Come and Help Celebrate
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2021-02-14
City: Victoria, Trentham
Organizer
Henk Bak
Location
14 Forest St, Trentham Victoria
Email
Theme:
Love yourself as your Neighbour: grateful for life and at peace with yourself.
Convener: Henk Bak
Venue: Evera, Centre for Renewal
14 Forest Street Trentham
Weekends 6-7 and 13-14, 21st and 28th February
or weekdays in February by appointment phone (03) 5424 1702
The theme of this year’s World Interfaith Harmony project at Evera is a reflection on the 10 years escalating interreligious violence since the launch of the WIHW at the United Nations as well as reflection on the ambivalent and often selfish and /or careless responses to the current epidemic, encouraged in certain religious and philosophical quarters, confusing an urgently needed ethical individualism with variations of individualistic legalism. The good news, dignity or joy that any religion or philosophy brings to any person should be enough to prevent anyone to go to war in the name of that good news…A one-sided emphasis at the ‘centre’ on aspects of teachings that in themselves are right may go horribly wrong somewhere in the ‘periphery’. The ‘love thyself’ implied in the law, i.e. the three commands of what is called the ‘golden rule’ can no longer be taken for granted. Its absence on the WIHW banner 10 years ago, may have been justified as ‘taken for granted’ then, but no longer now…
“Here in Melbourne I breathe Christianity. I can’t help it. …But there is one thing that we have given humanity, and that is Hallelujah !”
Rabbi Jack Engel. At the beginning of an Interfaith Conversation, Monash University-Caulfield Campus 1994
“I am deeply intrigued to hear the good news others proclaim…Our daily prayer in the grace after meals asks God to send us soon Elijah-Al Khidr with the good news of redemption and consolation… When a Christian proclaims what he or she knows a good news, I want to hear it…
Rabbi Zalman Schacter-Shalome. Bases and Boundaries of Jewish, Christian, and Moslem Dialogue (around 2000)
“There are Christians whose life seems like Lent without Easter… Joy adapts and changes, but it always endures, even as a flicker of light born of our personal certainty, that, when everything is said and done, we are infinitely loved. “ Pope Francis Evangelii Gaudium 2013 p13
“The Qur’an does not speak only to men. It speaks, quite explicitly to women. I knew this at a young age, not because I read the Qur’an, but because I talked to God all the time. I knew with certainty that He responded…
Hibba Abugideiri, George Washington University
“Isn’t it a noble and enlightened way of spending our brief time in the sun, to work at understanding the universe and how we have come to wake up in it?”
Richard Dawkins, Unweaving the Rainbow 1996 pp5-6M
Meditative Walk
On 5 acres of open parkland, bordering on the Wombat Forest. A walk along 12 sites, clusters of trees and shrubs, each dedicated to a religion, spiritual culture or world-view. Aboriginal cultures – Hinduism – Humanism
Buddhism – Shinto – Dao
Judaism – Christianity – Islam
Zoroastrianism – Way of the Sikh – Baha’i
‘Ocean of Life’
Conversation
Being at peace with yourself: a key to all world harmony. Recognize yourself as your own closest neighbour.
Lack of self-confidence is a challenge, lack of self-worth a mental health issue and a world-pathology.
People are being programmed to become disposable objects on consumerist and labour markets or on ideological battlefields.
This year’s conversation will focus on discerning between selfish and unselfish ‘self-love’ or ‘self-denial’, mature or immature, healthy or pathological, carelessness masked as ‘freedom’, or killing in name of religion as ‘heroism’.
“if you can talk you can sing
If you can walk you can dance”
Zimbabwean saying
Program
As most events are attended by participants coming from far, the program usually starts with morning tea: Arrival ca 10.30am. Introduction and walk: 11am -1 pm
Lunch: 1-2pm Workshop/conversation: 2 – 4 pm Afternoon tea 4-4.30 pm Departing 4.30 -5 pm Closer to the date please check current regulations, contact us by phone 54241702
How to get to Evera:
By public transport:
For train & bus connections, please consult current timetables and telephone about need for a lift from Kyneton or Woodend station. By car:
- From Bendigo: Calder Freeway, exit Kyneton, via Tylden to Trentham, first street after the town sign turn left into Forest Street, and then into the second street left, Beatties Road. The Evera entrance in around the second corner, to the right.
- From Melbourne via Woodend: Calder Freeway, exit Woodend/ Macedon, in Woodend turn left direction Daylesford; first street left after the sign Trentham, then into the second street left, Beatties Road, Evera is near the end, to the right.
- From Melbourne via Greendale-Blackwood: at T-intersection turn right, follow High Street, straight past traffic island, then first street to the right and second street to the left near the end. The gate is to the right
- From Daylesford: follow High Street as indicated above.
Contribution towards expenses: by donation
Booking and information:
Henk Bak 14 Forest Street Trentham Vic 3458
54241702 [email protected]
www.evera-ecosophy.com.au see under: activities