Author Archive
Be Present Inc. invites you to… A Dialogue with author Clare Holzman:
“I’ve Always Known I’m Jewish, but How Am I Jewish?”
in the book: A Minyan of Women: Family Dynamics, Jewish Identity, and Psychotherapy Practice, a special issue of Women & Therapy: A Feminist Quarterly.
Saturday, June 25th 5pm
at the Resource Center of Nonviolence
515 Broadway
Click Here to Download a Flyer for the event.
Clare will discuss her article as well as how her own journey with the help of Be Present, Inc. led her to a deeper understanding of herself as a non-believing, non-practicing Jew, still claiming Judaism.
The book, A Minyan of Women: Family Dynamics, Jewish Identity, and Psychotherapy Practice, explores the diverse manner in which family dynamics shaped Jewish identities in ways that were unique and directly connected to their experiences within their families of origin. Highlighted is the diversity of experience of ethnic identity within members of a group of women who are similar in many respects and who belong to an ethnic group that is often invisible. Jewish people, like members of other ethnic groups are often treated as if their identities were homogeneous. However, gender, social class, sexual orientation, factors surrounding immigration status, proximity of family members to the holocaust or pogroms, the number of generations one’s family has been in the US and other salient aspects of experience and identities transform and inform the meaning and experience by group members.
This book was published as a special issue of Women and Therapy. Women & Therapy is the only professional journal that focuses entirely on the complex interrelationship between women and the therapeutic experience. Devoted to descriptive, theoretical, clinical, and empirical perspectives on the topic of women and therapy, the journal is intended for feminist practitioners as well as for individuals interested in the practice of feminist therapy.
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 Cover of Maxine's book.
Wed June 1 at 7 PM
Live Oak Green Grange, 1900 17th Ave, Santa Cruz
Sliding scale $5-15, no one turned away for lack of funds
Reception & book signing follows presentations.
Sharat Lin, President of the San Jose Peace and Justice Coalition, was in Egypt during one of its most life affirming historical events, the mass uprisings which swept away the 30 year old dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak. Even though the military is now in control, the people in Egypt still have more freedom than they have in decades. Sharat will show photos and a short video from Tahrir Square and discuss his perspective, based on his 5 years living in the Middle East and his research, on the Egyptian nonviolent peoples’ revolution and its import for the region and the world. Dr. Lin writes on geopolitics, labor, public health, South Asian and Middle Eastern affairs for a variety of print and on-line media. A medical researcher by training, he brings his interests in problem solving, inventiveness and healing to his analysis of sociopolitical trends.
Maxine Kaufman-Lacusta will start the evening with discussion based on her recently published book, Refusing to Be Enemies: Palestinian and Israeli Nonviolent Resistance to the Israeli Occupation. Ms. Kaufman-Lacusta is a Jewish Quaker and dual citizen of Canada and Israel. Her book is based on interviews with about a hundred Israeli, Palestinian and international nonviolent activists, many of them colleagues from her seven years of living in Jerusalem.
After Sharat Lin’s presentation, there will be Q&A with both speakers and then a reception and booksigning.
The event is sponsored by the RCNV and the Palestine-Israel Action Committee.
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 Ellie Foster
In loving memory of Ellie Foster
who died on April 27, 2011 in Santa Cruz, California. An activist, humanitarian, and dedicated advocate for peace and justice, Ellie was known and loved by many in and beyond the Santa Cruz community.
Ellie was a lifelong Quaker, pacifist, and peace activist. In the early 1960s, Herb and Ellie started the Santa Cruz Friends Meeting. In the 1980s, Ellie was the local director of Witness for Peace, and she was involved in direct nonviolent action in Nicaragua.
She participated in many other nonviolent activist movements, including serving as co-founder and member of the Santa Cruz Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and as a member of the Salt and Pepper Shakers Affinity Group during the Lawrence Livermore anti-nuclear action in 1983. Most recently Ellie performed with the Raging Grannies.
Memorial services for Ellie Foster will be held Saturday May 28, 3p.m. at the Santa Cruz Quaker Meeting (225 Rooney St, Santa Cruz). A potluck will follow. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Resource Center for Nonviolence: (Memo- in memory of Ellie Foster) 515 Broadway, Santa Cruz, CA 95060; or American Friends Service Committee, 1501 Cherry St., Philadelphia, PA 19102 (or online as gift in honor of a loved one: http://afsc.org/). Notes or cards may be sent c/o Herb Foster, 118 Myles Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060.
For more information: 831-423-1626
 Photo by Takao Takahara, visiting scholar at Monterey Institute of International Studies from Japan, who interviewed the Fosters on March 22, 2011 in their home in Santa Cruz. Takao is researching the peace work of Earle and Akie Reynolds, also long-time Santa Cruz residents and Quaker peace activists.
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May 20, 7:00p.m.: Nonviolence Resistance and the Current Crisis in Mexico, with Pietro Ameglio, at the Resource Center for Nonviolence, 515 Broadway, Santa Cruz. Dessert and coffee will be served starting at 7:00p.m.; Presentation 7:30p.m. For more info, contact Anita Heckman at (831) 423-1626×101.
