#855 – Dick Bernard: Day Two: Youth Festival, and Law and Business Day, Nobel Peace Prize Forum Augsburg College March 7, 2014

PRE-NOTE: The Nobel Peace Prize Forum continues Saturday and Sunday March 8 and 9. Details here. I highly recommend the Forum, an annual tradition at Augsburg College. My thoughts on Day One (Dalai Lama) here.
Prime takeaway: Peace is a process, one person, one action at a time, which has immense cumulative effects. The guests know this, and convey this in one way or another in their talks. Everyone in every power pyramid, regardless of how seemingly insignificant they might be portrayed, or feel, has an equal stake in making our world a better place.
This morning I was walking towards Augsburg College with Tom Morgan. We parted company at Oren Hall, and he suggested that I take a look at the Peace Quilt Labyrinth there, an exhibit arranged by Janet Bear McTavish.
Thus began a usual great day at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum, now in its 26th year, bringing the community together to focus on the issue of Peace.
The basic message of the labyrinth, a series of 44 beautiful quilts, was the shared message of all faiths: what is often called the “Golden Rule”. Within the exhibit was this handout: Golden Rule – McTavish001
Janet (her maiden name, Bear, is actually German, she said), was completing setting up the labyrinth, but was most gracious, spending some time with me. Here are some photos from this must-see exhibit at Oren Center at Augsburg College, Minneapolis.
(click to enlarge)

Janet Bear McTavish with one of her quilts in the Labyrinth

Janet Bear McTavish with one of her quilts in the Labyrinth


SAMSUNG CAMERA PICTURES
Entry panel quilt

Entry panel quilt


My personal choice this first day was the Youth Festival, long a part of the Forum, open to students, this years focus grades 4-12. This years Festival co-sponsor was Youthrive. They did an expert job, including as MCs.
(The Youth Festival is not on the public program and by invitation to schools. I know of it from several years active involvement in it.)
Several hundred students were inspired by dynamic Nobel Laureate Leymah Gbowee (Liberia, 2011 Nobel Peace Prize); and Dr. Deane Marchbein, American President of Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders, Nobel Peace Prize 1999). Ms Gbowee is keynote speaker at the Forum on Sunday afternoon; Dr. Marchbein is keynote speaker on Saturday morning. Videos of their talks will be on-line at the Augsburg Peace Prize website soon.)
I have become accustomed to pleasant surprises at the Nobel Forums.
This year, along with the Quilts, another highlight occurred when Leymah Gbowee asked that the houselights be turned off; then asked the kids in the bleachers to turn on their cell phone lights. Here was the result:
cell phones on at Melby Hall, Augsburg, Mar 7, 2014

cell phones on at Melby Hall, Augsburg, Mar 7, 2014


The message of Ms Gbowee to the kids was simple: “you, the young people, are the light of the world”; a simple, powerful encouragement to everyone that they, individually, make all the difference.
Both Dr. Marchbein and Leymah Gbowee connected with their young audience, and one can imagine that lots of these kids and their teachers and parents went home inspired to light up their own worlds in a positive way, as we all can light up our world. (A few more photos at the end of this post.)
After the Youth Festival, I attended one of the workshops of Law and Business Day, and also the final talk of the afternoon. Both were worthwhile.
Looking for something worthwhile to do this weekend?
It’s not too late to attend and participate in this years Peace Prize Forum at Augsburg College. You won’t regret it.
Gallery. Click on any to enlarge.
Leymah Gbowee poses with kids after her talk.

Leymah Gbowee poses with kids after her talk.


Dr. Deane Marchbein, Doctors Without Borders, shared her experiences with the student audience

Dr. Deane Marchbein, Doctors Without Borders, shared her experiences with the student audience


from left Keith Nelson of Best Buy, Jothie Rajah of American Bar Association, Judge John Tunheim, U.S. District Court, and Wilhelmina Wright, Justice of Minnesota Supreme Court, discuss complexities of The Global Rule of Law: Crossing Boundaries.

from left Keith Nelson of Best Buy, Jothie Rajah of American Bar Association, Judge John Tunheim, U.S. District Court, and Wilhelmina Wright, Justice of Minnesota Supreme Court, discuss complexities of The Global Rule of Law: Crossing Boundaries.


