[Oe List ...] Mathews Symposium Reflection
Judi White
sophiacircle at windstream.net
Mon Dec 28 10:57:51 CST 2009
Adam, are you on facebook. I put 100 or so there and people have been tagging them. Quite a few on this dialogue are also on facebook. Doug Druckenmiller put some pics on as well.
--
Judi White
25 North Lake Street
Crescent City, FL 32112
Phone: (386) 569-6956
---- Adam Thomson <dmtmsn at language.eclipse.co.uk> wrote:
Also pictures - that would be really nice...
Love, Adam Thomson
END OF MESSAGE
At 14:04 28/12/2009, you wrote:
> From Janice Ulangca. I'm smiling at the very memory of the event,
> and putting my name at the beginning, as the source of these very
> personal observations about both people and presentations. I know
> several interested people who could not get to the symposium, and
> this report is especially for them. If you were one of the
> Symposiuneers, what struck you about the event? (Thanks Marshall
> for your insightful kickoff to these reflections.) I'd love to
> hear favorite quotes/impressions from workshop tracks I could not
> be in (you had to choose).
>
>The Mathews brothers were well-honored, with a balance of
>interesting history and timely implications for present and future.
>Bishop Felton May called them "the John and Charles Wesley of the
>20th century." Bishop Jim looked good, and only suggested his 90+
>years when he moved at a stately pace. The presentations to the
>whole group ranged from very good to over the moon. If you could
>not get there, you may want to get the document - when it's
>available - that will contain the presentations and the list of all
>who attended.
>
>Sights you could see most of the way through the event : A
>perplexed expression (who IS that vaguely familiar person?),
>followed by delighted recognition, then by exuberant catching up
>conversation. And hugging, lots of hugging. Each of us must have
>our own list of people it was terrific to see for the first time in
>a long time. Mine includes Jane Stallman, Joe and Marilyn
>Crocker, Margaret Aiseayew, George and Elise Packard, Jeanette
>Stanfield, Mary D'Souza, George Ensinger, Bain Davis, Randy
>Williams, Priscilla Wilson, Marie Sharp, Jack and Judy Gilles, Jan
>Sanders, Marshall Jones, Jean Watts, Gene Marshall, Donna
>Ziegenhorn, Susan and Forrest Craver. George and Carol Walters
>look much the same as I remember them from the 1980s.
>
>Doug Druckenmiller, ICA-USA board president, was smiling, after
>what he acknowledged has been "a very tough year", with the board
>now rebuilt after being down to two people at one point. Terry
>Bergdall, the new CEO of ICA-USA, was full of plans, and up for
>suggestions. Huge relief was generally felt that he is now in that
>position. Karen Sims is the one person on staff now fulltime (other
>functions, such as finances, are being contracted out as needed - a
>big personnel savings). After many conference calls, I was glad
>to meet Karen in person. Nan (don't have the last name), the new
>Executive Director of ICA Canada was there, and you could observe
>her with Karen drinking in EI/ICA history and culture.
>
>Though I had seen these folks more recently, for me it's always
>good to be with Nelson Stover, John and Lynda Cock, Martha Shepp,
>Bob and Sandra True, John and Ann Epps, Bill and Nan Grow, and Marge
>Philbrook, who does not seem to change a bit, and just twinkles with
>wisdom. I was addressed by, and am now on hugging terms with, three
>members of the Fifth City delegation, who were in my Urban Mission
>workshop track. Verdell Trice, Lily Fox, and Marie, the Executive
>Director of the 5th City Corporation, made sure that the seminary
>professors and seminary students who reported on their community
>research, stayed grounded in inner city reality. The seminary
>folks saw the value of their experience. George Holcombe guided our
>workshop group expertly - with folks from the west coast, the east
>coast, and the heartland. The workshop guides had an exhilarating
>time, with constant schedule changes due to the weather - and oh yes
>- that power outage even before the snowstorm hit. The power went
>out, conveniently at the end of the opening plenary when the speaker
>system was needed. The workshop groups were due to convene in rooms
>with window light but up dark stairs and down a dark hallway. No
>problem - in a few minutes Dr. Maynard Moore managed to get lots of
>flashlights for the stairs and hall. He was a genius at handling,
>and clearly communicating, all the necessary changes. The
>flashlights were only the beginning! We did, by the way, have
>electricity and therefore heat, after maybe an hour and a half?, and
>thankfully the rest of the time.
>
>Then there were the presenters. The seminary folks were all good -
>and their insights and context were encouraging to me, as I have
>wondered about what some pastors had been exposed to in
>seminary. But I'll mention three particular presentations.
>
>Bishop Felton May challenged us to know the current realities of
>inner city poor - a MESS - standing for Misery & Evil Side by Side.
>"All the poor need is an enabling environment... The poor are forced
>into the drug business to survive."
>
>Larry Ward led us on a journey, laced with humorous
>observations, toward a new understanding of how we create our own
>identity. It was an exhilarating mashup of what I think of as EI
>theology with his experiences with Buddhism in several parts of the
>world. "Kierkegaard: 'The self is a self created by itself.' This
>scares established institutions! Our created identity is important
>- we're coded to do it. It becomes harmful when we refuse to
>recognize that it's created - worship it - die for it - kill for
>it... We must figure out how to understand the construction of our
>own identity - and realize that this is a PLAY that we have
>created. So we don't need to hurt anyone that threatens our
>identity (personal, group, national) ... Thich Nhat Hanh: 'The
>Kingdom of God is always available. The question is, are YOU available?' "
>
>I don't recall being in an ICA gathering where the location was the
>headline story in the national news for several days. There were
>rumors that the Foundational Power of the universe had dumped on
>D.C. to keep the U.S. Senate in session until they acted on health
>care. But to me the extra time being snowed in at the hotel had a
>special power of its own. I was fortunate to be among folks over
>Sunday breakfast who had a chance to hear Cyprian D'Souza's talk on
>Kanbay. He had given it to the Corporate Social Responsibility
>workshop track, and this encore was by popular demand. Kanbay was
>formed in 1989 with social responsibility built into its DNA - not
>an afterthought of giving after profits are taken. It was acquired
>in 2007 by a much larger company, Capgemini, which was interested in
>the unique culture of Kanbay, and has kept Kanbay as a distinct unit
>with their own building in the large company complex in France, so
>that they can learn from Kanbay's approaches. I began spinning with
>hopeful possibilities for corporations as Cyprian described the
>practical organizational steps for translating values into behavior
>in a corporate setting, with cultural dynamics at the center. I
>thought of the church at every level when he said, "Culture is what
>you do - not what you say." And when he described the company's
>careful steps in dealing with nations with difficult human rights
>situations, I thought, "Some of these insights would be great for Afghanistan."
>
>This Symposium exceeded my hopes, and I am very grateful to those
>who dreamed it, and worked beyond hard to make it happen. I agree
>with Doug Druckenmiller's statement in the closing plenary. Doug
>said, "I think this has been another Great Turn - a turn to the
>center." The term "Great Turn" evokes the "turn to the world" when
>ICA was formed. As with that major turn, it hardly means the work
>is finished! So there are exciting future directions to be pursued.
>
>A blest and fruitful New Year to all on this list serv, and also to
>the folks you've built good working relationships with, in your own
>geography. Namaste.
>
>Janice
>
>
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