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Random Kindness and Senseless Acts of Beauty

Autor Anne Herbert, Margaret Paloma Pavel, Mayumi Oda, Desmond Tutu
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 ian 2017
This illustrated modern parable has wisdom for realizing world peace in our time—let us start the dance!
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781613320235
ISBN-10: 161332023X
Pagini: 40
Ilustrații: Color illustrations throughout
Dimensiuni: 176 x 191 x 4 mm
Greutate: 0.08 kg
Editura: MI – New York University

Recenzii

"We can indeed transform the world, and we are each called to take part in this sacred work. Random Kindness and Senseless Acts of Beauty offers this simple and powerful message of wisdom and hope. Wherever you are, you can create beauty. Moment by moment, you can create joy. Instant by instant, you can offer kindness." —Desmond Mpilo Tutu
"This exquisite book offers guidance to us all." —Alice Walker

"This is the real article, brought to us by streetwise bodhisattva, Anne Herbert, who authored the phrase you see on walls and bumperstickers, and Margaret Pavel, word wizard, systems thinker and global therapist, along with Dharma artist Mayumi Oda, whose wondrous frogs remind us that this time we awaken with all beings. Good things come in small packages. About as long as the Heart Sutra, it distills all we need to know right now in order to let our lives count in building a sustainable world." —Joanna Macy

“Wow! This book is amazing. The message is so important and relevant! I believe that we all have the power! I love the way this book sends this message of goodness to children. Children are the future and this book conveys HOPE! It is rich in language, thought provoking and positive.” —Marla Conn, Common Core Curriculum Standards assessment specialist

Notă biografică

Known to many as the ‘Matisse of Japan’, artist Mayumi Oda has done extensive work with female goddess imagery. Born to a Buddhist family in Japan in 1941, Mayumi studied fine art and traditional Japanese fabric dyeing. Mayumi has exhibited over 50 one-woman shows throughout the world. Her artwork is also part of the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art (New York, NY), The Museum of Fine Arts (Boston, MA), Yale University Art Gallery (New Haven, CT), Library of Congress (Washington, DC) and many others. She has authored books about her own creative life, including Goddesses and I Opened the The Gate Laughing, and Merciful Sea: 45 Years of Serigraphs. She has also illustrated several books for notable authors, including Thich Nhat Hanh’s popular Touching Peace and Present Moment Wonderful Moment.

In addition to her work as an artist, Mayumi Oda has spent many years of her life as a global activist, participating in anti-nuclear campaigns worldwide. She founded Plutonium Free Future in 1992. On behalf of her organization, Mayumi lectured and held workshops on Nuclear Patriarchy to Solar Communities at the United Nations NGO Forum and the Women of Vision Conference in Washington, DC. In 1999, she launched the WASH (World Atomic Safety Holiday) Campaign and is currently working to raise awareness among the citizens of Hawaii about the use of Depleted Uranium at the Pohakuloa military base. Her current activist work and the royalties beneficiary of this edition of Random Kindness and Senseless Acts of Beauty will be community recovery work in Fukushima, Japan.

Feeling a deep connection with the mother earth, Mayumi has always enjoyed growing her own medicinal herbs and vegetables. In 2000, she started Ginger Hill, a farm and a retreat center on the Big Island of Hawaii. The artistically landscaped five-acre property is home to a number of workshops and retreats ranging from traditional Hawaiian Hula to medicinal cooking. Mayumi currently lives in Fukushima Japan and spends summers at Ginger Hill Farm. She travels worldwide, teaching workshops in creativity and self-realization.

Mayumi Oda's website is mayumioda.net. Mayumi’s activities and workshops can be found at her farm website gingerhillfarm.com; her blog is mayumioda.blogspot.com.

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Dr. M. Paloma Pavel is president of Earth House of Oakland, California. She is editor of Breakthrough Communities: Sustainability and Justice in the Next American Metropolis (MIT Press, 2009), and co-edits Sustainable Metropolitan Communities Books for MIT Press. She is a frequent national and international lecturer and keynote presenter on the theory of living systems and urban sustainability, and consults with individuals, communities, and organization on building healthy just and sustainable communities. She is co-founder of Breakthrough Communities which builds multi-racial leadership for sustainability and justice at regional, national, and global scales. She has worked in Japan for over 25 years with the Web of Life network on issues. Visiting faculty – University of California at Davis – Advisor to the Center for Regional Change. Performance artist, and filmmaker, using multi-media approaches to activate internal resources for leading change.

Dr. Pavel holds a Master of Divinity from Harvard University as well as degrees in psychology and economics. She was previously core faculty, California Institute of Integral Studies; consultant to the Sustainable Metropolitan Communities Initiative, Ford Foundation; a performance artist (Border Crossings); filmmaker (Sustainable Solutions, Voices From the Community); Monk, eco-spiritual Benedictine monastery; Peace Boat faculty – circled the earth; Founded the Eco-Justice film series in the SF Bay Area with eco-activist, Kayaked Haida Guai (former Queen Charlotte Islands); weaver and fiber artist who started a collective in Maine (still going) and built a leadership center by hand on the coast of Maine, now succeeded by the urban Earth House Center in Oakland offering multi-racial leadership training.

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Anne Herbert (1952–2015) was an American writer and a past assistant editor of CoEvolution Quarterly, a precursor to the Whole Earth Review. She is perhaps best known for being the person who coined the phrases, "Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty." and "Libraries will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no libraries."

Having known Anne Herbert in the 80s, Kevin Kelly wrote (in 2012) about her writing: “…it was telegraphic, lyrical, abbreviated, evocative, extremely personal and mystical. She wrote in short bursts. Like proverbs from a secret bible…It was not like any writing I had encountered… She was decades ahead of her time…”

Syndicated columnist Sally Schneider notes that Herbert's writing is "often like haiku (without the constraints): tiny meditations that caste a unique light on everyday things."