[Oe List ...] A movement in the making

KroegerD@aol.com KroegerD at aol.com
Tue Apr 11 20:39:05 EDT 2006


I'm going.  Maybe I'll see you there?
 
Dick Kroeger
 
 
Forwarded Message: 
Subj: Tikkun Spiritual Activism Conference 2006 Information for  Registrants  
 Date: 4/11/2006 7:10:27 PM Central Daylight Time  From: 
_Tikkun at mail.democracyinaction.org_ (mailto:Tikkun at mail.democracyinaction.org)   To: 
_dickemail at aol.com_ (mailto:dickemail at aol.com)   Sent from the Internet _(Details)_ 
(aolmsg://06d25e80/inethdr/2)  



Below you will find: 
~Registration Confirmation and a Letter of Welcome From Rabbi Michael  Lerner
~Important Logistical Information on the Spiritual Activism  Conference, May 
17-20 2006
Dear Friends,  
I’m so delighted that you have registered for the Conference on Spiritual  
Activism, at which we will be taking the next steps in creating a Network of  
Spiritual Progressives. 

We have an amazing opportunity to make this an  historic moment. We’ve 
created this gathering for people who want to find a way  to challenge the misuse of 
God and religion by the Religious Right, to challenge  those aspects of the 
liberal and progressive world that have been unsympathetic  or even hostile to 
spiritual and religious people, and to find a way to build a  New Bottom Line 
in American society to challenge the dominant ethos of  materialism and 
selfishness and replace it—by insisting that institutions be  judged rational, 
productive and efficient not only to the extent that they  maximize money and 
power, but also to the extent that they maximize love and  caring, generosity and 
kindness, ethical and ecological sensitivity, and awe and  wonder at the 
grandeur of creation. These are our official goals in creating the  Network of 
Spiritual Progressives, and this conference is meant for people who  share these 
goals. It’s designed to be not only an opportunity to hear some  stimulating 
ideas but also a chance to forge connections and deepen your  involvement in 
spiritual-progressive social change work.

To prepare for  the conference, it would be of great help to the success of 
this event if you  were to read my new book, The Left Hand of God: Taking Back 
Our Country from the  Religious Right. In that book, I lay out a Spiritual 
Covenant with America that  offers a starting place for bringing about a New 
Bottom Line. It is that  Spiritual Covenant which will be the focus of our efforts 
as we meet with  Congressional representatives on May 18, and since the 
elaboration of those  ideas cannot fit into a sound byte, it’s very critical that 
you have an  understanding of the full meaning of the eight planks of the 
Covenant, which  you’ll get by carefully reading the book.

At the conference, you’ll hear  some amazing speakers and also have 
opportunities to get together with other  people who share your interests. On 
Wednesday, we’ll offer trainings on all  eight points of the Spiritual Covenant with 
America to help you prepare for  meeting with your Congressional representatives 
on Thursday; you can choose the  training on the point that most interests 
you. We are attempting now to set up a  meeting for you with your Congressperson 
or U.S. Senator, or, most likely, one  of his/her aides, and hope that you 
can bring some other people from your  Congressional district with you to the 
conference and the Congressional meeting  who share your enthusiasm for a 
spiritual politics and who can be part of the  Wednesday training session. In 
addition, we’ll have small groups that will meet  each day so that you can share 
with others some of your reactions and ideas.  Throughout the week, you’ll be 
able to choose from workshops that will add a  spiritual or meaning dimension to 
many of the issues you care about; many of  these workshops will give you an 
opportunity to network with others around these  issues and get specific ideas 
for getting involved. If you like, you can start  NOW getting to know other 
conference registrants who share your interests by  participating in our 
pre-conference online forums at: 
_http://spaceshare.com/conference/nsp/?q=forum_ 
(http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=106187643&url_num=1&url=http://spaceshare.com/conference
/nsp/?q=forum) . 

Enter  the following username and password as the page loads:
Username:  camel
Password: needle

Then create your own user name and login, and  choose the topic in which you 
would most like to meet people and make  connections. Below that topic, click “
Introductions” and then “Post new forum  topic.” Simply describe what you’d 
like other people to know about you and  especially: 

1. What draws you to this movement or this particular subtopic of  it?
2. What would you like to work on after the conference?  

As the conference gets closer, we’ll send instructions for the next steps  
for the forums. 

I’m sure that you have talents, experience, resources,  and connections that 
could help build an ongoing movement of spiritual  progressives. But how do we 
figure out how to most effectively channel all that  you bring in ways that 
will feel fulfilling to you and be useful to building the  movement? 

