SPIRITUAL JOURNEYS, NEWS

CHANT – MUSIC FOR PARADISE II

www.stift-heiligenkreuz.org

Welcome to start the new year with us in the Abbey of Heiligenkreuz.

We start at 9 pm with praise and prayer, to 10.30 pm Holy Mass is rhythmically designed by young people. At midnight the Eucharistic blessing in the new year. Everything in the Church of the heated cross, where it is of course quite closely… After Midnight Blue Danube Waltz on the square in front of the pen and then is – by-free donation goulash soup and sparkling wine in the Kellerstüberl celebrated… Accommodation is possible in a sleeping bag and camping mat in college. Welcome to young and old. The entire programme for the next few days HERE

Wonderful and important contribution of Christian Zechner through our STIFT Heiligenkreuz. ORF – broadcast ‚Theme‘ to the look: http://tvthek.orf.at/ With Abbot Maximilian Heim, father Karl Wallner, Fr. Johannes Paul Chavanne and brother Timothy WERZ.

 

Previous #article #video

CHANT – MUSIC FOR PARADISE

http://www.facebook.com/stiftheiligenkreuz

 

Dringender Aufruf: 10-jr Mädchen Samar aus Ramallah benötigt Gehirnchirurgie um ihr Leben zu retten info v.@pcrftweets //57% of FUNDRAISER 4 BRAINSURGERY of 10yr old Samar from #Ramallah reached! Help Donate to #SaveSamar http://www.pcrf.net/ OR → RT

(mehr …)

Lifestyle: Towards a future of life in harmony with nature.

Biodiversity talks end with call for ‚urgent‘ action

www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment

 

For more information visit: www.cbd.int/2011-2020 , www.cbd.int/agro/food-nutrition

People’s Coalition on Food Sovereignty: www.foodsov.org/take-action

The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), known informally as the Biodiversity Convention, is an international legally binding treaty. The Convention has three main goals: 1. conservation of biological diversity (or biodiversity);2. sustainable use of its components; and 3. fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from genetic resources. In other words, its objective is to develop national strategies for the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity. It is often seen as the key document regarding sustainable development. MORE

The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are eight international development goals that all 192 United Nations member states and at least 23 international organizations have agreed to achieve by the year 2015. They include eradicating extreme poverty, reducing child mortality rates, fighting disease epidemics such as AIDS, and developing a global partnership for development.  MORE

As the United Nations and the Ministry of Environment of Japan prepare to globally launch the Decade of Biodiversity in Kanazawa, Japan, governments, businesses and ordinary citizens are being asked to do their bit to save our planet’s delicate ecosystem over the next 10 years.

With the COP17 summit in Durban concluding with hopes of a binding agreement on carbon emissions, there is hope that the Decade of Biodiversity can build on this achievement.

Biodiversity is of vital importance to us all as it underpins a wide range of ecosystem services on which we depend. It provides for food security, human health, clean air and water, it contributes to local livelihoods and economic development and is essential in the fight against poverty.

Yet despite its huge importance, the planet’s biodiversity is being lost at an unprecedented rate.

Throughout the United Nations Decade on Biodiversity (2011-202) governments are encouraged to develop, implement and communicate the results of national strategies for implementation of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity.

However, the initiative will not be without its challenges as governments and business strapped for cash in the current recession deal with a multitude of issues at the same time. So what can realistically be achieved over the next 10 years to prevent the loss of biodiversity? What can governments, business and you, the individual do to help the cause?

The involvement of a wide range of stakeholders, including children and youth, will be key to the success of the Decade. Already the United Nations has recognized the vital importance of our children’s education to the future of the planet. The Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity hosts and coordinates The Green Wave, a project to raise awareness and educate young people – tomorrow’s leaders and citizens – on biodiversity and on actions to preserve life on Earth. Each year, The Green Wave contributes to worldwide celebrations of the International Day for Biological Diversity (IDB).

The Organisation for Industrial, Spiritual and Cultural Advancement (OISCA) has been participating in The Green Wave all over the world since 2009. This year 2011, the International Year of Forests and the starting year of United Nations Decade on Biodiversity, over 14,000 children and adults at 105 OISCA sites in 13 countries have taken part in the campaign.

webTV – Tokyo: In a live and interactive web TV programme from Tokyo, two of the key figures driving the response to the planet’s loss of biodiversity will be answering your questions about the United Nations Decade on Biodiversity. http://www.cbd.int/2011-2020/media/webtv_jp.shtml

Yasuaki Nagaishi, Secretary General of OISCA (Organisation for Industrial, Spiritual and Cultural Advancement) will join with Ahmed Djoghlaf, Executive Secretary of the Convention on Biological Diversity at 20:30 (local time) on Tuesday December 20th to answer your questions.

 

http://www.350.org/ http://www.facebook.com/350.org

http://en.wikipedia.org/Kyoto Protocol

 

Previous #articles, #videos:

Japan – Nagoya Biodiversity Agreement

CBD – UN Convention on Biological Diversity

Eradicating Ecocide – Rights for the Planet

 

http://www.facebook.com/UNBiodiversity

http://www.facebook.com/United Nations Millennium Campaign

http://www.facebook.com/iucn.org

http://www.facebook.com/road2rio20

(mehr …)

Global Financial Integrity: Illicit Financial Outflows from Developing World

http://www.endtaxhavensecrecy.org http://robinhoodtax.org

http://www.gfintegrity.org/content/view/486/70/

http://www.g20transparency.com/who_suffers.php

A new report from GFI finds that the developing world still lost over $900 billion in illicit financial outflows in 2009 despite the onset of the global financial crisis. The report, which was just published today, estimates the developing world lost US$8.44 trillion over the decade ending in 2009.

Global Financial Integrity’s new report on illicit financial flows leaving the developing expands previous studies using the latest available data through 2009. The report finds that despite the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, global illicit flows still approached US$1 trillion.

Read the report… http://iffdec2011.gfintegrity.org/

 

http://www.facebook.com/GlobalFinancialIntegrity

http://www.facebook.com/FinancialTaskForce

http://www.facebook.com/TransparencyInternational

 

http://www.tackletaxhavens.com

http://www.endtaxhavensecrecy.org/en/take-action/

http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/interactive/2011/dec/01/world-corruption-index-transparency-international-map

 


Human Rights Day 2011

http://www.ohchr.org

http://www.celebratehumanrights.org/

The Week Ahead: December 5-11 – The Week Ahead is a handy listing of key events of the coming week affecting RFE/RL’s broadcast region. Now on Twitter! Daily updates at @The_Week_Ahead.

SATURDAY, December 10: UN: Human Rights Day

This year thousands of people decided the time had come to claim their rights. They took to the streets and demanded change. Many found their voices using the internet and instant messaging to inform, inspire and mobilize supporters to seek their basic human rights.

Social media helped activists organize peaceful protest movements in cities across the globe—in Tunis, in Cairo, in Madrid, in New York, and in cities and towns across the globe—at times in the face of violent repression.

It has been a year like no other for human rights. Human rights activism has never been more topical or more vital. And through the transforming power of social media, ordinary people have become human rights activists.

VIDEO 2011: An extraordinary year for human rights – 2011 has been an extraordinary year for human rights, UN Human Rights Chief, Navi Pillay says in her message to mark Human Rights Day.

Human Rights Day is marked annually on 10 December, it commemorates the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by the UN General Assembly in 1948. Videos: The videos found here are available for use on Human Rights Day.

http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Day2011/Pages/Videos.aspx

Human rights belong equally to each of us and bind us together as a global community with the same ideals and values. As a global community we all share a day in common: Human Rights Day on 10 December, when we remember the creation 63 years ago of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

On Human Rights Day 2011 we pay tribute to all human rights defenders and ask you to get involved in the global human rights movement.

The High Commissioner for Human Rights will host a global conversation on human rights through social media on Friday, 9 December at 9:30 A.M., New York time.

We want you to be part of it: join the conversation, send a question, watch it live. More details coming soon.

Join us on Facebook as we countdown to Human Rights Day with a „30 days and 30 rights“ discussion on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights or follow us on Twitter #CelebrateRights.

