Remember – Poetry from Joy Harjo

In our Sufi tradition we practice Zikr which is about remembrance. This beautiful poetry (with thanks to Sister Amina who published this in her blog, “Love, Harmony, and Beauty”), speaks to an indigenous perspective on remembrance by the current U.S. poet laureate and first indigenous person to hold that role, Joy Harjo.

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.

– Joy Harjo

Coming Spiritual Events

I want to acknowledge that this effort has been taking a back burner lately and that it has been a while since I posted events. And blog posts have been fewer as well. Perhaps it can begin to rise up in my priorities again. Send your prayers and I’ll see what happens!

There are a some wonderful events coming in the next little while that I wanted to share:

Saturday – 16 October at 11 AM – online – Ruhaniat Family Zoom featuring the ZIRAAT COUNCIL presenting FANA-FI-GAIA

In the words of Hazrat Inayat Khan “There is one Holy Book, the sacred manuscript of nature, the only scripture which can enlighten the reader.”

Ziraat means holding in our hearts the harmony, sustainability, and balance of the whole planet and bringing this awareness actively into our everyday lives.
For further information about the Ziraat Council see https://www.ruhaniat.org/index.php/ziraat-2.

Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83268947415?pwd=a1pzNzJYQkRUV0MzY3dDUVY3V3lUUT09
Meeting ID: 832 6894 7415
Password: 787082

Saturday – 16 October at 3 PM – for those who are local to the Seattle area –
Our final pop-up in-person park peace dance will occur.   We will meet at the usual place in the good shepherd/Meridian Park (4649 Sunnyside Ave N, Seattle, WA 98103), at the gazebo between the pea patch and the bathrooms.   Leaders and musicians, please come half an hour early to get things organized.    Please email Elizabeth Dequine (edequine@gmail.com) if you have any questions!   We have had such joy at these outdoor dances, sharing this beautiful practice, our voices, and our hearts.   Please bring a mask to keep us all safe.

Wednesday – 20 October at 7:30 PM
Please join us (virtual doors open at 7:15) for our Seattle Dances of Universal Peace.

We will be celebrating the Way of the Heart and our Deep Connection to the Divine. Jennifer Nagel will be leading together with Wakil David Matthews and Raphaela Wendy Zieve.

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83569701210?pwd=MXl3RDhRUFhSeUxyREprMEdvRzVJUT09

Meeting ID: 835 6970 1210
Passcode: dancepeace
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Parliament of the World’s Religions Visual Statement

This year’s Parliament will take place virtually in November. You can find out more and register to attend here: https://parliamentofreligions.org/2021-parliament-worlds-religions-registration

They have just published their Visual Statement which unflinchingly illustrates the current state of the world and the intention of this year’s participants.

Whether you are able to attend yourself or not, this statement is a powerful, poignant, and timely reminder of where we stand and what we stand for, and what we are willing to do about it.

I encourage everyone to watch this and consider adding your name as an endorsement of this vision and intention: https://xbil.trk.elasticemail.com/tracking/click?d=QE9G9jtWHmKKHV8QExr7XMZLbcWnZJ1yOBbkj5YFhrEnR4QddA2-u1v78Iu4JxE2V2EtRr3riJEqeT5wqvl5O82_QgvYZklU-BcVpzC-wycAGAeGdE-wQuoV2P028YA90R-0qxayD4tU_-84RGpn_lQTR3yVkHg0I3IO8EB77h9Tf7m0UJmZ_Q0lvFU_fZp6yA2

From Rev angel Kyodo williams – practicing compassion


Loving Kindness, Discovering Compassion

Activist and author Rev. angel Kyodo williams was a presenter at CAC’s 2017 CONSPIRE conference. Raised in a Christian home, Rev. angel ultimately found her calling as a Zen Buddhist priest engaged in the pursuit of radical justice.

Compassion seems like a nice buzzword, and we all want to have it. But compassion isn’t an idea that can be taught. You can’t pick it up at the bookstore. Compassion has to be felt. It’s one of those things that reveals itself without your having realized that it was at your disposal all along. You can’t manufacture what was always there, but you can create the condition in which it is most likely to thrive. [1]

Rev. angel offers these suggestions for ways of developing compassion for self and others:

[Make] a practice of being open. Practicing being intimate, getting close. Not just to the people that you already feel love for and want to be close to, but to everyone. Open to the dentist, the bus driver, the clerk. Little by little you open up more and more. Open to Republicans if you’re a Democrat. To the Liberals if you’re Conservative. Your capacity to appreciate difference deepens. Open to white folks, Asians, Latinos, and East Indians. You accept the whole world with open arms not because you have been told you should, but because you realize in your heart that we are all ultimately deserving of love and compassion. Open to the poor and homeless, the sick and dying.

There’s no magic involved here, and it isn’t nearly as impossible or distant as it may sound. The way to get to this place of openness and compassion is to practice opening more and more to yourself. All of yourself. The rough, unrefined parts as well as the areas you are proud of and like to recognize. The practice of meditation helps us call on the gentle “watcher” inside us who views all the contradictions that make us who we are without judging any of it. When you are sitting there counting your breath and a thought comes up, acknowledge it for just what it is . . . a thought. . . .

There are no good thoughts or bad thoughts. When you name them like that, they all end up just the same. . . . Each [thought] gets a name and is then allowed to move on. . . . Through meditation, every bit of us gets to be seen and acknowledged, rather than forced into a corner. We gain our sense of wholeness from that self-acceptance. . . .

Armed with the open mind and open heart that come from self-intimacy and self-acceptance, you can begin the very possible task of truly accepting others. When you practice accepting yourself in many different forms and moods, you naturally develop an ability to see your own self in other people. As you learn how to accept yourself, you learn how to accept them. That’s the true meaning of compassion.

Experience a version of this practice through video and sound.

[1] angel Kyodo williams, Being Black: Zen and the Art of Living with Fearlessness and Grace (Viking Compass: 2000), 152–153. 

[2] williams, 146–147, 151–152.