Nonviolent Social Change: Creating and Supporting Movements
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901 12th Avenue,Seattle WA 98122
25 February, 2021
Description
A training in nonviolent social change, led by Kazu Haga, founder and coordinator of the East Point Peace Academy The Institute for Catholic Thought and Culture will focus on the theme "The Nonviolent Sift" for winter quarter 2021. This training is a part of a series that includes lectures on the nonviolence movement within the Catholic and Buddhist traditions. Visit the ICTC website to learn more. Nonviolent action has been proven as the most effective way to create systemic change, and yet the principles and strategies are often times a mystery to many. Join us as we explore some concrete practices and strategies in building nonviolent movements for change. Two trainings are available: A training for Seattle University Students: Friday, February 19, 3:30-5:30pm via Zoom A training for Seattle University Faculty and Staff: Tuesday, February 23, 3:45-5:45pm via Zoom Community members: Please email [email protected] if you are interested in attending a training. You will be notified a week before the training date if there is space available. Kazu Haga is the founder and coordinator of the East Point Peace Academy, a core member of the Ahimsa collective and the Yet-To-Be-Named Network and author of the book Healing Resistance: A Radically Different Response to Harm. He is an experienced trainer, certified in several methodologies of nonviolence and restorative justice. Having received training from elders including Dr. Bernard Lafayette, Rev. James Lawson and Joanna Macy, he teaches nonviolence, conflict reconciliation, restorative justice, organizing and mindfulness in prisons and jails, high schools and youth groups, and with activist communities around the country. Kazu was introduced to the work of social change and nonviolence in 1998, when at the age of 17 he participated in the Interfaith Pilgrimage of the Middle Passage; a 6-month walking journey from Massachusetts to New Orleans to retrace the slave trade. He spent a year studying nonviolence and Buddhism while living in monasteries throughout South Asia, and returned to the US at age 19 to begin a lifelong path in social justice work. He spent 10 years working in social justice philanthropy, while directly being involved in and playing leading roles in many movements. He became an active nonviolence trainer in the global justice movement of the late 1990s, and has since led hundreds of workshops worldwide. He is the recipient of several awards including the Martin Luther King Jr. award and the Gil Lopez Award for Peacemaking. Kazu is an avid meditator and enjoys being in nature, particularly with his dog. He is a die-hard fan of the Boston Celtics and of mixed martial arts, the latter of which he is still sometimes conflicted about. He resides in Oakland, CA.
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