Help us celebrate human rights!

http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Day2011/Pages/HRD2011.aspx

International human rights law refers to the body of international law designed to promote and protect human rights at the international, regional and domestic levels. As a form of international law, international human rights law is primarily made up of treaties, agreements between states intended to have binding legal effect between the parties that have agreed to them; and customary international law, rules of law derived from the consistent conduct of states acting out of the belief that the law required them to act that way. HERE

Watch LIVE tomorrow on UN Webcast @ 10:30am Geneva time. http://bit.ly/bjdKsc „Social Media and Human Rights“ Panel participants include acclaimed activists: Wael Abbas, Maite Azuela, Bassem Bouguerra, Ednah Karamagi, Meg Pickard and Salil Tripathi. Read on: http://bit.ly/vaWr6Y


Celebrating the birthday of human rights!

http://www.unmultimedia.org/tv/webcast/2011/12/human-rights-go-viral.html

During the event in New York, UN High Commissioner for human rights answered questions from multiple social media platforms. Through Skype, UN Messenger of Peace and writer Paulo Coelho, asked about the role of culture and art in protecting and promoting human rights. “Art and music,” stressed Pillay “can reach out to a wider audience and carry very powerful human rights messages.”


Happy Human Rights Day! uploaded by UNOHCHR on Dec 10, 2011:

Endless Poverty is a Human Rights Failure, December 7, 2011, By Thomas Pogge – Dr. Pogge is Director of the Global Justice Program and Leitner Professor of Philosophy and International Affairs at Yale University. He serves on Global Financial Integrity’s Advisory Board.

This Human Right Day, let us be mindful of the ways in which our emerging supranational institutional architecture can be reformed to ensure that the poorer half of humanity, too, can achieve at least a proportionate share of global economic growth.

Socioeconomic rights, such as that “to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of oneself and one’s family, including food, clothing, housing, and medical care” (UDHR, Article 25), are currently, and by far, the most frequently unfulfilled human rights. Their widespread under fulfillment also plays a major role in explaining global deficits in civil and political human rights demanding democracy, due process, and the rule of law.

Extremely poor people — often physically and mentally stunted due to malnutrition in infancy, illiterate due to lack of schooling, and much preoccupied with their family’s survival — can cause little harm or benefit to the politicians and civil servants who rule them. Such officials therefore pay much less attention to the interests of the poor than to the interests of agents more capable of reciprocation, including foreign governments, companies, and tourists.

Read on Global Financial Integrity’s Blog:

http://www.financialtaskforce.org/endless-poverty-is-a-human-rights-failure

http://www.amnesty.org/en/economic-social-and-cultural-rights

http://degrowthpedia.org/index.php

 

http://www.facebook.com/FinancialTaskForce

http://www.facebook.com/United Nations Millennium Campaign

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.ohchr.org

#video What is your wish? #CelebrateRights

http://twitter.com/unrightswire

http://www.youtube.com/user/UNOHCHR

http://www.facebook.com/unitednationshumanrights

http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/environment/environ/index.htm

Ai Weiwei – An Artist’s Stand

http://www.aiweiweifilm.org

Interview: http://artistsspeakout.com

www.aiweiwei.com/ wikipedia.org/Ai_Weiwei

www.financialtaskforce.org/about/overview

#video www.makeaidtransparent.org www.aidtransparency.net

The Task Force on Financial Integrity and Economic Development, a consortium of governments and research and advocacy organizations , focuses on achieving greater transparency in the global financial system for the benefit of developing countries.

The Task Force on Financial Integrity and Economic Development will address the inequalities in the global financial system that penalize billions of people, and will advocate for greatly improved transparency and accountability. The opacity and complexity of our financial system is at the heart of the current financial crisis, and significantly impedes development.

Task Force efforts are integral to those of The Leading Group on innovative financing, comprised of more than 50 countries, to mobilize stable and predictable resources to supplement traditional development assistance.

In November of this year, more than 30,000 people, most of them from China, donated about $1.4 million to one man. The donations flowed in all shapes and sizes—wrapped around fruit and thrown into his lawn, folded into paper airplanes, and one even wired in from the German government’s human rights commissioner. The man wasn’t a spiritual leader. He wasn’t ill and he wasn’t going to donate any of it to charity. In fact, he deposited nearly the entire sum into a government account—as a guarantee on his tax evasion charges. The man—not a leader or a humanitarian—is an artist.

His name is Ai Weiwei and the Chinese government claims his design firm, Beijing Fake Cultural Development Ltd, owes it nearly $2.4 million in back taxes and fines. Ai has responded he doesn’t even own the company.

It is likely Ai Weiwei’s true crime is not tax evasion, but dissent. Ai’s art, most of it exhibited abroad, is called “social sculpture” by most of those in the West, but labeled “political protest” at home. For much of his art he uses Twitter and a blog as a platform to reach and interact. His installations include a piece in Germany made of 9,000 children’s backpacks, in memory of the students who died in the poorly built schools in Sichuan that collapsed during the earthquake in 2008.

There is a deeper problem underneath, though. The truth is China doesn’t have the luxury to be wasting time on trumped up tax evasion cases when there are so many real cases to deal with.

Global Financial Integrity has been warning about illicit financial flows (IFFs) out of China for years. These outflows have ranged from an annual US$169 billion in 2000 to US$344 billion in 2008. With numbers like these China is, by far, the largest transmitter of illicit financial flows in the developing world. And despite its giant domestic economy, these numbers are still unbelievably large when put in scale. For a point of comparison, the PRC’s stock of total external debt in 2008 was $378 billion, just slightly greater than its total illicit outflows in that year alone. In the same year China’s net inflows of foreign direct investment were US$147 billion, less than half of its total illicit outflows (note: I’m comparing a net figure to a gross one, there).

Corruption also costs China’s economy a pretty penny. A report from China’s own central bank estimates that “up to 18,000 corrupt officials and employees of state-owned enterprises” have absconded with 800 billion yuan, or $123 billion, of state money since the 1990s. In a recent speech given to celebrate China’s Communist Party’s nineteenth anniversary, President Hu Jintao specifically addressed the importance of “rampant corruption” and the impetus to create a “clean government.” And Minxin Pei, a former scholar for the Carnegie Endowment for Peace, estimates that China’s government loses as much as 10% of government spending in kickbacks and corruption, calling it “one of the most serious threats to the nation’s future economic and political stability.”

Taxes are the most efficient and sustainable means of supporting vital public services like education, healthcare, a legal framework, police force, public transport networks, welfare and much, much more.

Transparency International – Check out our new animated video on the Corruption Perceptions Index!

http://www.transparency.org/ – Check out our stylish print report on the Corruption Perceptions Index 2011 with world map and innovative infographics! Corruption Perceptions Index 2011 > issuu.com

www.tackletaxhavens.com is a global campaign designed to raise public awareness of tax havens: what they are, the damage they do and how we can tackle them together.

Taxes are the most efficient and sustainable means of supporting vital public services like education, healthcare, a legal framework, police force, public transport networks, welfare and much, much more.

But the wealthy can escape their responsibilities to the societies on which they and their wealth depend – by hiding their money in tax havens.

 

China’s financial woes are not confined to the black market. In fact, we are now seeing a so-called “rich drain,” which means that high net worth Chinese individuals are not only sending their money overseas, they’re looking to emigrate, as well. According to a recently published study by China Merchants Bank, The 2011 Private Wealth Report , at least 60% of Chinese citizens with at least 10 million yuan (US$1.53 million) are either “considering emigration through investment overseas or are already finalizing the process.” In fact, there has already been a 73% increase in Chinese investment immigrants to the United States in the last five years.

This problem is big and it’s deep. And it isn’t going away. The Chinese government needs all the tools at its disposal to deal with this problem—and public trust is one of them. The Chinese people need to trust that the system is fair or they will go on cheating their taxes and sending their money abroad. And to gain that trust, the government must put in place a system that is indeed fair . It can start by going after the real tax evaders and leaving the dissidents alone.

