Friday, March 23, 2012

Why is this Night, Abkhazian Dinner Night, Sunday, March 25, Different?

The Abkhazian Dinner is different from all other New Horizons events and particularly special!
Why and how?
This is the night New Horizons, on behalf of the Season For Non-Violence, gives honor to Murat Yagan, last living Elder of the 26,000 year old ancient Abkhazian tradition, Ahmsta Kebzeh, and Murat's dedication and devotion to making the world a better place. One of the ways we show this respect is by cooking and eating traditional Abkhazian food.

Murat has been personally mentoring Anastasia and guiding the unfolding of the “new” New Horizons since 1999.

Join us for this very special event!

Feast on food native to ancient Abkhazia, a culture of the Caucasus Mountains, known worldwide for its vast contributions to longevity, spirituality and peace.

Learn how and why New Horizons is incorporating ancient traditions of Abkhazia into the design of the Possible Human, Possible Society Study.

Participate in a community unity-building “group dialogue” before dinner. Dialogue theme: Storytelling as a Path to Peace.

Murat visits us from British Columbia by video presentation.
Special before (2:30 p.m.) program begins and during dinner.

Reservations: zonesofpeacenh@aol.com or call 240.409.5347

Space Is Limited.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Abkhazian Dinner Event In Motion: Behind The Scenes #2

Sue says she’s “vibrating.” Immersing herself for most of the entire past weekend doing her New Horizons Curriculum Development work for the coming Abkhazian Dinner, she sent me this note this morning in an email.

Sue says she's
"vibrating" today.
“I am positively vibrating with ... let's see what... anticipation, fullness, hope, awe, ... yes also a touch of fear... did I leave out something important? Can this be good enough?” 

Sue deVeer, March 19, 2012.

Oh, my. Oh, my. Did Sue ever take herself to the edge of “curriculum development” this time! Oh, my. Oh, my. She dug in to everything she had at hand to come up with a wonderfully edited interpretation of Murat’s famous “bus ride story” as he presents it in his monograph, “Building Up A Kebzeh Community.” This story is to be our Abkhazian Dinner event’s feature. Then she expanded beyond Murat’s story to create a delicious, specially designed for our Abkhazian Dinner “conversation guideline.”

Well, I tell you I was wowed by what she had done!

I hope lots of people come out for our event, on behalf of the Season For Non-Violence.

They will be in for a bit of on the spot transforming or I will eat my words instead of our traditional Abkhazian Dinner foods.

Yum. Yum.
Reservations still open.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Abkhazian Dinner Event In Motion: Behind The Scenes

Who would have thought that a March day, especially a day before St. Patrick's Day, would see Sue and I sitting outdoors in the sunshine, preparing our program for March 25. But there we were, yesterday, in 70 degree plus weather, co-creating, plotting and planning our fourth Abkhazian Dinner working together; happy as we could be, doing one of the things we've come to excel at over the past five or six years; co-creating.

No doubt, today, spring is on
its way.
Our coming event is to be the sixth or seventh Abkhazian Dinner event New Horizons has presented since 2000. We had intended to present many Abkhazian Dinners since that inaugural event. We wanted so much to share the wisdom and the teachings Murat Yagan has generously gifted to us, as well as to the many others whose lives he has touched.

We wanted people around us to take a look at these teachings as a means of doing our part to build a healthier, more harmonious U.S.A. However, my eye surgeries and the overall wear and tear on me during my years of being blind and recovering from that challenge (1998 – 2006) rearranged that priority.

But we are back on track now, if we will be so blessed and ever so happy to be so!

There is much to share; so many stories of my own personal journey of transformation, intrinsically interwoven with how critically important community is to me. Murat brought the certainty into my life that we can, intentionally, co-create AWE in our communities. This is a whole series of stories by itself; Murat's, the stories of others around him who live this truth and my own. Then there are Sue's stories. And, now, for our Abkhazian Dinner event we have, also, added the stories of our guest presenter, Mayor Deborah Burgoyne of Burkittsville, Maryland.

