrate at this time of year.

Image may contain: tree, plant, sky, grass, bridge, outdoor and nature
Hope in the midst of suffering and sadness

I was also reminded of this poem of remembrance from an indigenous poet:

From Writer Joy Harjo

Joy Harjo is a poet and musician, and a member of the Mvskoke Nation. She has published seven books of poetry, including: How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems, The Woman Who Fell from the Sky, and She Had Some Horses. Among Joy’s honors and recognitions are the New Mexico Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts, the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers Circle of the Americas, and the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America. Born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Joy now resides in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Remember the sky that you were born under,
know each of the star’s stories.
Remember the moon, know who she is.
Remember the sun’s birth at dawn, that is the
strongest point of time. Remember sundown
and the giving away to night.
Remember your birth, how your mother struggled
to give you form and breath. You are evidence of
her life, and her mother’s, and hers.
Remember your father. He is your life, also.
Remember the earth whose skin you are:
red earth, black earth, yellow earth, white earth
brown earth, we are earth.
Remember the plants, trees, animal life who all have their
tribes, their families, their histories, too. Talk to them,
listen to them. They are alive poems.
Remember the wind. Remember her voice. She knows the
origin of this universe.
Remember you are all people and all people
are you.
Remember you are this universe and this
universe is you.
Remember all is in motion, is growing, is you.
Remember language comes from this.
Remember the dance language is, that life is.
Remember.

Global Peace Dance – December 30

NOTE CHANGES: Date, Time, and Location

Hamid Daniel and Hayra Fatah invite you once again, to a long depth-filled evening that hails in the New Year. In Puget Sound, we are usually one of the last Circles to add to this healing wave that has passed around the Earth. This year we will be on the leading edge of the wave… gathering on December 30th. This hopefully will result in safer roads on your way home. And we will end by 11, to allow those who need to catch a ferry a good option.

Generously, Unity of Whidbey Island and Gaea van Breda are hosting us on Whidbey Dances of Universal Peace Community’s usual last Sunday of the month.

For the 28th year… Global Peace Dance… a Meaningful Drug- and Alcohol-free Gathering

Sunday, December 30th, 2018
– – – – – – – – 7-11pm – – – – – – – –
– – – UNITY of WHIDBEY – – –
At SR 525 and Crawford Road
5671 Crawford Road
Langley, WA 98260
$10 per person

Healthy snacks to share welcomed . . Tea provided
Return ferries to Mukilteo depart Clinton at 11:30pm and 12:30am

New and veteran Dancers are ushered into a multi-culturally-inspired holding of life. Acoustic music, simple song, and movement… ride on the resonant power of sacred phrases from around the world.

Come alone or bring a friend.

Unity Zikr – December 29th, 2018

“The essence of God is love and the Sufi path is a path of love. It is very difficult to describe love in words. It is like trying to describe honey to someone who has never tasted or even seen honey, who does not know what honey is. Love is to see what is good and beautiful in everything. It is to learn from everything, to see the gifts of God and the generosity of God in everything. It is to be thankful for all God’s bounties.” SHEIKH MUZAFFER OZAK

POTLUCK 6:30 pm ZIKR 7:30 pm

IOOF HALL 1706 NW Market, Seattle

Saturday, December 29, 2018

NW WASHINGTON SUFI COMMUNITY

UNITY ZIKR

• At the PostHalveti-Jerrahi12/29/18 ecotoolsllc@comcast.net(206) 713-6917

• Rifa’i-Marufi Order3/30/19 rmoseattle@gmail.com(206) 235-1902

• Inayati Order6/29/1hafizullahsufi@gmail.com(206) 380-3833

• Mevlevi Order of America8/31/19 rumiseattle.org@gmail.com(206) 784-1532

• Sufi Ruhaniat Int’l11/30/19 (206) 850-2111

Friends from local Sufi circles, traveling the inner path in mutual respect in community for decades gather to pray, practice, update news, share food, and make a charitable contribution.

Host tariqat (1) selects a charity, (2) holds post/opens/closes,

(3) greets, (4) serves, (5) is responsible for clean-up.

SACRED ATMOSPHERE Announcements and fliers only pre/post-Zikr,

only in entry hall or dining room, please.

2019 Fifth SATURDAYS3/30, 6/29, 8/31, 11/30 PLEASE ARRIVE on TIME

$10-$20 Home2Vashon Charitable Contribution

Also, Ballard Food Bank Canned Food Donation

Many Thanks, Ballard Oddfellows!

Shoreline Dances of Universal Peace – 14 Dec

Please join Hayra and Zarifah in the Shoreline Dances of Universal Peace at 7:30pm this Friday, Dec 14th, as we move through the year’s darkest days, and invoke the return of the Light!