By Ann Hollingshead, financialtaskforce.org/an-artists-stand/

Ann Hollingshead is a Task Force blog contributor, whose posts appear on Wednesdays and Fridays. Formerly a Junior Economist at Global Financial Integrity, Ann is now a Research Analyst for ECONorthwest, an economic consulting firm in the Pacific Northwest. Follow her on Twitter: @AnnHollingshead.

 

http://twitter.com/awwneversorry

http://www.facebook.com/awwneversorry

http://www.facebook.com/FinancialTaskForce

http://www.facebook.com/TransparencyInternational

http://www.facebook.com/artistsspeakout

Climate Change Is A Trade Issue, Too – Forbes

2011 Report on Revenue Transparency of Oil and Gas Companies

#video GLOBAL CORRUPTION TRANSPARENCY REPORT CLIMATE CHANGE

 

 

 

 

http://artistsspeakout.com/get-involved/dont-retreat-retweet

 

http://www.financialtaskforce.org/2011/10/31/the-legal-basis-to-reject-odious-debt

note: The resource curse (Paradox of Plenty) refers to the paradox that countries and regions with an abundance of natural resources, specifically point-source non-renewable resources like minerals and fuels, tend to have less economic growth and worse development outcomes than countries with fewer natural resources. /wiki/Resource_curse //

http://www.odiousdebts.org/odiousdebts/index.cfm In international law, odious debt is a legal theory that holds that the national debt ( Little currency for global money? source IMF WB) incurred by a regime for purposes that do not serve the best interests of the nation, should not be enforceable./wiki/Odious_debt ( sources: www.stwr.org/ STWR has consultant status with the UN economic and social council ECOSOC @STWR_ London, UK on twitter )

 

NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON „SUFISM“

 

http://www.lokvirsa.org.pk

Conference on Sufism „as mainspring of Love, Peace and Harmony“

 

Opening Date: Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Closing Date: –

Additional Information : at 3.00 p.m at Lok Virsa Islamabad

The Gilgit Agency was a political unit of British India, which administered the northern half of the Princely state of Jammu and Kashmir. The Gilgit Agency was created in 1877 and was overseen by a political agent of the Governor-General of British India. The seat of the agent was Srinagar. In 1935, the Gilgit Agency leased the territory comprising the agency from the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir, Hari Singh, for a period of sixty years. This lease and the Gilgit Agency ceased to exist when Pakistan and India became independent countries in 1947. HERE

LOK VIRSA – AN INTRODUCTION :

Lok Virsa (The National Institute of Folk & Traditional Heritage) works towards creating an awareness of cultural legacy by collecting, documenting, disseminating and projecting folk & traditional heritage. Surveys and documentation of traditional culture is central to the objectives of the institute. The Lok Virsa delve into and surveys are conducting by mobile recording and filming units. Dedicated individuals undergo the rigorous field work, to bring back valuable results to the central archives and production facilities housed at the Lok Virsa complex at Garden Avenue Shakarparian Hills Islamabad.

Lok Virsa is an affiliate member of UNESCO, The World Craft Council, International Council of Music, The Asian Cultural Centre for UNESCO, The International Council of Museums and similar other world organizations for the dissemination of art products abroad.

 

http://www.rferl.org/section/Pakistan

http://www.facebook.com/Gilgit Baltistan

http://www.facebook.com/kashmirsufismsociety

http://www.facebook.com/pakistanyouthforumpage


http://hunzalandslide.blogspot.com/

http://www.facebook.com/Indian Youth Climate Network(IYCN)

http://de.wikipedia.org/Hunza Burusho people, Hunza-Mythos

http://en.wikipedia.org/Former State of Hunza (princely state)

http://www.facebook.com/International Organization of Folk Art (IOV)

https://www.facebook.com/unesco Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)

 

Zamana is a public interest space for learning, reflection, and action on Pakistan.

Explore: Whose Land? Whose Food?

In its first issue, Zamana delves into the thorny subject of land and food rights in Pakistan. The focus is prompted by recent news reports that amidst rising hunger and food crises, the Government of Pakistan plans to give away thousands of acres of farmland to Saudi Arabia and other foreign investors. Zamana invites more commentaries on this issue. Please send your perspective to info @ zamana.org. Further Infos: http://farmlandgrab.org/

Act: Our Land, Our Food, Pakistan is not for Sale

Sign the petition to raise your voice against land leasing to foreign clients.

 

UPDATE 23.11.2011 Final Declaration: Stop Land-Grabbing Now!

The Oakland Institute http://www.oaklandinstitute.org

More than a hundred civil society organizations have submitted a document entitled „Time to Act – Agriculture and Food Security and Rio+20“ as input to the UN Conference on Sustainable Development (the Rio+20 conference). The submission outlines the key actions that are needed to achieve viable food systems based on agroecological and other forms of sustainable production.

http://www.facebook.com/oak.institute

http://www.ourworldisnotforsale.org/members

http://www.facebook.com/road2rio20

http://roadtorioplus20.org

A global youth mobilization towards the UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20).

http://www.timetoactrio20.org/ 20 years after the Rio Earth Summit, the planet is in a deeper environmental, energy and financial crisis.The United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD) in Rio de Janeiro in 2012 might be just another high-level conference stating the need to eradicate hunger and poverty, stop climate change, the loss of biodiversity, soil erosion and other serious environmental problems – and then, after the conference, life goes on as before. But it can be different. It has a historical opportunity to make important decisions and agree on actions that actually do eradicate hunger and poverty, and save the environment. It’s time to act!

Many civil society organizations have signed on to a document with proposals on issues linked to food and agriculture for the Rio2012-conference. Download the document (PDF) HERE. Download the document in Word format (doc) HERE.

If you have comments and suggestions for changes in this document, and if your organization wants to support the document, please send a mail to rio2012agcso@gmail.com

The document is available in English, Spanish, French and German

 

UPDATE 24.11.2011 @guardian – Africa’s great ‚water grab‘ Foreign investors aren’t just after land in Africa. Access to water is essential – which can bring them into direct competition with the needs of local communities.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/poverty-matters/2011/nov/24/africa-water-grab-land-rights

This article is about a right to water as a human right under international law. For a discussion of water usage laws in common law, see Water right. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_to_water

 

WORLD CONFERENCE ON HUMAN RIGHTS

Vienna, 14-25 June 1993

 

VIENNA DECLARATION AND PROGRAMME OF ACTION

Note by the secretariat

Attached is the text of the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, as adopted by the World Conference on Human Rights on 25 June 1993.

1. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms the solemn commitment of all States to fulfil their obligations to promote universal respect for, and observance and protection of, all human rights and fundamental freedoms for all in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, other instruments relating to human rights, and international law. The universal nature of these rights and freedoms is beyond question.

… Emphasizing that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which constitutes a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations, is the source of inspiration and has been the basis for the United Nations in making advances in standard setting as contained in the existing international human rights instruments, in particular the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights…

http://www.unhchr.ch/huridocda/huridoca.nsf/%28symbol%29/a.conf.157.23.en

http://www.amnesty.org/en/economic-social-and-cultural-rights #video

Viennale – My house stood in Sulukule

http://rroma.org/

http://www.errc.org/ The European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC)

http://www.gypsyspirit.at/

The Romani, who are known collectively in the Romani language as Romane or Rromane (depending on the dialect concerned) and also as Romany, Romanies, Romanis, Roma or Roms, are an ethnic group living mostly in Europe, who trace their origins to the Indian Subcontinent. Romani are also widely known in the English-speaking world by the exonym Gypsies.

Romani are widely dispersed, with their largest concentrated populations in Europe, especially the Roma of Central and Eastern Europe and Anatolia, followed by the Kale of Iberia and Southern France. HERE

The Romani people, also referred to as the Roma or Gypsies, are an ethnic group who live primarily in Europe. They are believed to have originated in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. They began their migration to Europe and North Africa via the Iranian plateau about 1,000 years ago. HERE

Origin of Roma – At the end of the eighteenth century, linguistic comparisons of Romani with Indic Indo-European languages proved the Indian origin of the Roma. When the Roma left India, they did not write chronicles of their history nor did they have „bards“ …What language were the Malabar students speaking? The land of Malabar lies in what today is the southwest coastal Indian state of Kerala. There they speak Malayalam, a Dravidian language which has nothing in common with Indo-European languages (Hindi, Bengali, Punjabi, Marathi, Gujarati – Romani! – and others). http://romani.uni-graz.at/rombase.xml

Land acquisition for luxury apartment development forces a 600 year old gypsy quarter in Istanbul to be faced with eviction.