Ira Bremmer President and Founder of Eurasia Group gave his views on international developments in Eurasia.

Ira Bremmer President and Founder of Eurasia Group gave his views on international developments in Eurasia.


The First Graders from Burroughs School worked their annual magic.

The First Graders from Burroughs School worked their annual magic.


Dr. Geir Lundestad (at left), Executive Director of Norwegian Nobel Peace Prize Institute, and Lynn Elling, center right foreground, co-founder of the Youth Festival 17 years ago, were honored guests.

Dr. Geir Lundestad (at left), Executive Director of Norwegian Nobel Peace Prize Institute, and Lynn Elling, center right foreground, co-founder of the Youth Festival 17 years ago, were honored guests.


World Citizen display at Peace Prize Youth Festival March 8.

World Citizen display at Peace Prize Youth Festival March 8.


The Festival of Nations, a long-standing program of the International Institute of Minnesota, was invited to publicize its annual Festival in St. Paul, May 1-4, 2014.  Its 2014 theme: "Peace Among the People".

The Festival of Nations, a long-standing program of the International Institute of Minnesota, was invited to publicize its annual Festival in St. Paul, May 1-4, 2014. Its 2014 theme: “Peace Among the People”.

#854 – Dick Bernard: GreenCardVoices.com: A Project to Document our Nation of Immigrants

One week from today, Wednesday, March 12, a fundraiser to celebrate the power of immigrant stories will be held at Target Field, Minneapolis. You are encouraged to attend, and make others aware of this important event as well. All details, including bios of the speakers, are here.
Your RSVP is requested.
Ours is a nation of immigrants: this is such an obvious fact that it often escapes notice. My own American roots are France (via Quebec) and Germany.
I was reminded of the extent of the immigrant population a few months ago. In the summer of 2013, I had reason to access the 1940 census of the tiny town of Sykeston ND, the place from which I graduated from high school in 1958. In that tiny town (pop. 274, in 2010, 117) in 1940, of the 161 adults 16 listed other states as birthplaces, and 11 were born in countries other than the U.S.
As late as 1940, one of six adults in the town were not native, even, to the state of North Dakota. I wrote a bit about this here, including the worksheet from the actual census here: Sykeston ND 1940 CensusRev, see page 3.
Tiny Sykeston was just one town, then.
Every reader could tell their own story: family members, ancestors, neighbors, friends….
We are a nation of immigrants.
Which leads again to Wednesday, March 12, 2014, 6-9 p.m. at Target Field in Minneapolis MN.
On that day, three immigrants to the U.S. will introduce GreenCardVoices.
All projects have their stories, and GreenCardVoices is no different. This new project already has a history.
Some years ago Laura Danielson, chair of the Immigration Department at Fredrikson and Byron, Minneapolis, decided that the stories of immigrants she knew were so interesting that they deserved retelling, and a coffee table book, Green Card Stories, was published in January, 2012.
The book did well, but over the subsequent months, Laura and others engaged with the book and its stories came to a conclusion: print books, however attractive, have their limits, particularly in these days of exploding technological capabilities to share information far beyond one home or one office coffee table, and Green Card Voices was born just a few months ago.
The project is described here, including a video (this is a video project, after all!).
The dream of the project is to video-document first generation immigrants with more than five years in the U.S. from all of the world’s countries (196 in all). These stories can then be shared broadly in various ways. It’s a very ambitious undertaking, but doable with adequate funding support from persons like ourselves.
By happenstance, I was in attendance at one of GreenCardVoices first public presentations at Hosmer Library in south Minneapolis November 2, 2013. Theirs was a fascinating program, and I am certain the program at Target Field next Wednesday will be fascinating as well. (Roy Woodstrom, librarian at Hosmer Library, is a child of an immigrant – his mother is German). The person who invited me to the presentation is a child of Swedish immigrants. And on we go.
Shepherding the project is Dr. Tea Rozman-Clark, native of Slovenia. Her bio is here.

Tea Rozman-Clark, Feb. 25, 2014

Tea Rozman-Clark, Feb. 25, 2014


RSVP for the Target Field event Wednesday, March 12, 2014.
You’re in for a treat.