Truth is, we don’t yet fully know how to do this. We just  don’t know enough 
about you and we don’t have enough funding for staff to have  people who can 
sit down with you and hear your story and learn about your  talents and what 
you are willing to do to help make this project grow. That’s  why we’re asking 
you to do some thinking about what you might enjoy  doing.

An easy way to get involved is to invite five or ten friends to  join you in 
a study group around The Left Hand of God. This group might  then grow into a 
local chapter of the Network of Spiritual Progressives through  which you can 
plan events and activities to raise consciousness around our three  goals. In 
fact, some of our national staff will be doing a speaking and  organizing tour 
in the coming months, and we’d love to speak to people in your  town and get 
to know you and your group. Contact Nichola at tikkun.org if you have  a group of 
ten or more paid-up members who would benefit from a visit or for  help in 
getting names of Tikkun readers in your area who might respond to your  call to 
help create a local chapter. On the other hand, if there already is a  chapter 
functioning in your area and it doesn’t appeal to you for some reason,  you 
don’t have to try to change its direction or leadership—you are welcome to  
start another local chapter or project group (because we are attempting to give  
chapters maximum autonomy within the guidelines set by the Q&A on our  
website and by the Spiritual Covenant with America, we don’t know all the local  
leaders nor can we testify that they are the best people to be leading a local  
group, so if you don’t feel comfortable with them, yet do feel excited about 
the  basic ideas of the Network of Spiritual Progressives, please don’t use 
their  either real or perceived weaknesses as your reason for diminishing your  
commitment to building the spiritual progressive consciousness in your area—just 
 build your own independent project or chapter with at least ten other 
paid-up  members of the national NSP). 

But what if you don’t want to do that  local chapter building, but still want 
to give some of your talents to making  this happen? Here is where I 
particularly need your help in figuring out how to  make this happen.

In some arenas, it’s going to be relatively easy  because you can begin to 
work without needing our prior direction or approval.  Check our website 
regularly—because we will be putting up materials that can be  useful.


Show an NSP video or DVD to friends, neighbors, work or  religious community 
contacts: We have videos and DVDs with Rabbi Michael  Lerner and others 
introducing people to the NSP, a project of The Tikkun  Community. You do not have 
to have a large living room—if you can fit 8-10  people, that’s fine. Invite 
them over, and ask them to bring some treats to  share. After watching the 
video, spend some time talking about what people  liked about it (not just what 
they disagreed with). Then offer people  interested in becoming members of the 
NSP copies of the NSP brochure.  


Media: If you have contacts with media and are ready to  approach them about 
covering the Network of Spiritual Progressives, you can do  that even now, 
before the conference, or right afterwards. Don’t wait for  us—just do it. Or 
even if you don’t have those contacts, you could call your  local newspaper and 
ask them if you could write about the conference as a  volunteer 
correspondent. Or you could insist that they cover it themselves. Or  get them primed to 
cover the next conference. 

Fundraising or Grantwriting: If you have contacts on  foundation boards, 
please speak to them about helping us. If you have talent  at writing grants, 
start researching foundations that you think might be  helpful, and then write a 
grant using the information on our website and that  you’ll get at our 
conference. Then send it to us so we can be the ones who  approach the foundation 
directly.


Churches, Synagogues, Mosques, Ashrams, Professional  Organizations, or 
Unions: If you have contacts with the national office of  your denomination or 
religious community, your professional organization, or  your union, ask them to 
invite the NSP to present our ideas at their next  national and regional 
conferences and to interview NSP staff and write an  article in their national 
magazine. Or help devise a strategy for getting our  ideas presented on the local 
level around the country even if you can’t get  the national leadership on 
board. Form a caucus with others who share your  interest in the NSP in your 
church, synagogue, mosque, ashram, professional  organization or union—and then 
start working together to push forward these  ideas. 


Spiritual Democrats or Spiritual Greens: Perhaps you would  like to take a 
first step toward bringing our ideas into the liberal and  progressive world, 
challenging the hostility that has existed to spiritual  consciousness and 
helping them develop an awareness of why America needs a  spiritual left. Please 
approach your local branch of the party, or any other  party you wish to work 
with, and write also to the national chair. Tell them  you want to create a 
caucus for Spiritual Democrats or Spiritual Greens, (or  spiritual Republicans—
whatever party you feel fits you) and ask them how they  can help you publicize 
this and get support for it on the local and national  level. The goal of these 
caucuses is to move those parties or any other  political parties 
(Republicans, Peace and Freedom, Libertarians, or other  parties) to adopt the analysis 
and ideas of the NSP. The Spiritual Covenant  with America that can be used by 
the Dems and/or the Greens in the next  campaign, or by any other party as 
well, and of course there will be platform  ideas emerging from our conference 
and the next one in 2007 that you can draw  upon.