Mein Haus stand in Sulukule / My house stood in Sulukule ab 25. 11. in Graz, Rechbauerkino, ab 9.12. in Wien, Filmhauskino, ab 16. 12. in Linz Moviemento. Dokumentarfilm /Documentary Directed by Astrid Heubrandtner Produced by Peter Roehsler

Sulukule, a run-down district in Istanbul, is the oldest Roma settlement in the world. Until the 1990ies the Roma made a living through music and dance. Sulukule was the home of nearly 40 entertainment houses which were popular with Turks and tourists until the clubs were closed down in the 1990ies.

2005 an urban renewal project started: The municipality wanted to buy all the buildings and replace them with luxury villas, transforming the neighbourhood.

Because the local inhabitants can never afford to live in these new houses, they shall be evicted. The local government are offering residents credit to buy the new houses or apartments to rent in Tasoluk, at a distance of 40km / two and a half hours by car. In Tasoluk there are no jobs for the Roma and they are not welcome there. Under this circumstances the Roma population risk losing their social network. In addition their culture which has grown over centuries will disappear.

The film depicts Sulukule as an example for the numerous urban renewal and gentrification projects world-wide and their social consequences. The needs of the individual are disrespected. The needs of the local community are ignored.

The greedy search of the powerful capitalists for more and more profits predominates.

 

http://www.euroma.info/

http://ec.europa.eu/justice/discrimination/roma/index_en.htm

http://www.sinti-roma.at/ http://www.verein-roma.at/

http://indiatribes.wordpress.com/

BBC On the road: Centuries of Roma history

http://www.rajasthan-tour-package.com/rajasthan

 

Past Article: Traditional Food, Medicine & Biodiversity

The Vavilov Institute in Russia is the oldest seed bank in the world with a collection of over 325,000 samples of seed. Video from The Vavilov Institute from The Seed Hunter on National Geographic Channel http://natgeotv.com

#video The Institute of Plant Industry http://www.vir.nw.ru/ was established in 1921. Nikolai Vavilov was the head of this institute from 1924 to 1936 and had, and still has, the world’s largest collection of plant seeds. During the early 1930s, he became the target of the Lysenkoist debate and was exiled. In 2010 the plant collection at the Pavlovsk Experimental Station was to be destroyed to make way for luxury housing.HERE

 

http://de-de.facebook.com/Viennale/International Filmfestival

http://www.facebook.com/Mein-Haus-stand-in-Sulukule-My-house-stood-in-Sulukule

http://www.hrw.org/en/europecentral-asia/turkey

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom of speech Turkey

http://www.facebook.com/UNBiodiversity Decade on Biodiversity

http://www.facebook.com/Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)

Int. Peasant Conference : Stop the land grab

Threat to Food Security http://allafrica.com/environment/

http://farmlandgrab.org/ http://www.business-humanrights.org/

 

UPDATE 19.11.2011 Center for Media and Democracy

http://www.facebook.com/CenterforMediaandDemocracy

https://www.facebook.com/FoodRightsNetwork

Join the Food Rights Network in adding what you know about the „Secret Farm Bill“ to the SourceWatch article. http://sourcewatch.org/Secret Farm Bill

Keith Good @FarmPolicy

Blogger, Attorney http://www.FarmPolicy.com

 

Contacts International Peasant Conference:

CNOP/VIA CAMPESINA Kalabancoura rue 200 porte 727 BP E 2169 Bamako/Mali

Chantal Jacovetti: chantal.jacovetti@wanadoo.fr Phone : 00223.76.81.87.93/64.86.89.26

Lamine Coulibaly: laminezie@gmail.com Phone: Tel: +223 76 17 09 79/ 66 83 63 14

Via Campesina (from Spanish la vía campesina, the campesino way, or the Peasants‘ Way) describes itself as „an international movement which coordinates peasant organizations of small and middle-scale producers, agricultural workers, rural women, and indigenous communities from Asia, Africa, America, and Europe“. It is a coalition of over 148 organizations, advocating family-farm-based sustainable agriculture and was the group that first coined the term „food sovereignty“. Food sovereignty refers to the right to produce food on one’s own territory. Via Campesina has carried out a Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform since 1999, in opposition to market-led agrarian reform. MORE

Food security hostage to trade in WTO negotiations: UN right to food expert

[16 November 2011] Geneva – „The world is in the midst of a food crisis which requires a rapid policy response. But the World Trade Organisation (WTO) agenda has failed to adapt, and developing countries are rightly concerned that their hands will be tied by trade rules.” http://www.srfood.org/index.php

 

Press invitation 17-19 November, Mali (Bamako, 28 October 2011) The farmers of the National Coordination of Farming Organizations (CNOP) in Mali and the international farmers’ movement Via Campesina hereby invite the press to cover the first international farmers’ conference whose objective is tostrengthen the fight against the land grabs which are rife in Africa and other parts of the world.

The conference will be held in Sélingué from 17 to 19 November 2011, and will bring together almost 200 farmers affected by land grabs as well as numerous other participants, including researchers, political figures, and NGOs resisting the unprecedented land-grab offensive by large businesses and hedge funds, among others, that compromises the ability of people to feed themselves.

Affected populations from all over the world will have the opportunity to make their voices heard, and strategies will be developed to end the seizure of farmland at the expense of the rural family farming that feeds 80% of the African population.

The conference will conclude on 20 November with a visit by a delegation to the Office du Niger’s land in Kolongo, a year after the first farmers’ meeting about this matter. There, journalists will be able to speak to farmers engaged in the resistance, local authorities, and experts on land issues.

 

The Oakland Institute As farmer groups and civil society organizations from around the world gather at the International Conference on Land Grabs [DRAFT PROGRAMME http://viacampesina.org/en/index.php] from November 17-20 2011 in Nyeleni, Mali, The Oakland Institute and the National Farmers Organisation Coordination (CNOP) of Mali are releasing a new report on land grabs in the west African country.

Comprendre les Investissements Fonciers en Afrique: Rapport Mali [http://www.oaklandinstitute.org/comprendre-les-investissements-fonciers-en-afrique-rapport-mali] is an updated, French version of the Oakland Institute’s Understanding Land Investment in Africa: Mali report that was published earlier this year.

This comprehensive report analyses the current trend of agricultural land investments in Mali, revealing that by the end of 2010 at least 544,567 hectares of fertile land have been leased or were under negotiation for lease in Mali. Despite the limited availability of arable land in Mali and dramatic hunger figures, more than 40% of deals will devote land to agrofuel crops-which are unlikely to benefit those suffering from hunger in Mali. These land acquisitions involve violent and flagrant abuses of human rights and the report documents attacks on smallholder populations in the irrigated agricultural zones of the Office du Niger. Most of the large-scale land acquisitions are concentrated in state-owned lands within the large, riverine delta of the Office du Niger, where informal customary rights of the local people are not protected by law, and are not recognized by public officials.

Olivier De Schutter — UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food — recently released a report extolling the benefits of ecological agriculture. In this short radio interview, he explains how today’s scientific evidence demonstrates that agro-ecological farming methods outperform the use of chemical fertilizers in boosting food production where the hungry live — especially in unfavorable environments.

While the government of Mali justifies the massive leasing of lands with the need to „modernize“ Malian agriculture, plans for large-scale irrigated agriculture pose great risks to the survival of populations dependent on the water flows of the Niger River in Mali as well as in the rest of West Africa, where over 100 million people depend on the river for their livelihoods.

America, it’s your responsibility to decide who will emerge victorious from this battle of the bulge. Let’s meet the contestants — the American consumer, the independent farmer and the corporate fat cat. Watch Food & Water Watch’s The Biggest Farm Bill Loser and go to http://www.foodandwaterwatch.org to demand a Fair Farm Bill!

