Dear Friends of Gabe,

Sad news.  Sunday afternoon while doing chores, I noticed that Gabe was so stiff he couldn’t get up from where he was lying in the pasture.  Meg and I covered him with Emily’s blanket and gave him water and hay and called Cindy, his vet, who drove down from Bolton, MA to see him.  She examined Gabe and felt that due to advanced arthritis in his knees, aggravated by his enormous size, weight and age, his legs could no longer carry him.  He was unable to stand.  His 16 years of being a friend and ambassador to those who visited the Abbey was coming to an end … so she assisted him in his transition

Tears flowed as Meg and I held him and thanked him for being such a wonderful friend to us all.  Best that his physical condition worsened with us rather than at Maple Farm where the same outcome would have resulted.  How wonderful that a veal calf that would have been killed for food in 16 weeks would live happily for 16 years at the Peace Abbey and would befriend Emily, a pony named Lilly, 11 pigs and a flock of pigeons who shared his barn, the students and staff at the Life Experience School … and come to touch the lives of countless visitors, some who swore off eating meat because of him.  Gabe was buried on Monday, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, on the property.

A special thanks to those who loved Gabe and showed it by rolling up their sleeves since 1996 to help repair the fence, muck the stalls, put down fresh bedding, shovel the mud, toss down the hay, empty and clean the water trough, made contributions toward his care and much, much more.  There was so much work to be done … day in and day out … and Gabe and the rest of the animals appreciated our love.  He will always live in our hearts.  Guess he didn’t want to leave the Peace Abbey, either.

In Gabe’s memory, educate people to boycott veal and dairy.  Through your efforts, he lives on!    Thanks.

Lewis and Meg

 
By Theresa Knapp

Sherborn —The Order of the Bards, Ovates and Druids celebrated Winter Solstice at the Peace Abbey on Wednesday, Dec. 21.

The Druids celebrate eight ceremonies a year. The Winter Solstice welcomes the sun back and is a “new beginning,” said member Sarah Fuhro of Natick.

“For the last three years we’ve been at the Peace Abbey, and part of that is because we usually are doing them [ceremonies] on public land, but the Peace Abbey is nice because it’s private land and we can have a large fire,” said Fuhro, noting the Boston “grove” has been in existence for about 20 years.

Cat Hughes of Berlin has been involved with the Order since 2005. She attended this year’s Winter Solstice with her toddler son.

“This is one of my favorite ceremonies; I really like the bonfire,” said Hughes, noting that she attends a ceremony every six weeks. “It’s a nice contrast between the really cold weather [and the hot fire] and it’s neat to see the light shining in the dark of winter which is the major symbolism of the ceremony — the return of the sun.”

According to http://www.druidry.org, the Winter Solstice (called in the Druid Tradition Alban Arthan [the Light of Arthur]) is the time of death and rebirth.

The site says “Druidry is for some a spiritual path, for others a religion, and for others a cultural activity. As a spiritual way or philosophy, Modern Druidism began to develop about 300 years ago during a period known as the ‘Druid Revival.’ ”

James Dempsey is a Shamanic energy healer with the Order, and has been involved since 2003 when he first met Fuhro whose “grove”’ does a lot of rituals at the Boston Arboretum which Dempsey frequents.

“We’ve been coming to the Peace Abbey for this particular ceremony for three or four years,” said Dempsey, whose wife, Liz Tobin, is also an energy healer. “It’s nice because the mission of the Peace Abbey goes with our mission; the goals of Druid practices are similar to the practices of the Peace Abbey such as embracing Mother Earth.”

This may be the last year the Druids will celebrate at the Peace Abbey, however, as the buildings are up for sale.

“Hopefully we can sustain ourselves,” said Dot Walsh of the Peace Abbey.

According to www.PeaceAbbey.org, the Peace Abbey is dedicated to creating innovative models for society that empower individuals on the paths of nonviolence, peacemaking and cruelty-free living. They offer a variety of programs and resources that teach, inspire and encourage one to speak out and act on issues of peace and social justice.

Photo gallery – Celebrating the winter solstice at the Peace Abbey in Sherborn

 

 

Click here to view a catalog of the 3,203 books and videos in the Peace Abbey Library on LibraryThing.com.

The catalog includes the 564 books in the Gandhi collection.

You can sort the collection by topic or author by clicking the Tags or Authors tab at the top of the page. You can also use the Search window to look for a topic of interest.

Thanks to our great volunteers who input all the books. Please let us know what you think of this tool and how you are using it.

Enjoy!