Social Change Movements: Approach local branches or  national offices of the 
environmental movement, the women’s movement, civil  liberties, civil rights 
and human rights organizations, the anti-war movement,  disability rights 
movement, or any other movements with a progressive social  change organization. 
Ask if you can make a presentation of the ideas of NSP  and how they might help 
build a more effective and deeper  movement.


Circulate a Petition Endorsing the Spiritual Covenant with  America: We will 
supply you with petitions that you can take to your  workplace, into your 
religious organization, or door-to-door to your  neighbors. When you’ve collected 
a few hundred signatures, bring them to the  local city council and ask for 
your town or city to endorse the covenant, or  try to put it on the ballot as a 
popular initiative for the public to vote on.  The resulting debate will 
certainly generate an interesting opportunity for  public discussion about ideas 
that have largely been kept out of the public  sphere till now.


Poets, Writers, Songwriters, Filmmakers, Artists, Television  Producers, 
Graphic Artists, and Web Design Experts: Write poetry, songs,  fiction, 
non-fiction, create movies and art that embody our message. Send what  you’ve produced 
to Tikkun—some of it we may be able to use in the magazine  (though no 
promises). Convince people to do TV and movie documentaries about  our efforts. Or 
write magazine stories about the building of a Network of  Spiritual 
Progressives. Design a beautiful logo for the Network of Spiritual  Progressives, or a 
bumper sticker, or a membership pin. Come up with design  elements that we could 
use to identify visually a politics of love and  generosity.

Whenever possible, we want you to take the initiative to make something  
happen, rather than waiting for us to respond to an email or to come up with  
ideas or contacts for you. Of course, if there are pieces of information that  you 
need, or promotional material, please do connect with us.

You might  have other skills that you want to bring to us. Perhaps you have a 
relative who  might put NSP in their charitable-giving portfolio or their 
last will and  bequest, or perhaps you know a national leader in an important 
charitable giving  foundation, political, religious, or social change 
organization, or perhaps you  can bring us some brilliant new social theorist or 
theologian, but you need for  us to make the contact. Or perhaps you have some other 
skills that we haven’t  thought about. Or perhaps you’d be interested in 
coordinating one of the  national projects mentioned on our website. For these, I’d 
like to invite you to  write to me—tell me about you, your background and 
skills, your time  availability, and your own ideas about how to implement the 
ideas of the NSP,  and what specifically you’d like to do and how you imagine 
proceeding if I say  “yes.” Write me at 951 Cragmont Ave., Berkeley, CA 94708 
or at  RabbiLerner at tikkun.org (even better if you send a picture either in the 
letter  or online—I have a notoriously bad memory for names, and the picture 
can remind  me of who you are). If you have ideas about what we should be doing 
at the NSP,  or a catchy formulation for some part of our ideas, or a 
dynamite plan for how  to reach out to people who are not yet part of our network, 
you can send them to  me on email: RabbiLerner at tikkun.org, though I have to warn 
you in advance that  ideas that don’t come with someone willing to implement 
them are far less  exciting to me and far less likely to elicit a response—
because at this point,  there is no one to actually make your ideas happen, no 
matter how brilliant they  are, unless you are. 

I’ve put all this about what happens after the  conference first in this 
letter because the conference is not meant to be just  an opportunity to hear 
great ideas, but one step in a larger process to build a  progressive spiritual 
movement. But now let’s turn to how to make this  conference as successful as it 
can be.

The agenda is very full. Please  don’t feel that you have to be inside every 
session that is happening. Take time  for yourself to process. Beautiful 
Meridian Hill/Malcolm X Park is just a few  blocks south on 15th Street, and the 
weather should be great; find a place to  sit outside and meditate. (We’ll also 
have a meditation room available inside.)  Meet new people. Introduce yourself 
to strangers and tell them that you don’t  normally do that, but as a way of 
supporting this venture you are going to  extend yourself and want to meet 
them and get to know how they are. Suggest that  you go for a walk, or meet for 
breakfast, lunch or dinner at one of the many  restaurants in the neighborhood 
of the conference. Building personal ties is an  important part of this 
conference—and it requires you to make the effort. (At  one of our Tikkun 
conferences we had some people meet who then became active in  local Tikkun work, and 
eventually they became couples who are now happily  married—so let us know if 
that happens for you—we’d like to celebrate with you.)  We also have created a 
time each day for small group discussions, so please try  to attend those. 
(Also, let us know if you have facilitating skills and want to  help one such 
group work smoothly for the 4 days that they will meet (email 
_Allyson at tikkun.org_ (mailto:Allyson at tikkun.org) ). 