Download the report: In French: http://www.oaklandinstitute.org/comprendre-les-investissements-fonciers-en-afrique-rapport-mali In English: http://oaklandinstitute.org/understanding-land-investment-deals-africa-mali

 

Latest Articles – #farmlandgrab

World Social Forum Dakar – Sign the Dakar appeal against land grabbing!! #video

Gegenrede: Offener Brief von Jean Ziegler #video

Eradicating Ecocide – Rights for the Planet #video

Climate Change, Food Sovereignty & Security #video

Africa – Green Agriculture & Climate Change #video

 

Sustainability and Equity: A Better Future for All

Kate Holt/IRIN

The 2011 Human Development Report, Sustainability and Equity: a Better Future for All, says bold steps must be taken to reduce environmental risks and inequalities in Africa. http://allafrica.com/environment/

According to the 2011 Human Development Report, released by the United Nations Development Programme, Africa’s progress in human development over the next four decades could outpace any other region of the world, but environmental challenges could threaten the continent’s advancement, possibly reversing it.

 

UPDATE 19.11.2011 Final Declaration: Stop Land-Grabbing Now!

by The Oakland Institute – Nyeleni, November 19, 2011

We, women and men peasants, pastoralists, indigenous peoples and their allies, who gathered together in Nyeleni from 17-19 November 2011, are determined to defend food sovereignty, the commons and the rights of small scale food providers to natural resources. We supported the Kolongo Appeal from peasant organizations in Mali, who have taken the lead in organising local resistance to the take-over of peasants‘ lands in Africa. We came to Nyeleni in response to the Dakar Appeal, which calls for a global alliance against land-grabbing.

In the past three days, peasants, pastoralists and indigenous peoples have come together from across the world for the first time to share with each other their experiences and struggles against land-grabbing. In Mali, the Government has committed to give away 800 thousand hectares of land to business investors. These are lands of communities that have belonged to them for generations, even centuries, while the Malian State has only existed since the 1960-s. This situation is mirrored in many other countries where customary rights are not recognised. Taking away the lands of communities is a violation of both their customary and historical rights.

Secure access to and control over land and natural resources are inextricably linked to the enjoyment of the rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and several regional and international human rights conventions, such as the rights to an adequate standard of living, housing, food, health, culture, property and participation. We note with grave concern that states are not meeting their obligations in this regard and putting the interests of business interests above the rights of peoples.

Land-grabbing is a global phenomenon led by local, national and transnational elites and investors, and governments with the aim of controlling the world’s most precious resources. The global financial, food and climate crises have triggered a rush among investors and wealthy governments to acquire and capture land and natural resources, since these are the only “safe havens” left that guarantee secure financial returns. Pension and other investment funds have become powerful actors in land-grabbing, while wars continue to be waged to seize control over natural wealth. The World Bank and regional development banks are facilitating land grabs by promoting corporate-friendly policies and laws, facilitating capital and guarantees for corporate investors, and fostering an extractive, destructive economic development model. The World Bank, IFAD, FAO and UNCTAD have proposed seven principles that legitimise farmland grabbing by corporate and state investors. Led by some of the world’s largest transnational corporations, the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) aims to transform smallhold agriculture into industrial agriculture and integrate smallhold farmers to global value chains, greatly increasing their vulnerability to land-loss.

Land-grabbing goes beyond traditional North-South imperialist structures; transnational corporations can be based in the United States, Europe, Chile, Mexico, Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Thailand, Malaysia and South Korea, among others. It is also a crisis in both rural and urban areas. Land is being grabbed in Asia, Africa, the Americas and Europe for industrial agriculture, mining, infrastructure projects, dams, tourism, conservation parks, industry, urban expansion and military purposes. Indigenous peoples and ethnic minorities are being expelled from their territories by armed forces, increasing their vulnerability and in some cases even leading to slavery. Market based, false solutions to climate change are creating more ways to alienate local communities from their lands and natural resources.

Despite the fact that women produce most of the world’s food, and are responsible for family and community well being, existing patriarchal structures continue to dispossess women from the lands that they cultivate and their rights to resources. Since most peasant women do not have secure, legally recognised land rights, they are particularly vulnerable to evictions.

The fight against land-grabbing is a fight against capitalism, neoliberalism and a destructive economic model. Through testimonies from our sisters and brothers in Burkina Faso, Columbia, Guatemala, Democratic Republic of Congo, France, Ghana, Guinea Bissau, Honduras, India, Indonesia, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Nepal, Niger, Senegal, South Africa, Thailand and Uganda, we learned how land-grabbing threatens small scale, family based farming, nature, the environment and food sovereignty. Land grabbing displaces and dislocates communities, destroys local economies and the social-cultural fabric, and jeopardizes the identities of communities, be they farmers, pastoralists, fisherfolk, workers, dalits or indigenous peoples. Those who stand up for their rights are beaten, jailed and killed. There is no way to mitigate the impacts of this economic model and the power structures that promote it. Our lands are not for sale or lease.

But we are not defeated. Through organisation, mobilisation and community cohesiveness, we have been able to stop land-grabbing in many places. Furthermore, our societies are recognising that small-scale, family based agriculture and food production is the most socially, economically and environmentally sustainable model of using resources.

Recalling the Dakar Appeal, we reiterate our commitment to resist land-grabbing by all means possible, to support all those who fight land-grabs, and to put pressure on national governments and international institutions to fulfill their obligations to defend and uphold the rights of peoples. Specifically, we commit to:

  • Organise rural and urban communities against land-grabs in every form.
  • Strengthen the capacities of our communities and movements to reclaim and defend our rights, lands and resources.
  • Win and secure the rights of women in our communities to land and natural resources.
  • Create public awareness about how land grabbing is creating crises for all society.
  • Build alliances across different sectors, constituencies, regions, and mobilise our societies to stop land-grabbing
  • Strengthen our movements to achieve and promote food sovereignty and genuine agrarian reform

In order to meet the above commitments, we will develop the following actions:

  • Report back to our communities the deliberations and commitments of this Conference.
  • Institutionalise April 17 as the day of global mobilisation against land-grabbing; also identify additional appropriate dates that can be used for such mobilisations to defend land and the commons.
  • Develop our political arguments to expose and discredit the economic model that spurs land-grabbing, and the various actors and initiatives that promote and legitimise it.
  • Build our own databases about land-grabbing by documenting cases, and gathering the needed information and evidence about processes, actors, impacts, etc.
  • Ensure that communities have the information they need about laws, rights, companies, contracts, etc., so that they can resist more effectively the business investors and governments who try to take their lands and natural resources.
  • Set up early warning systems to alert communities to risks and threats.
  • Establish a Peoples‘ Observatory on land-grabbing to facilitate and centralise data gathering, communications, planning actions, advocacy, research and analysis, etc.
  • Strengthen our communities through political and technical training, and restore our pride in being food producers and providers.
  • Secure land and resource rights for women by conscientising our communities and movements, targeted re-distribution of land for women, and other actions make laws and policies responsive to the particular needs of women.
  • Build strong organisational networks and alliances at various levels–local, regional and international–building on the Dakar Appeal and with small-scale food producers/providers at the centre of these alliances.
  • Build alliances with members of pension schemes in order to prevent pension fund managers from investing in projects that result in land grabbing.
  • Make our leaders abide by the rules set by our communities and compel them to be accountable to us, and our communities and organisations.
  • Develop our own systems of legal aid and liaise with legal and human rights experts.
  • Condemn all forms of violence and criminalisation of our struggles and our mobilizations in defense of our rights.
  • Work for the immediate release of all those jailed as a result of their struggles for their lands and territories, and urgently develop campaigns of solidarity with all those facing conflicts.
  • Build strategic alliances with press and media, so that they report accurately our messages and realities; counter the prejudices spread by the mainstream media about the land struggles in Zimbabwe.
  • Develop and use local media to organise members of our and other communities, and share with them information about land-grabbing.
  • Take our messages and demands to parliaments, governments and international institutions.
  • Identify and target local, national and international spaces for actions, mobilizations and building broad-based societal resistance to land-grabbing.
  • Plan actions that target corporations, (including financial corporations), the World Bank and other multilateral development banks that benefit from, drive and promote land and natural resource grabs.
  • Expand and strengthen our actions to achieve and promote food sovereignty and agrarian reform.
  • Support peoples‘ enclosures of their resources through land occupations, occupations of the offices of corporate investors, protests and other actions to reclaim their commons.
  • Demands that our governments fulfill their human rights obligations, immediately stop land and natural resource transfers to business investors, cancel contracts already made, and protect rural and urban communities from ongoing and future land-grabs.

