BHM: Joyfully Together : Anger, Rage, Love - Black History & LGBTQ2S+

Feb 27, 2021  14:30

(GMT -4:00) Atlantic Time

Event URL:  https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/joyfully-together-anger-rage-love-tickets-132549102935?aff=ebdssbeditorialcollection&keep_tld=1

ALL WELCOME

If you are unable to offer a donation at this stage, please contact us so we can make appopriate arrangments for you to attend. We wish all to benefit from this event.

To honour and cherish Black History USA and LGBTQIA+ Month, join us to hear the wisdom of Lama Rod Owens, Ruth King and sharing from Simran Uppal. They share Buddhist philosophy and contemplative practice, to recognize, honor and tap into anger, rage and love.

In a time when the politics of anger-who gets to be angry, how, when and at whom-infuse every institutional and cultural sphere, their wisdom will resonate with many: young adults, activists, political organizers, Buddhists, POC, those living in marginalized bodies.

Ruth King is the Founder of Mindful of Race Institute, LLC, and is a celebrated author, educator, and meditation teacher. Formally an organizational development consultant to Intel and Levi Strauss corporations, King currently teaches the Mindful of Race Training Program to leaders, teams, and organizations, weaving mindfulness-based principles with an exploration of our racial conditioning, its impact, and our potential.

King teaches mindfulness meditation retreats worldwide and develops meditation practitioners at Spirit Rock Meditation Center, Insight Meditation Society, and the Mindfulness Meditation Teacher Certification Program. She has a Masters Degree in Clinical Psychology from John F. Kennedy University, CA, and is the author of several publications including “Healing Rage; Women Making Inner Peace Possible” and her most recent, “Mindful of Race: Transforming Racism From The Inside Out”.

King - Elder, Heart Activist, African American with Choctaw roots, and native Californian, currently reside on the unceded territory of the Catawba indigenous nations in Charlotte, NC, with wife, Dr. Barbara Riley, and doggie Bodhi.

Lama Rod Owens is a Buddhist minister, author, activist, yoga instructor and authorized Lama, or Buddhist teacher, in the Kagyu School of Tibetan Buddhism and is considered one of the leaders of his generation of Buddhist teachers. He holds a Master of Divinity degree in Buddhist Studies from Harvard Divinity School and is a co-author of Radical Dharma: Talking Race, Love and Liberation. Owens is the co-founder of Bhumisparsha, a Buddhist tantric practice and study community. Has been published in Buddhadharma, Lion’s Roar, Tricycle and The Harvard Divinity Bulletin, and offers talks, retreats and workshops in more than seven countries. His latest book -Love and Rage: The Path of Liberation Through Anger he shares his personal journey with rage

Simran Uppal is from West London, and lives in Hackney. As a poet and theatremaker, they explore radical approaches to South Asian ecstatic poetry across lines of religion, and run a small theatre company, using art-making as a way to build community among queer people of colour. As a yoga teacher and educator they’re interested in joyful co-creation, trauma-sensitivity, and the spaces between embodiment, dreaming, and devotion. Simran is also the secretary of the newly founded Yoga Teachers Union, a branch of the Independent Workers Union of Great Britain, and works for an anti-poverty charity. Their practice is somewhere in the edges and overlaps of Plum Village, their sangha of socially engaged post-lineage yoga practitioners, and the anti-sectarian bhakti of their ancestors.

Val Regan has worked as a community musician since 1993. She leads choirs and singing workshops throughout the U.K. alongside song-writing and theatre projects. Her composition work includes a commission from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, documenting the experiences of older LGBT+ people in care homes and Significant Others, a collection of choral songs, celebrating notable LGBT+ lives. In 2017 she co-founded Out of the Archive, an arts company dedicated to researching and animating hidden queer histories. For the last fifteen years she has been the musical director of Out Aloud, Sheffield’s LGBT+ Community Choir.



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