On the other  hand, when you are in a session, please listen carefully to the 
speakers and  help us keep the cross-talking to a minimum. If you want to 
connect with people,  go outside of the rooms where presentations are being made. 
And please express  your enthusiasm as visibly as possible. Our speakers have 
come to this event  without any pay, nor even payment for travel or lodgings. 
They deserve our  attention and our enthusiastic appreciation. And please 
note this: many of these  are people who are famous and respected in their 
arenas. They normally would  have an hour or more to present their ideas, and then 
plenty of time for  feedback and audience response. Here they are mostly 
getting 10-15 minutes. They  are modeling for us how people can cut back on ego in 
order to support a larger  cause. So please show them how much we appreciate 
them for that as  well!

We had one huge disappointment in our outreach for speakers. Though  we asked 
an equal number of women as men to speak, we did not come close to  creating 
the gender balance we had sought. Similarly, though we made a  considerable 
effort to target both potential speakers and participants from  communities of 
color, including offering scholarships and weekend-only options  for people who 
couldn’t take off from work, we were not as successful in that  regard as we 
had tried to be. We hope that when you start a local NSP chapter  you can make 
similar efforts and demonstrate to us how to be more effective in  that 
regard. Please understand that we’ve done everything in our power to  increase the 
leadership from women and people of color (including outreach to  every church 
in and around Washington, D.C.). We solicited names of women and  people of 
color and sent them invites to speak months in advance. In some cases  we were 
successful, in many cases not so much. We take this issue very  seriously, and 
apologize to you for not having been more successful. We also  sought 
religious diversity and often found that those communities selected white  males to 
represent them, and this contributed to a lack of the balance we had  sought.

On the other hand, please read the Q&A about the NSP,  particularly points 
12-14, which emphasize our desire to not make people feel  inadequate because 
they are white or because they are male, or to give the  covert message that 
they aren’t “really” the people we seek. We are really  delighted that you are 
coming. We will be discussing a broadened conception of  diversity at the 
conference, one that includes but goes beyond issues of gender  and race to also 
address class and religious diversity. In the final analysis,  we are not a mass 
movement organization trying to build an organization  representative of 
everyone in the population, but rather an organization with a  particular 
worldview, spelled out in The Left Hand of God, and we are seeking  those who agree 
with that perspective, whatever their gender, race, class or  religious (or 
non-religious) background. So while we have made a supreme effort  to increase 
diversity and remain committed to that goal, we’ve sometimes had to  back away 
from getting people who might supply us with that kind of diversity  but who do 
not enthusiastically embrace the worldview which it is our goal to  spread.

Please get involved in helping us refine the platform for the  Network of 
Spiritual Progressives. While we intend to use the version of the  Spiritual 
Covenant with America found in The Left Hand of God as our foundation  for the 
next two years, we will be collecting and discussing suggestions about  how to 
best develop and add to (or subtract from) those ideas—so we will be  listening 
carefully to the discussions that take place in our NSP chapters, the  
feedback we get from the variety of religious communities we are seeking to work  
with, and the feedback we get from individual members. The Spiritual Covenant  
itself came out of that kind of process, and we intend to continue listening  
carefully to our members and allied groups as we prepare to issue a revised  
version in 2008 that best and most elegantly conveys what our New Bottom Line  
would look like if translated into policy terms. Write your suggestions and give 
 them to our staff and after the conference send a copy to nichola at tikkun.org 
(or  a letter to NSP, 2342 Shattuck Ave. Suite 1200, Berkeley, CA, 94704). 
There may  be areas that you imagined would be discussed at a workshop that are 
not being  discussed, or that simply are not on the agenda. So tell us what we 
should be  saying about that area and what language we should use to talk 
about it.  Remember, though, that our goal is not to repeat a laundry list of 
progressive  ideas, but specifically to show what a spiritual perspective might 
add to a  progressive agenda that would be fundamentally different from what 
you would  expect to hear from, say, Z Magazine or The Progressive or Mother 
Jones, or from  the Greens, or from some of the other quite wonderful and 
respected voices of  liberal and progressive thought. We are not seeking to duplicate 
them or show  that we have the politically correct line on all issues, so if 
it’s something  that you’d likely hear elsewhere it’s not what we need to be 
saying, because we  already endorse the liberal and progressive agenda. Please 
remind people of this  point when they get up at a session and say, “Why didn’
t you address point J or  point S of the progressive agenda?” Always ask 
them: is there something we  should say which is different in content than what 
other progressive groups say  on these points, something that only would be said 
by people who are talking  from the standpoint of a New Bottom Line? If not, 
we don’t need to add it to our  agenda, since we are only creating a Spiritual 
Covenant with America as a  vehicle to teach people what it would be like to 
think about public issues with  a spiritual progressive perspective, and don’t 
need to duplicate what is already  being done very well by others. 