We call all organizations committed to these principles and actions to join our Global Alliance against Land-Grabbing, which we solemnly launch today here in Nyeleni. Globalise the struggle! Globalise hope!

 

#anatolia #turkey #growth #jobs 14.11.2011


A Call for Renewable Energy in Brazil

www.internationalrivers.org

http://amazonwatch.org/belo-monte-dam

www.dka.at/belomonte

www.suedwind-agentur.at

http://plattformbelomonte.blogspot.com


UPDATE Mo, 7.11.2011, 19:33 For immediate release

Media contacts:

Zachary Hurwitz, International Rivers +1 510 848 1155 x 303 zachary@internationalrivers.org

Oriana Rey Tanaka, Amigos da Terra-Amazônia, Brazil orianarey@amazonia.org.br

Belo Monte Dam Does Not Meet Sustainability Criteria of World’s Private Banks, Say Rights Groups

The controversial Belo Monte Dam, slated for construction in Brazil’s Amazon region, does not meet the standards of an international framework used by the world’s largest private banks to evaluate sustainability, say human rights groups in Brazil.

In a letter sent to Itaú, Banco do Brasil, Bradesco, Santander, and Caixa Econômica Federal, 150 Brazilian social and environmental organizations warned that Belo Monte developer Norte Energia, S.A. (NESA) has not complied with the Equator Principles, a set of voluntary standards created in 2003 that aid private financiers in assessing and managing social and environmental risk in project finance. As signatories of the Equator Principles, the five banks commit to not providing loans to projects where the borrower will not or is unable to comply with the Principles‘ respective social and environmental policies and procedures.

The five banks have been mentioned by the Brazilian government as possible co-financiers of the Belo Monte Dam, and at least one, Banco do Brasil, has been mentioned as the top-runner to co-finance nearly $20 billion reais that would be disbursed by the Brazilian National Development Bank (BNDES) to NESA. The Brazilian civil society groups argue that BNDES is using tax-payer funds to finance what is ultimately a costly boondoggle. In October, Credit Suisse reduced its outlook for Cemig and Light, two Brazilian electric utilities that joined NESA, stating that the project’s rate of return is far below government estimates.

“The legal violations that have accumulated throughout the planning process of the Belo Monte Dam clearly illustrate that the project does not live up to the standards of the Equator Principles. We recommend that Equator Principles banks stay away from co-financing Belo Monte, because the reputational risks associated with the project are very large,” said Zachary Hurwitz, Policy Coordinator at International Rivers, which published a risk report with Amigos da Terra-Amazônia Brasileira in early 2011 detailing the project’s history.

In order for any of the five private banks to co-finance a loan for the Belo Monte Dam, they would have to illustrate that NESA has complied with the guidelines‘ ten principles. For example, Principle 5 requires borrowers to “consult with project affected communities in a structured and culturally appropriate manner,” and to “ensure their free, prior and informed consultation and facilitate their informed participation as a means to establish whether a project has adequately incorporated affected communities’ concerns.”

However, recent evidence suggests that NESA, a project consortium composed of nearly 75% state-owned enterprises, did not hold free, prior, and informed consultations with affected indigenous communities.

In a hearing of Brazil’s Regional Federal Tribunal, judge Selene Maria de Almeida decided that three tribes who live on a 100km stretch of the Xingu River that would be dried out because of the dam— the Juruna, the Arara, and the Xikrín Kayapó— had not been properly consulted. Environmental agency IBAMA and state electric utility Eletrobras, the largest holder in NESA, only began studying the project’s impacts on tribes in 2008, three years after the Brazilian Congress had approved the project. The Brazilian Constitution mandates that developers must hold proper consultations before a development project that impacts indigenous people is approved by the Brazilian Congress. If de Almeida’s decision is upheld in court, Belo Monte would be suspended until proper consultations were held.

The warning letter also argues that the developer has not complied with Principle 4 of the Equator Principles, which requires the borrower to create an Action Plan that “implements mitigation measures, corrective actions and monitoring measures to manage the impacts and risks” in compliance with host country social and environmental regulations. An injunction brought by Carlos Castro Martins at the end of September barred NESA from beginning any work that would interfere with the natural flow of the Xingu river, after it was found that the developer had not properly assessed the risks to local fish stocks, nor planned a program to mitigate the impacts on families who make a living from fishing.

The warning letter also argues that NESA has not complied with Principle 6, which requires the borrower to create a grievance mechanism as a condition of managing the risk of Category A and B projects. The Equator Principles consider Category A projects to have significant risk, while Category B are considered to have limited risk.

The Equator Principles, last revised in 2006, are directly based on the Performance Standards of the International Finance Corporation (IFC), which were revised and strengthened in 2011. The new version of the Performance Standards includes language that protects indigenous peoples‘ right to informed consultation and participation, and, in certain cases, upholds their right to free, prior, and informed consent. The Equator Principles will also be updated in 2012, and are likely to adopt the stronger language.

For more information:

 

International Rivers

Amigos da Terra – Amazônia Brasileira (Portuguese)

Movimento Xingu Vivo Para Sempre (Portuguese)

More Info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equator_Principles

http://nativeamericanheritagemonth.gov/ Native American Heritage Month 2011

 

(mehr …)

Urgent: sign-on letter on G20 infrastructure report (incl. dams)

Exclusive club: the G20 heads of state

http://www.g20transparency.com

The Group of Twenty Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors (G-20, G20, Group of Twenty http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G-20_major_economies ) is a group of finance ministers and central bank governors from 20 major economies: 19 countries plus the European Union, which is represented by the President of the European Council and by the European Central Bank.

Dear friends, I would like to request your urgent attention for an issue which is a bit outside our usual focus, but relates to global decision-making on large dams and other infrastructure projects.

The heads of state of the exclusive Group of 20 will meet end of next week in France. They will discuss a report from a high-level panel of experts on infrastructure. The panel consists mainly of representatives of private enterprises and banks, and will make recommendations on how to increase infrastructure investment. We have learned confidentially that the report is all about private investment and economic growth.

Environmental protection, poverty reduction and climate change are not addressed. The panel proposes a few projects that illustrate their new approach, and the list includes the giant Inga dam on the Congo River.

No NGOs were consulted, and there is no plan to make this important report public. Some NGOs have prepared an urgent sign-on letter to the infrastructure panel, asking that the report be made public and that NGOs be consulted before it is finalized.

Please see below. Can we ask you to read this and SEND YOUR ENDORSEMENT (name, institution, country) to Doug Norlen at Pacific Environment, DNorlen@pacificenvironment.org, by the end of FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28? (He is cc’ed to this message.)

Please don’t make the letter public for now. It will be great if those of you who live in G20 countries can however prepare to send a copy to your heads of state and finance ministers next week.

 

Many thanks,

Peter Bosshard

International Rivers

Letter follows:

*******************

Home › Follow the Money › Other Financial Institutions

How the Global 1% Shape the World’s Development Agenda

Fri, 10/28/2011 – 8:06am By: Peter Bosshard

http://www.internationalrivers.org/en/node/6936 or http://huff.to/usl8dl]

www.amnesty.org/en/economic-social-and-cultural-rights

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right to water as a human right under international law

(mehr …)

Niyaz featuring Azam Ali | Iran, USA

www.salam-orient.at/index.php

Niyaz featuring Azam Ali | Iran, USA

http://www.niyazmusic.com

Elektro-akustische Sufi- Sounds

Mit: Azam ALI: Stimme, Perkussion | Ramin Loga TORKIAN: Saz, Gitarre | Kiya TABASSIAN: Setar | Ziya TABASSIAN: Perkussion | Sheila HANNIGAN: Cello

 

Sargfabrik DO, 27. 10.  20.00h
SARGFABRIK, Goldschlagstr. 169, 1140 Wien

Anlässlich seines 10. Geburtstages wartet http://www.salam-orient.at „Salam.Orient. Musik, Tanz und Poesie“ mit einem Kon­zert und Veranstaltungsmarathon auf, der so umfangreich ist wie noch nie. Auf dem Programm stehen vom 13. Oktober bis 5. November 26 Einzelevents in Wien sowie Konzerte in den Bun­desländern und im slowenischen Maribor.

