Amatul's Antics...Spring is Sprung kool kats und kitties!
Amatul
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Name: Amatul
Metro:
Gender: Female


Interests: Working on farms. Creating fantastic Gardens. Clean air, clean water, clean food, sunlight, good boots & freedom. Live music, costuming, Cirque du Soleil, Wilderness, Art show Production and Curation, creation of all kinds of beautiful spaces. Fave artists: Klimpt, Duchamp, Judy Chicago, Ellen Gallenger, NomyLamm...
Expertise: Wilderness walking, biking around town, home cooked gourmet food, The overthrow of unkindness and idiocy. Feeding the hungry, making goo goo eyes, dumpster love, clothing the unclothed ... YES! Enjoying all good things of the sacred Green Earth
Occupation: Oragnic Gardener
Industry: Agricuture, Social Justice, bu


Message: message meEmail: email me
Website: visit my website


Member Since: 4/1/2004

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Thursday, January 22, 2009

WWOOFing and traveling

Ama and Nate are currently On The Road, going across the land in our wonderful old Subaru, and working at farms, ranches, and private lands. We've been camping, hiking, stayed in cabins, cob buildings with solar power, tenting, etc. All mode and all manner of alternative ways of living in this world exist.... already!
Yes, we can do it. We can change the way we live, our own house can be in order.

PEACE and LOVE to all


Tuesday, March 11, 2008

its great to be alive - musing on History -

Current mood: contemplative

Do you know,
ts so deep to be ALIVE in this moment.

My friends know that Im a biracial American woman born on April 3rd 1968.
Rev. MLK Jr. was killed the day after I was born.
My white mother and black father were thrown into a time of turmoil.
Many of us online are too young to know, and the books dont tell:
there were RACE RIOTS when I was a baby.
When MalcolmX was killed and when Rev. King was killed we faced the
end of America for a few moments.

Seriously guys, look it up, ask your (grand)parents about this.

The current emergency is more subtle, and most dire. (REALLY TRUELY its BAD today)
I can personally compare these past three-four administrations to what I remember of President Carter.
Carter personally (with Rosilyn) BUILDS HOMES FOR POOR PEOPLE.

How different we have become!
Why dont ALL former presidents do public service to the homeless and poor?
It would be incredible.

Anyway, I remember Nixon being impeached and taken away (in a great helecopter) and my family passionately sitting together all discussing the impeachment of that president for being a crook, a filthymouthed person, a cruel and mean man. Gangster pure and simple.
Well, we have NO IDEA what is said in the White House today.

Weve lost America.
but! We can rebuild her. (like the show said, "we have the technology")
and we have HOPE , BRAVERY, and JUSTICE.

If you know not the day nor the hour - lets take this hour and this day to be fully HUMAN and ALIVE

like they say, Si Si puede....Yes, we CAN.


Thursday, December 20, 2007

Currently Listening
What's Going on
By Marvin Gaye
see related

Election Year thoughts: its coming, are we ready?

A new year is coming
an election year
but
 will the Election be Legal and fair?
Do we have real elections anymore? Did we EVER have real elections..? the past two are really makking me wonder.

How could we not be talking about this issue and working on it? So curios. Let me tell you - as hard as so many of us are working for Obama, Hucklebee, Cinton,  etc etc... what if its basically a sham election?

We realy need to rise as a nation and ask questions about electoral proceedures, count, paper vs electronic, the Black and Latino Vote, regoinal differences. Last year when I voted for Govenor of Ma, in Dochester the voting was done in an open room, on paper ballots, with police officers looking over our shoulders at our votes as we hand fed them into a crank machine. Primitive paper polling. I was so very surprised, and wondered where the ballot box was going to go, and how the election could really possibly be ensured legal
(at all, or ever...its sooo dependant on if you trust the system and the people entrusted with administering the system locally, regionally, statewide country wide, globally... it boggles the mind. too much. So lets focus locally: what can we do but ASK THESE QUESTIONS of our local legfislators and get involved, work at Polling places, meditate and pray. one never knows.


Thursday, June 14, 2007

Currently Listening
Cuts to the Chase
By Richie Havens
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Seeds Of Peace in New Mexico - reflections -

Ama_and_Arun_G                                                                            Amatul greeting Arun Ghandi after his cool keynote

Nate and I just got a report on the NM World Peace conference we took Amtrack across America to attend - its a pretty good summary of the keynote speakers and some activities.

The best aspect for us was the personal connections we made with native american medicine women and other indiginious elders at the conference, who not only drove us around Santa Fe but gave us free tickets to the Richie Havens/ Indigo Girls concert out at the Santa Fe Opera House - a great night! Thank you Pacal!

Boy, Richie STILL rocks it out hard and deep! Go go go Mr Havens! and then in the cold and rain he sat out at a table for two hours signing autographs and taking pictures with eager fans age 16 to 70 years old - He is incredible!

"...FREEDOM! FREEDOM! FREEDOM!"

-----the report by Louise Diamond, world peace conference designer-----

"Building a Culture of Peace"

Santa Fe Conference a Huge Success

Nearly 500 people gathered in Santa Fe, New Mexico in mid-May to explore the question, ‘What would it take to transform the current culture of violence in our society to a culture of peace?’ 