Undoubtedly there will be people at our  conference who get on your nerves. 
When we start talking about a world based on  love and generosity, each of us 
gets a bit nervous, because we remember the  moments in our own lives when we 
allowed ourselves to hope and made ourselves  vulnerable, and then got 
disappointed, shot down, even betrayed. So people have  a variety of coping mechanisms 
to handle the anxiety that arises when they start  hoping again. Some become 
excessively negative, wanting to show that none of  this is really possible 
and we are being so unrealistic. Others get in touch  with feelings that they’ve 
never been adequately recognized, so they take this  moment to either (a) 
dominate a discussion and not provide space for others, or  (b) react harshly to 
others who are dominating. Still others attack the whole  gathering.

When people get into this space, we need to be compassionate  toward them, 
and understand the legitimate roots of their upset. But we also  need you to 
take responsibility to gently and compassionately interrupt that  kind of 
discourse, tell them that you are happy about this event even with all  its 
deficiencies, and ask them to please use public space to talk more about  what is good 
rather than what is not. Most of us have been taught how to catch  attention 
by critiquing some idea that has been presented to us, but few of us  have 
learned how to give praise and support when something is said or something  is 
happening that deserves that praise. So if you hear something or witness  
something at the conference that is positive, spread the word. We invite you to  tell 
others about it (both here and afterwards), and model for others what it’s  
like to enter public space with a positive rather than merely a critical  
comment. But if people continue to persist in anger or negativity, don’t get  
intimidated or feel that you have to give them support for anger or negativity.  
Instead, gently but firmly tell them that this conference is really not the  
place for them to be acting out those feelings, that we’ve come together to  
model what a loving community could be, and that it would be better for all of  us 
if they left and only came back when they felt they could add to the positive 
 energy that we are seeking to build. 

I’m sure that when you look at the  agenda (a final version won’t be 
available on the web till May 15th, but please  look at it before then at 
_www.spiritualprogressives.org_ 
(http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=106187643&url_num=2&url=http://www.spiritualprogressives.org) ) you’ll think of 
dozens of ways  to change the agenda to make it better (fewer speakers, perhaps—
but remember  that one of the reasons we have so many speakers is to attract 
people from a  variety of different constituencies who might not have come 
without a speaker’s  presence symbolizing to them that their interests were 
considered). However,  it’s too late to change the agenda, so please don’t put 
energy into that. There  are always people who approach us at the conference with 
the insistence that we  add people to the agenda or otherwise change it. We won’
t be able to accommodate  those demands and it will just make us tense and 
feel bad because the demands we  get are almost always coming from contradictory 
perspectives and would require  unmaking commitments that we’ve already made. 
We can’t do the agenda as a  response to whoever complains loudest at the 
last moment, so please accept this  one as is, and then after the conference help 
us figure out how to do it better  next time. 

This conference happened because people in the Tikkun  Community and All 
Souls Church, particularly the staff of both organizations and  a handful of 
volunteers, gave their time and energy to make it possible. so  please don’t fill 
their time at this conference with your complaints about what  isn’t working. 
Let them know how much you appreciate what they’ve been doing,  and volunteer 
your time to help us make the next conference even better.  