Niyaz (نياز) is an Iranian musical trio. The group was created in 2005 by DJ, programmer/producer and remixer Carmen Rizzo, vocalist and hammered dulcimer player Azam Ali, formerly of the group Vas, and Ali’s husband, Loga Ramin Torkian, of the Iranian crossover group Axiom Of Choice. „Niyaz“ means „yearning“ in both Farsi and Urdu.

Niyaz’s music, described as „mystical music with a modern edge“, is primarily a blend of Sufi mysticism and trance electronica. Niyaz adapts Persian, Indian and Mediterranean folk sounds, poetry and songs including the poetry of Sufi mystic Rumi, with Western electronic instrumentation and programming.

 

http://www.urdupoetry.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niyaz

http://www.mamak-khadem.com/audios/axiom of choice

http://mevlana.net Mevlana Celaleddin-i Rumi

http://www.poetseers.org/spiritual_and_devotional_poets/sufi

http://www.festivalculturesoufie.com

http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/intangible heritage.html

(mehr …)

Wien Besuch Shri Sarvabhavana 2011

Namaste liebe Freunde,

ein letztes Mal für dieses Jahr kommt Shri Sarvabhavana nach Wien um Beratungen zu geben. Er wird am Sonntag den 23.10 in Wien ankommen. Vielleicht gibt es die Möglichkeit auch am Sonntag Nachmittag Termine anzubieten, aber nur falls dies dringend notwendig ist. Ansonsten besteht das Angebot am Montag einen von sechs Terminen und am Dienstag einen von drei Terminen wahrzunehmen. Am Mittwoch(Nationalfeiertag Ö) wird es einen spirituellen Vortrag in Klagenfurt geben. Genaue Infos auf Anfrage.

 

Zusammenfassung der Beratungszeiten:

  • 23.10.2011 Sonntag: nur in Ausnahmefällen: Nachmittags, bzw. Abends
  • 24.10.2011 Montag: 10 – 11 Uhr, 12 – 13 Uhr – sowie: 17 – 18 Uhr, 18 – 19 Uhr
  • 25.10.2011 Dienstag: 10 – 11, 12 – 13

Weiters gibt es eine neue Webseite von Shri Sarvabhavana, ein Blick darauf lohnt sich: www.vedic-guide.de. Anmeldung wie immer unter spiritualgrowth@gmx.at und der Tel.Nr.: 069917073418

 

Es sind noch Termine frei. Weiters gibt es auch noch freie Plätze für eine von unseren zwei Palmblattbibliotheksreisen nach Indien:

(mehr …)

Mind and Life “Ecology, Ethics & Interdependence”

Mind and Life XXIII

Ecology, Ethics and Interdependence

with His Holiness The Dalai Lama

Dharamsala, India  •   October 17 – 21, 2011

Remember- less than half a day until the first live webcast of a Mind and Life conference with His Holiness the Dalai Lama! “Ecology, Ethics and Interdependence” promises to be a very important and timely dialogue in light of our relationship to this changing planet.
Live broadcasting by Ustream Unfortunately, as this will be a small, private meeting, it will be impossible to invite additional participants to attend Mind and Life XXIII.  However, the proceedings of the conference will be webcast live, beginning October 17th. Please note that the sessions begin at 9:00 am and 1:00 pm Indian time. If you experience problems viewing this video, you can also see it at http://dalailama.com/live-english The sessions will be available for streaming and download after the event at http://dalailama.com/webcasts

Conference Overview The slow meltdown of Earth’s capacity to sustain much of life, as we know it, poses an urgent challenge for both spiritual traditions and science. These two ways of knowing have developed distinctive responses, which are potentially synergistic.
The goal of the meeting is to provide an opportunity to articulate an engaged environmental ethics. This would include the understanding of interdependence through an examination of the most recent data on the scientific case for effective ecological action. Furthermore, it will be a unique opportunity to meet with other faith traditions that have arrived at a religious basis for motivating environmental activism.
A dialogue between contemplative scholars, activists and ecological scientists could enrich the response to our planetary crisis. Insights from the new thrust in ecological science evoke the deep interconnections between individual choice and planetary consequence as well as through cross-fertilization of ideas and meaningful action among activists working within their own spiritual framework.
We will explore many dimensions, from the human-caused deterioration in the global systems that sustain life, and the role each of us plays as seen through the lens of industrial ecology, to a view from Buddhist philosophy and other faith traditions, to the on-the-ground realities faced by ecological activists. Our hope is that this conference will be a significant catalyst for the formulation of new research ideas in these fields and solutions to our planetary crisis.
The conference serves as a catalyst for new research projects and economic initiatives that promote personal responsibility, fairness, cooperation and compassion. “Altruism and Compassion in Economic Systems” traces the roots of altruism, the biological components of compassion, experiments in trust and the potential of economics based less on ‘profiting me’ and more on ‘helping you.’  An economic system that pays more attention to the importance of human interactions will lead to more cooperation, less greed and greater happiness. At the heart of this dialogue is the understanding that altruism and compassion are integral to the realization of a society aligned to the benefit of all its members. The Dalai Lama participated fully in all sessions recorded on this DVD set.

The Mind and Life Institute is dedicated to fostering dialogue and research at the highest possible level between modern science and the great living contemplative traditions, especially Buddhism. It builds on a deep commitment to the power and value of both of these ways of advancing knowledge and their potential to alleviate suffering.

The ongoing global financial crisis shows clearly just how vulnerable economic systems are to human behavior, particularly to corruption and greed. This strongly suggests that other qualities, such as empathy, pro-social motivation, altruism and compassion may play an essential role in our increasingly competitive global economic system.
But can we really imagine an economic system that delivers prosperity and welfare, or is competition an unavoidable consequence of the human race? How can we, as individuals, help form a society that is both productive and resolves actual societal and environmental problems? What have the sciences to contribute – if anything at all?

By bringing together some of the world’s leading minds, the Mind and Life XX Conference highlights the benefits and limitations of altruism and compassion in economic systems.
This offers a unique opportunity to follow a high-level, interdisciplinary exchange of scientists and economists focusing both on individual thinking and the structure of economic systems. Thus, the conference build bridges between different disciplines and serve as a catalyst for new research projects and economic initiatives promoting personal responsibility, fairness and compassion.

mindandlifeorgMind&Life Institute

Live  webcast of Mind and Life XXIII – Ecology, Ethics and Interdependence in Dharamsala, October 17-21! http://fb.me/JCEczEGh

Human Rights Watch Annual Dinner 2011

http://www.un.org/human rights

http://www.uyghurcongress.org/

http://www.amnesty.org

http://www.hrw.org/

 

Human Rights Watch Annual Dinner 2011

Honoring those who speak out where there is silence

Each year Human Rights Watch honors individuals who have put their lives and safety at risk in the name of defending human rights. Join us at the Voices for Justice Annual Dinner where we will present these human rights defenders strong with The Alison Des Forges Award for Extraordinary Activism, our highest honor.

Meet the 2011 Defenders – This year’s Voices for Justice Annual Dinners will be held in Amsterdam, Beirut, Chicago, Geneva, Hamburg, London, Los Angeles, Munich, New York, Oslo, Paris, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, Toronto, and Zurich throughout November and early December. We hope you will come celebrate these remarkable individuals and support the important global work of Human Rights Watch.