#853 – Dick Bernard: An Opportunity to Talk With (not At, or Down to) Public Education, past, present, future

This morning, while waiting for my car to be serviced, I noted the Business Section of the Minneapolis Star Tribune. Leafing through it I came across an article by Chuck Slocum, about two personages involved in Public Education policy in Minnesota in the early 1980s. The article is headlined: Minnesota Education Duo: 3M CEO Lew Lehr and [then Minnesota Governor] Rudy Perpich.
Back home, my wife, a retired 3Mer, noted the article, and I said I’d already read it. “Interesting article”, she said.
Indeed. Interesting.
I know Mr. Slocum, not as well as I’d like to, and he’ll be specifically noticed by myself when I publish this blog, as will all of the people I can identify within public education, including the “education establishment” and retired, not only in Minnesota.
My career was in MN public education – primarily as teacher union staff (MEA, now Education Minnesota).
Mr. Slocum references a 1984 Study by the Minnesota Business Partnership (MBP): “Educating Students for the 21st Century”. My file copy of this now near-30 year old report can be read in its entirety here: MBP 1984 Education001 (Here is one page that I missed making the aforementioned pdf: MBP 1984 58 businesses002)
I first heard reference to this Study at a meeting of MEA Staff about November of 1984, and was last involved with it in about August of 1985.
In 2005 I dusted off the report, sent copies of it to the Minnesota Public Education establishment of the time, and urged them, as I am again urging them, and MBP et al, “that this might be an excellent opportunity to review the [now 30] years since the MBP report, and perhaps even get into dialogue about what happened, and didn’t happen, and why. (There were lots of dreams, and my suggestion was to look at the reality of what happened in the intervening years.)
From 1984 to today, and indeed before 1984, it has been my observation that the establishment, in this case, Big Business, and Public Education leaders, are better at declarations and positioning than dialogue, and as a result, fences go up, rather than walls come down about how best to do public education which is, after all, about children and their future in our society.

A little personal history:
Back in 1984, as Mr. Slocum might similarly recall, the process went like this, for me.
We learned about this report at a Union staff meeting. It had been published, and we were immediately put into a reactive mode against it.
I personally challenged our knee-jerk reaction at the union staff meeting in question, and afterwards called the Business Partnership and asked if I could have 50 copies of the report to take home to my Iron Range locals.
The answer was yes, and I recall going to the MBP office in the IDS Center in downtown Minneapolis to pick up the box of reports. Mr. Slocum came out of his office; I took the reports home, and gave them to my teacher leaders, who were far less than pleased with the indictment they felt against their work with students. Over the coming months there were some tiny and unsuccessful attempts at dialogue, including at the then-MEA Summer Leadership Conference in the summer of 1985.
But these attempts were perfunctory.
You don’t do dialogue past monologues, unilateral declarations, or fighting issues in the newspaper.
As stated, 20 years later, I tried again to encourage dialogue. I didn’t hear a thing from anybody.
Most recently, four years ago, by accident, I happened across an MBP official at a meeting. He and I had tried to facilitate a conversation about the MBP Report at a teacher meeting back in 1985. I was glad he came to the gathering at a Minneapolis hotel; but it wasn’t the time for a civil conversation. The bitterness of the teachers was too close to the surface.
It happened that in the 2010 conversation, conversation quickly turned to the latest clearly business centered initiative, to get rid of “bad” teachers, and essentially gut seniority and disempower unions. There was a petition going around….
The beat continues.
Mr. Slocum, in a conversation in recent years, said he and MBP were “proud” of what they did in 1984. And perhaps the pride was justified.
But it all fell apart because it was a talking down to, rather than dialoguing with, the institution they were criticizing.
Maybe they’re still proud.
I hope the folks talk….
A SNIPPET FROM THE PRESENT:
We have eight grandkids in Minnesota public schools.
Not long ago one of them, a 9th grade boy, said he couldn’t read handwriting.
This led to a realization that kids weren’t taught cursive handwriting any more. This puzzled me. I still handwrite letters I think are most “important”.
Very recently I was visiting with a middle school administrator who affirmed that they don’t teach much handwriting any more. The reasons given: computer keyboards are the way to communicate, but even more important, the dominance of testing, which makes subjects like handwriting a frill.
This troubles me….