 

Here are a few of the media stories of Gandhi’s visit to Occupy Boston:

WickedLocal.com: Photo gallery: Peace Abbey’s Gandhi statue visits Occupy Boston

WRKO: Gandhi Makes Occupy Boston Appearance

WickedLocal Dover: Gandhi statue back at Peace Abbey after stay with Occupy Boston

Boston Globe West: Suburban Occupy sees opportunity to reenergize

 

Read the December Peace Abbey newsletter (pdf).

 

The Peace Abbey is a spiritual oasis that’s tucked away in the wooded hamlet of Sherborn. The multi-faith retreat center is home to the Pacifist Living History Museum and Emily the Sacred Cow, and over the years has hosted well-known visitors like Mother Teresa, Howard Zinn, Muhammad Ali, Maya Angelou, and, most recently, Joan Baez.

But the future of the Peace Abbey is up in the air. Faced with mounting bills, the cash-strapped nonprofit is appealing to the public and hoping that an angel investor can save the place.

Peace Abbey supporters are doing whatever they can to help. On Nov. 6, they held a fundraiser at Roots and Wings in Natick. About 250 people attended the benefit, which raised $3,000:

PeaceAbbeyBenefit.JPG

The folks at the Peace Abbey want to continue to offer peace and social justice programming in Sherborn, and they’re on the lookout for a like-minded organization to purchase the property. If you know anyone who might be interested, check out their latest newsletter (PDF) or contact the Peace Abbey office at 508-655-2143.

Meanwhile, the Peace Abbey continues to operate as usual. The campus is located at 2 North Main St. in Sherborn. Yoga classes are offered Tuesday mornings at 10:30 a.m. and meditation sessions are held on Sunday mornings.

Visitors are welcome to check out the museum, animal rights memorial, and the rest of the grounds 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekends.

If you haven’t been before, it might be worth checking out…before it’s too late.

– Emily Sweeney

 

Peace Abbey volunteer Madeline Champagne had been recording the total number of U.S. war deaths in Iraq on a sign outside the Peace Abbey, but during the winter of 2007 she decided these men and women deserved more recognition than just a number. In the Peace Abbey Coffeehouse room in the lower level of the Conference Center Madeline began building a memorial consisting of a wrist band with the name of each of the U.S. service member killed in action in Iraq. The wristbands are linked in a series of hanging chains that extend for many feet along the walls. The effect is moving and memorable.

Now, as the troops will be coming home from Iraq by the end of this year, it seems a fitting time for The Peace Abbey to dismantle the memorial and have a final tribute for these men and women.

We encourage everyone who is able to participate in this process. Please come by The Peace Abbey to spend a few moments to be a part of this extended prayer. Even taking down a few wristbands will make you part of the prayer–spend whatever time you can.

Each participant will cut one or more wristbands from the chains, remove the plastic covering, and honor each individual by reading aloud the name, age, and other information. (Scissors and staple removers will be on a table downstairs, along with a container to hold the wristbands.)

Once all the wristbands are all taken down, we will have a ceremony to burn the wristbands and scatter the ashes on C.O. Hill.

A listing will be printed and kept in a book in the Peace Abbey Multi-Faith Chapel.

 

Remarks by Dot Walsh at the presentation ceremony in South Africa

October 6, 2011

It is an honor to be here tonight to present the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award to Nelson Mandela.

I would like to thank Karen Beransche and all who helped make the global summit possible.  In the United States the Department of Peace was first presented to Congress by US Representative Dennis Kucinich.  Although it has never been adopted  there have been many people who are still working to promote this concept. We have a dept. of war why not a dept. of peace?  Representative Dennis Kucinich was the most recent recipient of the Courage of Conscience Award.

Andrea Le Blanc from September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows and the international organization, Network for Peace is with me tonight to present the award.

Shaun Johnson, the executive director of the Mandela Rhodes Foundation will be accepting the award on behalf of Nelson Mandela.

I would like to begin my words with a quote from Robert Kennedy who came to S. Africa during a difficult and turbulent time.

“Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy builds a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.”

The man we are honoring tonight,  Nelson Mandela is such a man. 

Many times I have asked myself who is this man who so loved his people and his country that he took on their struggle despite the consequences to himself, risking his life and his personal freedom for 27 years?

He has been described as a man full of vitality and optimism.  A man who dedicated his life to the principles of peace, social justice, harmony and equality, and a man who was prepared to die for his beliefs.

He has been called heroic and complex.

His friends called him a simple man, someone who was down to earth with warm human characteristics even finding time to play tennis and chess with tireless energy.

A man who kept his personal life private though he became the most public person in the world.

Educated as a lawyer he spent many years fighting for people who were suffering and punished under the unjust laws of apartheid in a segregated society.  Their suffering was his suffering.

Perhaps it was these years that prepared him for the road ahead.