We meet at Namaste Yoga Studio, 18021 15th Ave NE in Shoreline to sing and move prayerfully together, tuning in to the inner and outer transformation, and taking it out into the world. Hope to see you there!

SPECIAL SEMA – Mevlevi Order of America invites you to Remember Rumi, 12/17 (Monday)

On Monday, December 17th at 7:30pm, the day of Rumi’s final step into Union with the Beloved, known as Shebi-arus, Lovers of Rumi will gather for the Sema Ceremony. The Mevlevi Order of America in Seattle are offering a unique opportunity to participate directly in the Ceremony, Whirling, Walking or Watching according to your preference. The Seattle Mevlevis will be whirling around the circle, but you are welcome to turn in the center space, walk with us through the meditative beginning Mukabele (three revolutions of the floor, and bowing together ‘face to face’), or be in a state of Witness from the sides. Join us afterwards for tea and refreshments.

This is a rare chance to immerse yourself in the Ceremony and celebrate one history’s greatest Mystic Poets, Mevlana Jelaluddin Rumi – Spiritual Teacher, Friend of Truth and Master of the Religion of Love. We hope to see you!

Details:
Ballard Oddfellows Hall
1706 NW Market Street
12/17 at 7:30pm

$15 suggested donation

Awaken to Love

From Richard Rohr’s blog on the Center for Action and Contemplation site.

Mirabai Starr writes in her book God of Love [One of my favorite books in the world – Wakil]:

The unifying theme in [Judaism, Christianity, and Islam] is that God loves us unconditionally. . . . A hadith [saying] of the Prophet Muhammad expresses the unconditional love of God: Allah says, “Take one step towards me, I will take ten steps towards you. Walk towards me, I will run towards you” (Hadith Qudsi).

The great Sufi teacher Hazrat Inayat Khan [1882–1927] placed special emphasis on the sacred phrase Ishq Allah Ma’bud Allah, which he translated as “God is Love, Lover, and Beloved.” [1] In Love, Human and Divine, Inayat Khan writes, “The Sufis say that the reason of the whole creation is that the perfect Being wished to know Himself, and did so by awakening the love of His nature and creating out of it His object of love, which is beauty.”. . .

This love dance is not some rarified state reserved for long-dead saints and the occasional living master. We do not have to go insane with longing. Few of us will relinquish the last traces of ego and walk away from our life in the world. [But] we can feed the fire of divine love by cultivating simple practices that expand our hearts and raise our consciousness, such as meditation and chanting, reciting ancient prayers or conversing with the Beloved, in silence or in lifting up our voices, in solitude or in community. “There are a hundred ways to kneel and kiss the ground,” says Rumi. [2]

Avideh Shashaani describes prayer within Islam as “a state of presence where the soul is in communion with God. ”Ablutions—ceremonial washing—are ways to open heart, mind, and body to God’s love:

By washing the face with water we put aside the five senses that are engaged with the world; the washing of the hands signifies giving to the world what belongs to the world; wetting the head means putting all thoughts aside, and wetting the feet means redirecting our steps from the world to God. It is after we have cleansed ourselves of our interactions with the world that we are able to stand before God and declare our intention to enter the heart and walk on the straight path that leads to the Divine presence. [3]

[1] Inayat Khan, A Sufi Message of Spiritual Liberty (London: The Theosophical Publishing Society, 1914), 29.

[2] Mirabai Starr, God of Love: A Guide to the Heart of Judaism, Christianity and Islam (Monkfish Book Publishing: 2012), 60-61,136-137.

[3] Avideh Shashaani, “An Islamic Perspective onTransgression: Oneness,” “Transgression,” Oneing, vol. 2, no. 1 (CAC Publications: 2014), 25.

Song: Prayer of the Children

Please enjoy this beautiful song – “The Prayer of the Children” by Sam Cardon and Kurt Bestor:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njAoVXDPJZQ

Here are the lyrics:

Can you hear the prayer of the children?
On bended knee, in the shadow of an unknown room
Empty eyes with no more tears to cry
Turning heavenward toward the light
Crying Jesus, help me
To see the morning light-of one more day
But if I should die before I wake,
I pray my soul to take

Can you feel the hearts of the children?
Aching for home, for something of their very own 
Reaching hands, with nothing to hold on to,
But hope for a betterday a better day

Crying Jesus, help me
To feel the love again in my own land
But if unknown roads lead away from home,
Give me loving arms, away from harm

Can you hear the voice of the children?
Softly pleading for silence in a shattered world?
Angry guns preach a gospel full of hate,
Blood of the innocent on their hands
Crying Jesus, help me
To feel the sun again upon my face,
For when darkness clears I know you’re near,
Bringing peace again

Dali cujete svedjecje molitive?
(Croatian translation:
‘Can you hear all the children’s prayers?’)
Can you hear the prayer of the children?