#852 – Dick Bernard: His Holiness, The 14th Dalai Lama at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum, Minneapolis MN March 1, 2014

Give yourself a gift this week, and enroll for one or more days of the rest of the Nobel Peace Prize Forum at Augsburg College, Minneapolis MN (Friday through Sunday Mar 7-9). Here’s up to the minute information.
And since the Dalai Lama speaks from a global perspective, here are some interesting maps to help make a little sense of this interconnected world in which we live.
(click to enlarge snapshots, taken from a distance in less than ideal conditions for photography)

Anastasia Young, Dalai Lama and Tenzin Yeshi Paichang at conclusion of Dalai Lama's presentation

Anastasia Young, Dalai Lama and Tenzin Yeshi Paichang at conclusion of Dalai Lama’s presentation


Written March 2, 2014
We went to Day One of this years Nobel Peace Prize Forum specifically to see and hear the Dalai Lama. The rest of our day was too busy with other events, so we were at the Convention Center for the morning session only…along with 3200 others there to share in a piece of history.
My meager efforts were to try to listen, observe and take a few photos, a couple of which follow.
Most readers probably have at least heard of the Dalai Lama. At this website, there is a link to the entire program we viewed in person. The program begins at 56 minutes with Tibetan dances, with the Dalai Lama speaking at 1:20. Give yourself a gift, and listen in. You, better than I, can interpret the meaning of the formal proceedings.
For myself, I found myself translating His Holiness’ words about Peace to those of us sitting in the comfortable seats of the Convention Center auditorium.
Seating was open, and access controlled by three security stations like you find at all airports.
Anyone wanting to see the best of contemporary American society needed only to look at the very orderly throngs waiting to go through security. We lined up, snake-like, with no ropes, back and forth in the expansive lobby area. We moved slowly but steadily to our destination. More than once one of the security people complimented us on our group behavior. It was an opportunity to either be contemplative and/or to strike up conversations with nearby neighbors. In front of us were two folks from Bismarck ND, a Mom and daughter, who had driven several hundred miles for this event. Being North Dakotan myself, we had a common ground beyond the usual small talk.
Security was for a reason, and as informal as possible. Inside we took whatever seat was available, waiting for the program to begin.
In essence, this crowd practiced the ideals you can hear Dalai Lama speak about in his presentation.
After the obligatory introductions and opening remarks, came time for His Holiness to be introduced. A student from Concordia College, Moorhead, Anastasia Young, had the honor of introducing Dalai Lama. You will note a very moving and humorous moment as she is reading her introduction. An impish Dalai Lama was, in a sense, sneaking up on her from her right, and she wasn’t immediately aware of him.
It was a wonderful moment among many memorable moments.
At the end, shawls were presented to Dalai Lama, and he in turn presented them back, to Anastasia Young, and Tenzin Yeshi Paichang, student at Augsburg, who had delivered the questions to the question answer part of the program. The student had, at two years of age, played two year old Dalai Lama in the 1997 film, Kundun, about his life.
Anastasia, Tenzin, their colleague young people, and indeed all of us who yearn for peace, are the ones who need to carry the Dalai Lama and other prominent peacemaker messages forward.
There is no other way.
Enter Dalai Lama in your search engine, and you will come up with any number of items.
Later in the day, break out sessions talked about many aspects of Faith and Peace. Some weblinks that seemed interesting from the program booklet are these: Forgiveness 360; Nansen Dialogue Network; and the film, Ten Questions for the Dalai Lama.
Tenzin Yeshi Paichang gives question for Dalai Lama to Kathleen Wurzer, conversation moderator.

Tenzin Yeshi Paichang gives question for Dalai Lama to Kathleen Wurzer, conversation moderator.


Presentation and re-presentation of shawls at conclusion of Dalai Lama's conversation in Minneapois

Presentation and re-presentation of shawls at conclusion of Dalai Lama’s conversation in Minneapois


POSTNOTE:
Changing the course of human violent behavior is as essential as it is difficult. Back home, preparing for another event in our home life, I watched part of two History Channel programs, the first about the end of the Vietnam War in 1975; the second about “Superpower”, the notion that America is the one remaining superpower, with a presence everywhere on the planet. In both cases, what came across clearly to me was not our omnipotence, but our impotence about controlling everything, everywhere, any more.
We live together, or we all are, literally, “history”.