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December,
2006:
Dear friends,
It’s almost Solstice, the dark and cold close around us,
and yet in just a few days, the sun will once again be reborn. In this
time of hope and renewal, we sense a shift in the national mood—a
slight opening, like a crack in a window allowing a small, cool breeze
into and smoky, stinking room.
We’re in a moment of crisis, for the earth and for our human communities.
If real people weren’t dying, in Iraq, in Palestine, in so many
war-torn places on this earth, we could sit back and watch the modern-day
Greek tragedy play itself out, noting the themes of hubris and arrogance.
Unfortunately, it is not just a drama—it is the real, heartwrenching
loss of daughters and sons and shattered lives. Meanwhile our civil liberties
and social programs are continually eroded. And all the while, the Arctic
is quietly melting, the climate heating up and destabilizing…
But you know all this. If you’re on this list or website, I trust
you already know how bad it is. The question is, what can we do about
it?
Over the last year, I’ve noticed that my own work has shifted. I’m
spending less time on protest and organizing actions, and more on mending,
repairing, trying out solutions and sharing skills. Protest is important—and
more is needed, to keep pressure on the new Democratic Congress to make
some of the important changes we want to see, to keep that slight crack
open. But the primary purpose of protest and direct action is to shake
up structures and delegitimize oppressive powers by showing that it does
not rest on the support of the people.
When the structures are crumbling, we need alternatives and new visions,
and practical ways to implement them. That’s why I spent time in
New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, doing relief work and bioremediation.
And that’s why I’ve stepped up the teaching of permaculture
and organizing in our Earth Activist Trainings, and why, with my filmmaking
partner Donna Read, we’ve been working on a documentary on earth
healing and on lots of supplementary educational material.
Our EAT students are doing remarkable work. Many of them joined us in
New Orleans, volunteering with Common Ground Relief, in the bioremediation
project, and with the clinic. Right now, one is home organizing sustainable
neighborhood tours in the heartland town of Iowa City. Another is in Bolivia,
doing rain water catchment in a poor, rural area. One group created a
sustainable encampment for a climate change protest camp in England. Yet
another is running the women’s program for a permaculture project
in the Occupied Territories, that brings together Palestinians and Israelis
to work on healing the land. And that’s just a small sampling of
the amazing work so many of them are doing.
But we need your help. Many of the youth and activists that take our courses
come on scholarships or work trade. This year we want to expand the number
of courses and the areas in which we teach. We hope to add family-friendly
courses that make it possible for parents to attend, with a program offered
for children as well. And Donna and I need to set aside some big chunks
of time in order to finish our permaculture documentary before the ice
caps melt!
And there is still the need for organizing, mobilizing, and filling the
streets, to create a huge, public clamor for peace.
All this takes resources. Alliance of Community Trainers is our umbrella
nonprofit that funds training, education, the production of educational
materials, and supports organizers and activists to do work like rebuilding
and bioremediating New Orleans.
You can help by giving a tax-deductible donation to Alliance for Community
Trainers. Every dollar you donate will generate big ripples of change,
and help put a solid foundation beneath the vision, returning its value
ten times over in health, empowerment and hope. We receive no government
support nor big foundation grants—we depend on individuals like
you to make our projects possible. Thank you for helping us to continue
this vital work.
Donate online by using the PayPal link on the left. Or send a check (which
you can earmark for a specific project—i.e. scholarships or documentary)
to:
Alliance for Community Trainers
1405 Hillmont
Austin, Texas
78704
And if you are looking for holiday cards to send, or gifts, check out
our CafePress stores that also support these vital projects:
http://www.cafepress.com/earthactivist/?pid=4130928
Thanks for your generous support—it feeds our hearts as well as
funding the programs that can help guarantee a viable future. In this
season of returning light, we wish you joy, love, and a fertile imagination
for the coming year.
-- Starhawk for Allliance of Community Trainers
Following are some of Starhawk's fave recipients,
with her comments why:
- E.A.T.
(Earth Activist Training) is a two week long training that combines
a permaculture design course with earth-based spirituality, political
organizing and direct action training. Activists, youth, and people
from poor communities who desperately need both the skills and the hope
this training offers usually can't afford the costs. We'd love to have
the funding to allow us to offer it on a pay-what-you-can basis. For
currently scheduled EAT trainings, see the Schedule
Page.
For full information
including donations visit the EAT web site:
http://www.earthactivisttraining.org
(NOTE: this page will open in a new browser window.)
Again, Click the "Make a Donation" button on the left to donate
using PayPal, or mail a check payable to ACT to the following address:
ACT
1405 Hillmount St.
Austin, Texas
- Reclaiming
Witch Camps always need money to provide scholarships for students who
can't afford to come otherwise, and to sustain our minimal but important
infrastructure.
Tax deductible checks
can be sent through Vermont Witch Camp. Make check out to VWC and earmark
it "All-Camp Scholarship Fund." Send to:
VWC,
PO Box 206,
Burlington, VT 05402
- R.A.N.T.
(Root Activists Network of Trainers) provides training and organizational
support for actions in the Global Justice and related movements. Donations
help fund travel and occasional stipends for trainers, the development
of written and online resources and a website, and trainings for trainers.
Since we formed in January of 2001, RANT has offered support for campaigns
in California, Brazil, Argentina, Quebec, Genoa, Washington DC, New
York, Kananaskis, and elsewhere. To find out more about RANT, visit
the website at rantcollective.net.
Click the "Make a Donation" button on the left to donate using
PayPal, or mail a check payable to ACT to the following address:
ACT
1405 Hillmount St.
Austin, Texas
78704 USA
- Reclaiming's
El Salvador Friendship fund supports projects teaching sustainability
and empowerment in poor communities in El Salvador. We encourage people
to join a Circle of Love and pledge $100 a year for five years, but
any amount is gratefully accepted. The last earthquake has created intense
suffering and need.
For the El Salvador
Fund, tax deductible checks can be made to:
Reclaiming
(earmark them ESFF)
P.O. Box 14404
SF CA 94114
Thanks
for taking the time to be sure your checks are correctly made out,
earmarked, and sent to the right address. I know this is a bit confusing,
but we don't yet have a central funding agency for the diversity of
projects represented here.
The
groups above are ones I'm personally involved with. There are other
lovely possibilities: the Pagan group of your choice, groups working
for abortion rights, Green Party candidates, your local schools, and
I'm sure you'll think of others. Let's jumpstart our own economy,
one that reflects our values and supports a true, shared abundance.
--
Starhawk
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