7/16/2007
Ceremony Afterglow
7/15/2007
Join Us Now for the After-Ceremony Celebration at Heartland Cafe
(PHOTO: Michael McColly bangs the 1,579th gong of the celebration, commemorating the 1,579th day of the War in Iraq -- today, July 15, 2007)
Today on Chicago's North Shore Beach, Rogers Park
And striking a gong for each day of the War in Iraq -- 1,579 days total.
We are here till sunset.
Please join us afterward for a celebration at the Heartland Cafe (Glenwood and Lunt) for Emergency USA, a humanitarian, neutral, non-profit organization that provides high-quality treatment, surgery, and rehabilitation to civilians in war and post-war areas around the world, including Iraq and Afghanistan. Emergency also trains medical and non-medical personnel in these areas.
7/12/2007
MAP and DIRECTIONS
After the ceremony, there will be a party held at Heartland Cafe,
7/10/2007
Download Fliers and Spread the Word
Please click the links below to download PDFs of the fliers and distribute them in your neighborhood or city:
PDF: Prostrations flier (with tear-off address strips)Thanks!
PDF: Prostrations flier (color version)
7/07/2007
Calendar for Prostrations for Peace
Thursday, July 12, 2007, 6:30 p.m., at North Shore Pier, then moving to Heartland Cafe (7000 N. Glenwood, corner of Lunt and Glenwood)
PEACE CEREMONY
Sunday, July 15, 2007, from 5:00 a.m. (sunrise) to Sunset
AFTER CEREMONY:
CELEBRATION FOR PROSTRATIONS AND EMERGENCY
Sunday, July 15, 2007, 8:00 p.m., at Heartland Cafe
The Birth of Prostrations For Peace
Next week I will reach that milestone of adulthood and turn fifty. How and why a day on a calendar has come to have such psychological and almost spiritual significance, I’m not sure. Most people in the world don’t even live to fifty nor have the time or money to consider making a to-do about it. I’m HIV +, and I remember that I didn’t even think I’d turn 40, but here it is.
When my sister turned 50 two years ago, my brother-in-law had a big party for her. It was a joyous and raucous evening, friends and family coming from afar, toasts by her children, gag gifts, funny then emotional speeches. I was happy for her, but inside I dreaded the whole idea that in a year it would be my turn.
As the months passed, the date loomed, and I had no plans, no money to travel, which is usually my way out of all birthdays and holidays as a single man.
Then, Memorial Day came. I was sitting on the pier off of North Shore Beach in Roger’s Park, which is where I spend almost every morning doing yoga or resting after taking a long swim. I was feeling energized and grateful for this beach and the lake and my neighbors I see out here everyday. Over the years no matter where I have lived in Chicago, the lakefront has always been a sort of refuge for me in difficult times. Often it’s not so much the wide span of blue that changes my mood but watching the effect it has on other people’s bodies, especially children and older people.
Later, that day I read through the headlines of the suicide bombs exploding and saw the photos of the shrieking Iraqi women with their hands to their mouths. On TV, there was more of the same as well as the now familiar scroll of American dead, most all under the age of twenty-five and from unknown towns across America. Then I saw the name of a town in Indiana not far from where I grew up, where old aunts and uncles still live. And a rage came over me and all at once I’m feeling the awkwardness of my birthday and my loneliness and all of my problems begin to feel like bombs exploding now inside of me.
Once again, the news from the war has sucked out the sunny day and the buoyancy in my body.
That night walking along the lake one more time with the families and the couples strolling along the beach, I had an idea—a crazy idea.
Why not use this day to have another kind of ceremony? Why not invite my friends and family, all my neighbors, and, in fact the whole city of Chicago to this beach where I seem best able to cope? Why not invite them to confront with me the suffering of this war? Why not ask them to come and create a kind of organic altar to peace? To pray, bow, offer flowers, or whatever they feel in their heart they need to express?
The audacity of this thought made me laugh. But the next day back at the beach I told a friend of mine, a man I met strangely enough one morning far out in the lake as I swam by him and his wife. To my surprise, his answer was swift and serious. “Great idea! Let’s do it!”
A week later several of my friends are sitting around me at the Heartland Café, planning a ceremony that had nothing to do with my neurotic fears about my 50th birthday.
My friends and I don’t have the answers to this endless war. But what we do know and feel is a need to express our frustration and sadness, our common sense of grief and outrage at the useless suffering this war has brought to the people of Iraq, to our soldiers and their families, to our nation, and to the people of the world.
7/06/2007
What's Emergency all About?
Emergency provides free of charge, high standard medical and surgical care in war-torn areas.
Emergency promotes a culture of peace, solidarity and respect of human rights.
Emergency is an independent, neutral and nonpolitical humanitarian organization established to provide care to civilian victims of war and of land mines. All Emergency facilities are designed, built and managed by specialized international staff committed to training local medical personnel.
The work of Emergency around the world is possible thanks to the help of the thousands of volunteers and supporters.