To inspire and challenge us, we had four keynote speakers, spread over the two days. Rigoberta Menchu Tum (Nobel Peace Laureate, 1992) opened the conference by speaking of harmony between the material and the spiritual. She told of the Mayan Calendar’s No Time Zone, coming in 2014, when the natural clock will move in one direction and the material in the other, after which there will be a new era of collaboration, coalition, and balance of the masculine and the feminine. To prepare for this, we need to be a light for others, not letting pessimism, bitterness, or too much comfort overtake us. She invited us to be the best example of peace that we can be, and to work from that place for the well-being and dignity of all.

Jody Williams (Nobel Peace Laureate, 1997) shared her own journey to ban landmines as a model for how one person can make a difference. Seeing herself as just an ordinary person, she was exposed to the issue of landmines and the incredible harm they did. As she became motivated to do something about this, she rallied others to the cause, eventually finding and building collaborative networks all over the planet. Fueled by anger and determined to succeed, she did indeed help build a worldwide movement and support that resulted in an international treaty to ban all landmines. Not willing to stop there, Jody said she was turning her attention now to cluster bombs, and after that, to nuclear weapons.

Arun Gandhi (Founder, the M.K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence), took us on an incredible journey of learning about peace from Mahatma Gandhi, through the eyes of himself as a rebellious teenage grandson. In one story after another, we saw and heard Gandhi’s commitment to nonviolence, love, and respect for all beings played out in simple family relationships and everyday events. In one story, young Gandhi cavalierly threw away an old pencil stub, assuming his grandfather would get him a new pencil. Instead he received a teaching about how discarding that pencil was showing disrespect to the earth (all the elements that made up the pencil) and to the people who were involved in making it. He also received a flashlight, to go and retrieve the stub he had tossed aside, as he was not, in fact, going to get a new pencil. 

His Holiness the Dalai Lama (Nobel Peace Laureate 1989), by video, ended the conference by speaking of the need for a culture of peace, especially given the way the media focuses so much on violence. He reminded us that the heart of peace is to recognize we are all one family on this earth, and that we need to care for each other. He acknowledged that transforming the culture of violence to a culture of peace could take a long time, but with perseverance, determination, and hope, it could be accomplished. He invited us each to go out and offer our unique gifts to realize this vision.

In between these talks, six Peace Councils met and discussed a variety of topics. Small groups examined, for instance, the need to build bridges to the military, and to illegal immigrants rather than seeing them as ‘the enemy;’ the difference between indigenous cultures for whom spirituality is integrated into daily life and industrialized cultures where religion tends to be a separate part of life, and the implications of these different perspectives for peace; the importance of bringing spirit into our businesses and economic life and developing new models for corporations that share ownership with employees and build community.

Other groups spoke of creating a statewide peace curriculum; of building on the rich aggregation of scientific and healing skills present in New Mexico to create a new economic base for the state so it doesn’t have to rely so much on the nuclear/military industry, and of funding the nuclear labs to focus instead on alternative energy; of how important art, music, poetry, and even T-shirts are to youth for expressing their views on peace; of how important it is to re-connect with nature in order to remember our unity with all creation; of how to use the new internet modalities to help transform the need for security through power and control to a paradigm of security through mutual collaboration, understanding, empathy, and communication.

And so much more! A fuller report on the conference and its outcomes will be available later this summer. Next steps are still under discussion. We know that further small- and large-group dialogues and working groups are in the picture, and that new projects are emerging. More on this as it becomes solidified.

At the end of the conference, as each of the Peace Councils gave a brief report to the whole assembly on the highlights of their work, we realized that most of all, this two-day gathering of peace leaders (from ages 10 to 84+ and from five continents) was a moment of planting seeds, seeds that will grow, through our continued care and tending, to eventually become that great Tree of Peace that shelters us all. 


Thursday, May 31, 2007

SAT is PEACEDAY in CAMBRIDGE MA - join us!

Peace Day is Sat June 2, 2007, from 1 pm - 5 pm
Cambridge City Hall, 795 Mass. Ave and
Cambridge Senior Center, 806 Mass. Ave.
FREE and welcoming for people of all ages!
Rain or Shine!

Performances - music, poetry, dance, spoken word, theater with
Danielle Scott, Delisile, Amatul & NateBox, Jeff Robinson, AfroDZAk, Jimmy Tingle, CRLS Jazz Ensemble, Senior Center Chorus, CRLS Haitian Club, Underground Railroad Theater, TAiNA Vargas, and many more...

Participation - making peace cranes and peace flags, learning the healing arts, joining in dialogue, singing along, acting with True Story Theater, Peace Games, Dances of Universal Peace, Emperor Norton's Stationary Marching Band, The Raging Grannies…

Exhibits - local & global peace & justice information tables

1 pm - Program opens on City Hall steps
4:30 pm - Make a human peace symbol in front of City Hall.
(If it’s raining, bring an umbrella)

For the day’s schedule, contact the Peace Commission at 617-349-4694 or email peace@cambridgema.gov
FREE --- FREE refreshments, resources, renewal! FREE --- FREE

25TH Anniversary – Cambridge Peace Commission
To recognize the 25th anniversary of the Peace Commission the Cambridge City Council has declared Cambridge as a “City of Peace” in the year 2007. This resolution is an invitation to all of Cambridge - community groups, civic institutions, businesses, families, faith communities - to make connections to and promote peacebuilding all year long.



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