 

http://www.marchforfreedom.info

http://www.facebook.com/HumanRightsWatch

http://www.facebook.com/amnestyusa

http://www.facebook.com/unitednationshumanrights

 

San Francisco World Music Festival

http://portal.unesco.org/intangible

http://www.sfworldmusicfestival.org

http://www.uyghurensemble.co.uk

www.rferl.org/Radio Free Europe/Kyrgyz

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Kyrgyzstan (English pronunciation: /ˈkɜrɡɪstɑːn/; KUR-gi-stahn; Kyrgyz: Кыргызстан IPA: [qɯrʁɯzstɑ́n]; Russian: Кыргызстан [kɨrɡɨsˈtan]), officially the Kyrgyz Republic, is a country in Central Asia. Landlocked and mountainous, it is bordered by Kazakhstan to the north, Uzbekistan to the west, Tajikistan to the southwest and People’s Republic of China to the east. Its capital and largest city is Bishkek. The ethnonym „Kyrgyz“, after which the country is named, is thought to originally mean „forty tribes“, presumably referring to the epic hero Manas who, as legend has it, unified forty tribes against the Khitans. The 40-ray sun on the flag of Kyrgyzstan symbolizes the forty tribes of Manas. It might also refer to “red”, the colour of the “south country” of the original Turkic nations. More

Uzbekistan, officially the Republic of Uzbekistan (Uzbek: O‘zbekiston Respublikasi or Ўзбекистон Республикаси);(Urdu: ازبکستان), is a doubly landlocked country in Central Asia, formerly part of the Soviet Union. It shares borders with Kazakhstan to the west and to the north, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to the east, and Afghanistan and Turkmenistan to the south. Once part of the Persian Samanid and later Timurid empires, the region was conquered in the early 16th century by Uzbek nomads, who spoke an Eastern Turkic language. Most of Uzbekistan’s population today belong to the Uzbek ethnic group and speak the Uzbek language, one of the family of Turkic languages. Uzbekistan was incorporated into the Russian Empire in the 19th century and in 1924 became a constituent republic of the Soviet Union, known as the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic (Uzbek SSR). It has been an independent republic since December 1991. Uzbekistan’s economy relies mainly on commodity production, including cotton, gold, uranium, potassium, and natural gas. Despite the declared objective of transition to a market economy, Uzbekistan continues to maintain rigid economic controls, which often repel foreign investors. The policy of gradual, strictly controlled transition has nevertheless produced beneficial results in the form of economic recovery after 1995. Uzbekistan’s domestic policies on human rights and individual freedoms are often criticised by international organizations. More

Dear Friends, The 34th annual Mill Valley Film Festival will present a special evening of music on Saturday October 15th celebrating the life and work of the great master Indian musician and teacher, Ali Akbar Khan. The screening of the U.S. premiere of the documentary film Play Like a Lion: The Legacy of Maestro Ali Akbar Khan is one of the highlights of the 10-day film festival.

This concert will bring together award-winning world music artists who have been inspired and influenced by the „maestro“ and whose music spans classical Indian to African and western fusion.

 

Musicians for the evening include:

  • Saturday, October 15th 9pm (doors 8pm) at 142
  • Ali Akbar Khan’s son Alam Khan on sarod accompanied by Salar Nader on tabla and Manik Khan on tampura
  • Grammy-winning bassist Rob Wasserman & Friends
  • Grammy-nominated jazz saxophonist John Handy, who is featured in the film
  • Master African drummer Kwaku Daddy accompanied by 10 drummers
  • Grammy nominated singer and composer Sukhawat Ali Khan and Riffat Sultana (featured vocalist with Quincy Jones at the May 2011 Mawazine Festival, Morocco)
  • And….special surprise local music legends who join the festival every year.
  • Video greetings from Derek Trucks and Zakir Hussain

Throckmorton Theatre in Mill Valley – Play Like a Lion: A Concert Honoring Ali Akbar Khan. Tickets are $50 and are available online at mvff.com or by phone at 877-874-6833 or at the Rafael Film Center box office, 1118 4th St. San Rafael, the Mill Valley Chamber of Commerce, 85 Thockmorton Ave., and at 142 Throckmorton Theater day of show.

 

PLAY LIKE A LION: THE LEGACY OF MAESTRO ALI AKBAR KHAN

When a young Alam Khan asks about his family’s religion, his father, master North Indian musician Ali Akbar Khan, tells him, „Music is our religion.“ Play Like a Lion explores the deep musical lineage of the Khan family -a tradition in which the lines between father and teacher are blurred and the intervals between duty, love and music become a devotional song. Alam, a prodigious musician, taught at his father’s feet, is our guide for a rich, soulful journey into the legacy of the late maestro. Entrancing musical virtuosity and moving homage on display in footage featuring concerts, class time at the famed Ali Akbar School of Music and tribute performances by musical luminaries like Carlos Santana, Ustad Zakir Hussain and Mickey Hart.

Sun. October 9, 8:00PM, Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center, San Rafael

Wed. October 12, 9:15PM, CinéArts @ Sequoia, Mill Valley Tickets: mvff.com, Tel: 1-877-874-MVFF (6833)

Akyns are virtuoso performers: they are Kazakh poets and bards of improvisation. The Akyn improvises with lyrics while playing the dömbra to a set traditional rhythm. The Akyn must not only be a master dömbra player, but also an expert story-teller, with a good wit and a great sense of timing. Akyn competitions are exciting and humorous, full of theatre and soul. They bring life to a party, helping to strengthen the sense of community among villagers.

The Art of Akyns, Kyrgyz Epic Tellers UNESCO: Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity – 2008 URL: http://www.unesco.org/culture/ich/RL/00049

Description: The predominant form of cultural expression among the Kyrgyz nomads is the narration of epics. The art of the Akyns, the Kyrgyz epic tellers, combines singing, improvisation and musical composition. The epics are performed at religious and private festivities, seasonal ceremonies and national holidays and have survived over the centuries by oral transmission.

The value of the Kyrgyz epics lies largely in their dramatic plots and philosophical underpinnings. They represent an oral encyclopaedia of Kyrgyz social values, cultural knowledge and history. The pre-eminent Kyrgyz epic is the 1000-year-old Manas trilogy, which is noteworthy not only for its great length (sixteen times longer than Homers Iliad and Odyssey), but also for its rich content. Blending fact and legend, the Manas immortalizes important events in Kyrgyzs history since the ninth century. The Kyrgyzs have also preserved over forty smaller epics. While the Manas is a solo narration, these shorter works are generally performed to the accompaniment of the komuz, the three-stringed Kyrgyz lute. Each epic possesses a distinctive theme, melody and narrative style. Akyns were once highly respected figures who toured from region to region and frequently participated in storytelling contests. They were appreciated for their proficiency in narration, expressive gestures, intonation and lively mimicry, so well suited to the epics emotionally charged content.

During the 1920s, the first part of the Manas trilogy was recorded in written form based on the oral interpretation of the great epic singer, Sagynbay. The epics remain an essential component of Kyrgyz identity and continue to inspire contemporary writers, poets, and composers; even today, the traditional performances are still linked to sacred cultural spaces. Although there are fewer practitioners nowadays, master akyns continue to train young apprentices and are helped by recent revitalization initiatives supported by the Kyrgyz government. Country(ies): Kyrgyzstan

 

SF WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL – AACM’s beloved tabla master, Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri, will be honored for his 30 years of performing and teaching in the U.S. at this year’s San Francisco World Music Festival – The Epic Project: Madmen, Heroines, and Bards From Around the World (http://www.sfworldmusicfestival.org/) – The Epic Project:  Madmen, Heroines, and Bards From Around the World. October 27-30 www.sfworldmusicfestival.org

Swapanji will be performing on the opening night of the festival, Friday, October 28th, in a world premiere commissioned composition which he has composed for an array of musicians including AACM’s Youth Tabla ensemble and musicians from Kyrgyzstan, Azerbaijan, and South India.

The San Francisco World Music Festival, under the musical direction of AACM faculty member Jim Santi Owen, will be presenting world class musicians from Burkina Faso, India, Tibet, China, Azerbaijan, Taiwan, Kyrgyzstan performing repertoire from their countries‘ epic stories in both traditional settings and cross-cultural collaborations.

This is the third consecutive year that AACM is proud to be a co-sponsor of The San Francisco World Music Festival. Tickets are sure to sell out so purchase yours soon!

 

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