The main story for our Abkhazian Dinner event will, delightfully, be Murat's "Bus Ride Story" which we intend to introduce as a way of inviting community-unity building storytelling (as time allows) for our event guests. This story is a powerful community building story, if I ever heard one. It is excerpted from Murat’s “Building Up A Kebzeh Community” monograph which will be on sale at our Abkhazian Dinner event.

Storytelling, as the Possible Human, Possible Society Study has made me appreciate more than ever is one of the most impactful vehicles for clearing a path to peace. It leaves us knowing the truth that "an enemy is someone whose story we have not yet heard."

Now I am off to sit outside, again, in the warm sunshine, polishing up my own opening story for the dinner. I think this planning process is about to bring forth a few more stories of our behind the scenes preparation process. So please come back for more as we head into our final Abkhazian Dinner preparations. (I hope I don’t end up here promising more than I can deliver. My recent blog posting track record has not been much.)

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

About Abkhazian Elder, Murat Yagan, and Anastasia, New Horizons Executive Director

(Also see Anastasia The Storyteller and the Two Pastors, Two Churches stories.)

May, 1999 -- Guest of Honor, Eye Bank Dedication District 22-C -- Ms. Rosen-Jones, legally blind, receives a standing ovation she is unable to see;

Anastasia, Guest of Honor,
Dedication Eye Bank, District
22 C, May, 1999
June, 1999. Anastasia discovers the ancient teachings of Abkhazia as taught by Elder of the Tradition, Murat Yagan;
2000. Murat writes Anastasia. Anastasia meets Murat in person and is “awed.” Anastasia discovers Murat’s map to “awe” – the “Chart of Ascension,” recognizing its kinship to her work with Martin G. Groder, M.D.; (Also see Marty Groder, "The Man Who Believed In Evil."
2001. Anastasia Sees “911” Through A Waxed Paper Veil,” recovers her eyesight (2003), returning to mainstream life (2006) with an assignment to share what she saw when she was blind with Murat’s guidance.

This is “why an Abkhazian Dinner.”

More about Abkhazian Elder, Murat Yagan, and Anastasia

Monday, February 27, 2012

Why An Abkhazian Dinner?

What is the reason the New Horizons/Small “Zones Of Peace” Project honors Abkhazia?

Since 1999 when New Horizons began merging what was originally a psychological, mainstream therapeutic community model with the ancient cultural traditions of Abkhazia, under Murat Yagan’s tutelage, we have increasingly advanced our expanded community development and violence prevention approach into programs and projects that can benefit all of society. At the Abkhazian Dinner we honor these rich foundations -- and – Murat who is purportedly the last living Elder of his ancient Abkhazian tradition, Ahmsta Kebzeh.


Archeological findings suggest that this culture, located in the region of Mt. Ararat, dates back 26,000 years. The communal way of life of these peoples appears to have been unadulterated up until Russian invasions began around the 1600s. Study of Kebzeh traditions and practices sheds light on how a culture can endure --for that length of time- -- living long and in peace and harmony, at least among themselves.

More to come...

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Dialogue And Dinner Event, March 25, 2012

You are cordially invited to a feast
for body, mind and spirit.

New Horizons Support Network, Inc, on behalf of the Season For Non-Violence, presents …

A special dialogue and dinner event, showcasing ancient Abkhazian community traditions, used today, in the design of New Horizons’ fascinating Possible Human, Possible Society Study ---

“(Almost) Annual Abkhazian
Dinner"

With New Horizons’ Executive Director and Founder, M. Anastasia Rosen-Jones and special guest, Mayor Deborah Burgoyne, Burkittsville, Maryland.

Anastasia and Abkhazian Elder, Murat Yagan,
put their heads together about peace-building.
           
Sunday, March 25, 2012
 3:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.

          Potluck Dinner follows and continues "group dialogue."