I hope that during or after the conference you’ll decide to personally  join 
The Network of Spiritual Progressives and pay the dues that will make it  
possible to continue this project. Clarification: Subscribers to Tikkun magazine  
are not automatically members of the Tikkun Community or the NSP—you have to 
pay  membership dues. If you pay your dues to the Tikkun Community or to the 
Network  of Spiritual Progressives, you will automatically get Tikkun magazine 
as a  membership benefit. Join at www.spiritualprogressives.org)

Finally, a  word of personal appreciation. This whole venture is only 
possible because you  have decided to make it real. I so deeply appreciate your 
willingness to join  with me on this path. The war in Iraq, the escalating 
environmental destruction,  the erosion of civil liberties, the attempts to pass 
punitive legislation  against immigrants—all of these and more are reasons to hope 
that our venture  succeeds. You are making an important contribution simply by 
showing up with  supportive and loving vibes—the first step in building a 
movement whose  watchword must be the kindness we show to each other on this very 
challenging  path ahead. I pray that what we do turns out to be a real 
service to all of  humanity, the earth and God.

Love and blessings,

Rabbi Michael  Lerner

P.S. It is not too late to urge friends around the country to  attend this 
founding conference of the Network of Spiritual Progressives on the  East Coast. 
Instead of having them read about it in a newspaper afterwards and  wonder 
why they weren’t invited, urge them to be there with you—it’s going to be  an 
amazing event. On the other hand, if they intend to register, tell them not  to 
wait till the last moment. Last time we had to close registration before the  
conference began. 

To find the latest tentative agenda and also register,  go to 
_www.spiritualprogressives.org_ 
(http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=106187643&url_num=3&url=http://www.spiritualprogressives.org)  or call 1-510-644-1200 
between  9:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time. 
 
____________________________________
Important Logistical Information for the Spiritual Activism Conference
Lodging
A list of local hotels and hostels is available on our  website at 
_www.tikkun.org/community/spiritual_activism_conference/hotels-dc_ (ht
tp://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=106187643&url_num=4&url=http://www.tikkun.org/co
mmunity/spiritual_activism_conference/hotels-dc) _._ 
(http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=106187643&url_num=5&url=http://www.tikkun.org/commu
nity/spiritual_activism_conference/hotels-dc)  All Souls Church, Unitarian, 
is also offering a less  expensive home-stay option. Please see the website 
above for details, or email  housing at all-souls.org. 

Roommate Matching
Roommate(s) can make  staying in Washington more affordable, easier, and more 
fun. Check out the nifty  roommate matching system designed for us by 
SpaceShare by going to _http://spaceshare.com/nsp/_ 
(http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=106187643&url_num=6&url=http://spaceshare.com/nsp/) . 

Carpools and Travel  Networking
Traveling with other conference-goers is not only ecologically  sensitive but 
also more fun! Check out SpaceShare’s carpool and travel  networking system 
at _http://spaceshare.com/nsp/_ 
(http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=106187643&url_num=7&url=http://spaceshare.com/nsp/) . From this site, you 
can connect  with others coming to the conference from your area and make 
plans to fly,  drive, bike, walk, or take the train or bus together.

Directions and  Transportation
The church is located on the corner of 16th Street NW and  Harvard Street NW. 
Thorough directions and travel information are available on  our website at: 
_www.tikkun.org/community/spiritual_activism_conference/_ 
(http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=106187643&url_num=8&url=http://www.tikkun.org/c
ommunity/spiritual_activism_conference/) .

Parking  Near the Conference Site
Parking in the neighborhood around the church is  tight. Please be sure to 
read any posted signs about parking  restrictions.

There is a large free public parking lot at Carter Barron  city park on 16th 
Street and Kennedy Street, north of the church. From the  parking lot, you can 
either walk 15-20 minutes south on 16th Street or take one  of the buses (S1, 
S2, or S4 ) that run continuously up and down the street. Bus  fare is $1.50. 

Registration
Please arrive at All Souls Church  between 8 am and 9 am for registration on 
Wednesday, May 17th for full  conference passes and at 9am each day for one 
day passes. Please be prompt as  there are nearly 1,000 people to be registered 
and we want to ensure that  everyone can be processed efficiently before the 
conference begins. All  materials including final agendas, maps, restaurant 
information and other  specifics will be provided at registration. NOTE: If 
someone else has purchased  your conference pass for you under his or her name, 
please use his or her name  in picking up your materials.

Activities on Capitol Hill
On  Thursday, May 18, conference participants will engage in a teach-in to 
Congress  about the ideas in the Spiritual Covenant with America. We will set up 
meetings  with your Congressional representatives so that you can discuss 
with them this  whole new way to think about the issues.

Pray-In for  Peace
Thursday afternoon, we will host a vigil and demonstration near the  White 
House. More details on this event will be available on our website  soon.



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