Who is Pietro Ameglio? Pietro Ameglio of Mexico has worked for more than two decades promoting active nonviolence in Latin America. A university lecturer, popular educator and author of a book on Gandhian nonviolence, Pietro is a key figure in an emerging nonviolence movement in Mexico, offering new hope against uncontrolled drug violence and increasing militarization. He was one of the founders of the Peace and Justice Service (SERPAJ) in Mexico. SERPAJ is a Latin American organization working in 10 countries to promote human rights, social justice and nonviolent culture and struggle. Pietro founded the group Serpaj Morelos, which was honored with the Pfeffer International Peace Prize in 2008. Pietro has a deep, faith-based commitment to social justice and a deep grasp of Gandhian nonviolence.
Over the past four years, the drug violence in Mexico has claimed the lives of close to 40,000 people. In January 2011, Pietro played a key role in a public demonstration and fast in Juarez, the most violent city in Mexico. He wrote:
“We are in the midst of a tragic war not of our making – the Mexican government declared war against organized crime, and we know that violence generates violence. The saying of Gandhi is more than ever applicable here: ‘An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.’”
Several groups are coordinating events throughout the Bay Area to raise public awareness and support for nonviolence efforts in Mexico. Pietro’s engagements currently include:
May 14, 7 p.m.: IF Latin America Dinner, a fund raising event for Pietro’s work. 160 Sunflower Lane, Watsonville. For reservations or more information, email if.officemgr(at)gmail.com
May 16, 6 pm: Presentation at Monterey Institute for International Studies. For information please contact Pushpa Iyer at (831) 647-7104 or pushpa.iyer(at)miis.edu
May 17 and 18: Presentations in San Francisco (with Global Exchange and Fellowship of Reconciliation) and East Bay (with Fellowship of Reconciliation and Metta Center for Nonviolence) : venues and times TBA. For more information contact John Lindsay-Poland at johnpl(at)forusa.org
May 19, 7 pm: Short Brown Beret Meeting, 8 pm presentation by Pietro: Presentation at Watsonville Brown Berets Bike Shack. Contact Sandino Gomez at sandinista(at)freakreadio.org
May 20, 7 pm: Presentation at the Resource Center for Nonviolence, 515 Broadway, Santa Cruz. Dessert and coffee will be served. Contact Anita Heckman at (831) 423-1626.
The Bay Area groups coordinating Pietro Ameglio’s events include IF and the Resource Center for Nonviolence in Santa Cruz; Fellowship of Reconciliation and Global Exchange in San Francisco; and the Metta Center for Nonviolence
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By Mike Rotkin
Appeared in the 5/1/11 edition of the Santa Cruz Sentinel
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An opinion piece that appeared in the Sentinel two Sundays ago raises concerns about “an undercurrent of anti-Semitism in Santa Cruz.” The author explicitly targets the Resource Center for Nonviolence RCNV as contributing to this ostensible problem.
Let me begin by saying that I am not affiliated with the RCNV. I have attended several of their events over the years, occasionally donated money to them, and am friends with several of their staff. I also am Jewish, and although not a religious person, I have deep cultural roots in the Jewish community. Members of my family were exterminated in the Holocaust, my father was a leader in the Jewish community in Washington, D.C., and I identify as a Jew. As someone who grew up in a community where we were the only Jewish family among 300 households, I know a little about anti-Semitism.
I also wish that everyone commenting on the situation in the Middle East offered views that were balanced, offered only accurate information, and, perhaps most importantly to me, did not make the mistake of conflating their views on Israel with Jews in general. However, there are several fundamental problems with this opinion piece.
First, several of the events and individuals that are criticized in the piece have no relationship to the RCNV. There is not room in the brief space of my response to name every inaccuracy I found, but a few examples: The letters about Helen Thomas, whatever their merit, were written by individuals who have no relationship to the RCNV, its programs or staff. The one referenced letter that was written by someone who volunteers at the RCNV, but does not work there or speak for the center, raised questions about a foreign worker rather than Palestinians being responsible for the murder of a Jewish family in the West Bank. It is not anti-Semitic to observe that not every Jewish family murdered in the West Bank must have been killed by Palestinians. This is, apparently, one of the leads being followed by Israeli police.
Scott Kennedy is criticized for attending a meeting at the U.N. with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, but the author fails to point out that it was not to support Ahmadinejad’s frequently insane comments, but rather to ask critical questions about Iran’s nuclear program, treatment of women and minorities, and other human rights abuses.
The writer describes a discussion group on the Middle East sponsored by the RCNV in which he had participated and then attributes anti-Semitic quotes to several unnamed participants. As a result of little investigation, I found that nobody else who participated in the group can remember these quotes or anything like them being expressed.
The article criticizes the RCNV for sponsoring two speakers whom the author feels are outside the boundaries of civil and rational discourse. One of them, about whom I happen to share the author’s assessment, Imam Abdul Malik, who claims Jews bombed the World Trade Center, was not sponsored or in any way supported or endorsed by the RCNV.
The other, Norman Finkelstein, a serious scholar, gave a talk that I attended. I was extremely impressed with his documentation of all of his arguments. I felt that many in the audience who had come expecting to gather evidence of an irrational, “self-hating Jew” were pleasantly surprised to hear cogent and persuasive arguments about non-democratic elements of Israeli society and what Finkelstein feels is a self-defeating foreign policy for both Israel and the United States.
The author of this opinion piece has every right to express his views, but he makes exactly the mistake that he urges others to avoid — conflating any criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism. I am glad that the RCNV continues to encourage critical discussion and activism about the Middle East, and I see no evidence that they have contributed to anti-Semitism or any other breach of reasonable civil discourse in their work.
Mike Rotkin is a former five-time mayor of Santa Cruz.
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