(Native Abkhazian recipes now posted online, should you choose to try your hand at them. All dishes welcome.)

Frederick Friends Meeting
723 N. Market Street
Frederick, Maryland

Feast on food native to ancient Abkhazia, a culture of the Caucasus Mountains, known worldwide for its vast contributions to longevity, spirituality and peace.

Learn how and why New Horizons is incorporating ancient traditions of Abkhazia into the design of the Possible Human, Possible Society Study.

Participate in a community unity-building “group dialogue” before dinner, sparked by introductory presentations by Anastasia and Mayor Deborah Burgoyne.

Dialogue Theme: Spirituality, Ethics and Politics.

More to come about Abkhazia and Elder, Murat Yagan

Reservations:

zonesofpeacenh@aol.com or call 240.409.5347.

Space is limited.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Lisa Boyer: Volunteer Of The Year, 2011

Snowy days up here in the hills that still call themselves mountains, as in “West Virginia: the Mountain State;” a perfect time for me to be surrounded by family photographs and volumes of scrapbooks; the ones I have in my possession. A few of them date back almost a hundred years or so.

New Horizons' Volunteer Of
The Year, 2011
I had recklessly pulled them off the storage shelves, usually housing them, the other night. At the time I was paying little heed to the reality that the next day I would need to right the mess I made, providing visual aids for a story I was telling a friend. You know, the “a picture is worth a thousand words” kinda thing. By Sunday afternoon the disorder I created had, however, become a joy of discovery. Many tales could emerge from the adventure. Most of them more appropriately belonging on Anastasia The Storyteller. Nonetheless, there are a select few that belong right here.

In particular, there are stories that relate to photos of Lisa Boyer at various board meetings; in restaurants and at my house, indoors and outdoors. Photos of Lisa climbing up the mountainside behind my house, with me and several others.. We are hiking these brush-covered trails for an (almost) annual Veteran’s Day event; a hike that has been more “almost” than annual in recent years.

Ever the peace-builders, we’re trekking these paths to honor soldiers of the Civil War and the battles that engulfed Harpers Ferry during that era. The impact of these battles is a part of us here; reminders of the best; the dedication of our freedom fighters, and the worst; war, of America. We climb up to these encampments, see the gorgeous vistas that surround them and return to ground level in about five to seven hours. The occasional Appalachian Trail thru hikers we’ve known can do the same, in less than two hours, round trip back to my house. But who are we, the occasional hiker, to compare with these heroes of mine?

Sue saw a halo over
Lisa's head when she took
this. Who is to say it was only
the lights?
Images surface; remembrances of Lisa picking strawberries with me at a nearby organic farm, Lisa sitting quietly at New Horizons community meetings, prompted by me to share what she is thinking, the rest of us rewarded with the jewels of insight and wisdom of her clever mind. So many images; each one a precious treasure for me. Words cannot hope to convey the blessings and gifts of Lisa by my side, on my team, for more than eleven years! And, these were the difficult years; the ones when it was not quite certain that New Horizons would truly be able to ever rise again because its leader, me, had lost her eyesight (but never her vision).

What can a humble person really say to show ample appreciation for loyalty, devotion to the mission and something, going beyond those earth plane contributions, having a Lisa walking with them? Nothing really does the trick.

Small token of appreciation that it is, this past year, again, Lisa Boyer, is our Volunteer of The Year. Lucky me, lucky New Horizons and lucky you who visit our blog sites that would not even exist were it not for Lisa. Please take a moment, if you will, to read my letter of appreciation to Lisa; inadequate as it is, so you, too, can have a brief glimpse into the magnitude and gifts of her contributions to us. And, thus, also to you.

Of course, by now, Lisa, the modest one, upon reading this, is embarrassed. My gushing brings that out in her. So I will end right here with deepest gratitude to Lisa Boyer, New Horizons’ Volunteer of The Year, 2011.

From Anastasia
Up in the hills/mountains where it is very cold today.
But the sun was shining nonetheless.