1) The effective need for specialized medical or surgical services
2) The absence of similar humanitarian projects in the given country
Because health care is a basic human right, Emergency:
- offers medical and surgical treatment completely free of charge
- guarantees treatment to anyone in need of assistance, without any racial, ideological, political discrimination
- provides high quality assistance, employing standardized therapeutic and work protocols which have been tried and tested in emergency situations
- trains local staff thoroughly, with the intent of handing over all operations of the medical center to them and to local authorities as soon as self-sustainability can be achieved
Emergency builds:
- hospitals specifically dedicated to war victims, surgical emergencies and specialist therapy in places where there are none
- physical and social rehabilitation centers
- first aid posts for emergency treatment
- heath care centers for primary medical assistance
All Emergency facilities are designed, built and run by specialized international personnel, who provide training for local staff.
How is Emergency different than other organizations?
Emergency has the capacity, skills and focus to provide specialized long-term care for civilian victims of war and land mines free of charge.
Emergency provides high standard surgical and specialized care. Hospitals and rehabilitation centers are established and operated in depth and for the long term, from trauma surgery and advanced life support for civilian victims of war to public health clinics and First Aid Posts.
Emergency offers training programs for local medical and nursing staff in each of its permanent facilities.
Emergency creates a permanent health-care capacity where it operates through education and training of local health-care personnel. Emergency’s long-term goal is to have a sustainable system in place to be turned over to the local health authorities, where neutrality of care provided free of charge can be guaranteed.
What humanitarian programs does Emergency offer?
Emergency provides surgical, medical, pediatric, maternity and rehabilitation care to the survivors of war and land mines. Public Health Clinics and First Aid Posts are connected to the major Surgical Centers.
Emergency also offers social reintegration programs for rehabilitated victims of land mines and to war widows in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Who funds Emergency and Emergency, USA?
More than 90 percent of fund-raising is based on the activity of volunteers and the contributions of small private donors. More than 93 percent of those funds are allocated to humanitarian programs.
How are Emergency’s hospitals’ locations selected?
Humanitarian projects and programs are identified on the basis of most urgent needs of the populations in war-torn countries and the interaction of such needs with available local resources, project feasibility and opportunities.
Does Emergency stay involved with a hospital after it has been turned over to the local health authorities?
Emergency stays involved by providing supervision, further training and monitoring of compliance with agreed upon principles and protocols of care.
Are reports about Emergency available?
An Activity Report for 1994-2005 is avalible. It summarizes Emergency activities around the world. To request a copy of this reports contact http://www.info@emergencyusa.org/, or 724.766.4518.
EMERGENCY'S contact person for the Prostrations for Peace event is Gerri Gorman. People are encouraged to stop by the table at the ceremony to learn more, or contact Gerri at (312) 413-9013. Click to view a number of local events hosted by Emergency.
7/05/2007
The Significance of 108
The Significance Of The Mystical
Number 108
By Vaughn Paul Manley, M.A.
Copyright 2005. All Rights Reserved.
Have you ever wondered why a typical beaded necklace from the East, called a mala, is always strung with 108 beads? You'll find this to be the case not only in Hindu traditions but also Buddhist, Sikh, Jain and virtually any tradition that has it's roots in India. If you've ever been initiated into the use of a mantra you've probably been told to chant your mantra at least 108 times a day, not fifteen minutes a day. Why? In Japan the Zen temple bells ring 108 times to bring in the New Year. Obviously this number is significant. But why not a more rounded number like 100?
The early Vedic sages were renowned mathematicians and in fact invented our number system. 108 was definitely the number of choice for this simple reason: 108 represents the whole of existence. Here's some interesting reasons why:
1. The number 9 represents wholeness and 108 when added together equals 9. 1+0+8 = 9. Interestingly, if you multiply 9 times ANY number, the answer is always 9 when you add the numbers together. Try it! 1x9=9. 2x9=18. 1+8=9. 285x9=2565 2+5+6+5=18 1+8=9. 8543x9=76887 7+6+8+8+7=36 3+6=9 The logic behind this is that 9 represents wholeness or God and God times anything is always God since God is all there is!
2. The 9 planets travelling through the 12 signs constitutes the whole of existence. 9 x 12 = 108
3. The 27 nakshatras or lunar constellations each have 4 padas or parts. The 27 nakshatras are also spread over the 4 elements - fire, earth, air, water. This also constitutes the whole of existence. 27 x 4 = 108
4. Consider the powers of 1, 2, and 3 in math: 1 to 1st power = 1; 2 to 2nd power = 4 (2x2); 3 to 3rd power = 27 (3x3x3). 1x4x27 = 108. The logic behind this is that 1 represents 1 dimensional reality, 2 represents 2 dimensional reality, 3 represents 3 dimensional reality. When you mulitply their powers together then you encompass the whole of existence.
5. The universe is made up of 108 elements according to ancient texts. The current periodic table claims a few more than 108.
6. The diameter of the Sun is 108 times the diameter of the earth (give or take a few miles).
7. The average distance from the earth to the Sun is equivalent to 108 Sun's in a row (give or take a few miles).
8. The average distance from the earth to the Moon is equivalent to 108 Moon's in a row (give or take a few miles).