His inner strength and strong will helped him to stay the course and not give in after he was arrested in 1964 charged with treason and given a life sentence.  And when faced with the brutality of prison life, being treated as less than human, he used his time to build self discipline.  He understood that the power over his own life making choices of how he would act and react was greater than the abusive and oppressive power of the authorities over him.

His intolerance of injustice, knowing it was wrong, and his own suffering strengthened his commitment and compassion for the suffering of his people.

He is a leader with integrity, a leader who inspired not only people in his own country and people throughout the world.  There was a world wide outcry from countries who supported his position using sanctions against the government and public events to raise the consciousness about apartheid  and the conditions in S. Africa.

In his negotiations with the  government in1989 when presenting his peace plans he did not waver or back down. And on February 11th, 1990 he walked through the gates of the prison and in the moment became the most public man in the world.

After his election as president in 1994, He called for democracy, reconciliation and equality for all.  As a leader he understood that moral courage and the ability to inspire others while willing to serve them humbly, is more important than serving yourself.

I remember after his release when he visited the United States and appeared at the Hatch Shell in Boston, he was so moved by the people and the music that he danced right into the hearts of people there and everywhere.

This is the man that the scholars in the Mandela Rhodes Foundation are called to follow for these are the characteristics defined in the application process itself.

He is the embodiment of the Ubuntu philosophy for as each one of us knows we are all connected in one human family and our humanity depends on the humanity of each person.

And now I would like to speak directly to Nelson Mandela.  The young S. African man we met in the airport told me to call him Tata Madiba.

And so,  Tata Madiba  you were my beacon of hope and inspiration for the twenty years of my service in prison work as a chaplain.  These men in the maximum security section  I call my brothers, had committed a crime, and were mostly uneducated, victims of violence themselves and unaware that perhaps their lives could change.  They had to discover their own power to make that change and you were our role model.  We learned about you,  your journey and what you valued.

Some of these men are now living in our community serving the young people who are at risk and desperately need inspiration and a message of hope.  For all who have loved and followed your principles over the years I say thank you.

…………..

The struggle is not over…just as Mandela said on the day he was released ”Today fills my heart with joy and sadness to learn you are still suffering.”

He recognized the injustice and violence of poverty and as the stability of the world economy challenges those who have and those who have-not, we are called to remember Mandela’s words “your freedom and mine cannot be separated”

In closing, I would like to ask Tammy Lee, 11 years old in the 5th grade of the Bellevue school to join me in reciting The Special Peace Corps Creed.

Dot..When I am hungry

Tammy..Send me someone to feed

Dot,,When I am thirsty

Tammy..Send me someone who needs a drink

Dot..When I am cold

Tammy.  Send me someone to warm

Dot..When I am sad

Tammy..Send me someone to cheer

Dot..When I need understanding

Tammy..Send me someone who needs mine

Dot..When I need to be looked after

Tammy..Send me someone to care for

Dot.And when I think only of myself

Tammy.,Draw my thoughts to another.

Let us all stand and face the cameras and send a blessing to Mandiba, the blessing that the children at the LES give as they end their day. Please raise your hands with the sign of love and I will say the blessing.

(sign)  Angels hover near and far in what we do and where we are,  pace bene, peace and good.  We love you Madiba!

And now for the statue to be presented to Shaun Johnson.  The award reads.. Nelson Mandela for your courage, commitment and love for your country and its people  by sacrificing your own freedom for twenty seven years to bring freedom to all.

 

By Staff reports

Sherborn —Faced with foreclosure again, the Peace Abbey in Sherborn is hosting a yoga and bodywork event at Roots and Wings in Natick on Sunday, Nov. 6. The event lasts from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. and will feature various sessions, including yoga, an information session about the Abbey and an art sale.

Long-time Abbey volunteer Dan Dick, and others like him, would hate to see it go away.

“This is a place that brings all aspects of nonviolence together,” he said.

The Abbey serves as a haven for vegetarians, pacifists, conscientious objectors and any one who seeks peace, both in the world and within themselves.

For Dick, the Abbey served as a home when it opened its doors to him and his family after a house fire left them homeless in 2008. To this day, the Peace Abbey is “my spiritual home,” he said.

Ellen Fine, who called herself an occasional decoration at the Abbey, said that it’s a place that has meant a lot to a lot of people.

The Abbey, which has encountered financial trouble in the past, is facing roughly $300,000 in debt.

Fine said, “Peace is a costly thing to achieve.”

And, while the event on Sunday will not bring them close to that goal, “every little bit helps,” Dick said. “It would be a great loss for the area and for the spiritual.”

The property consists of old buildings, animals and a memorial park that all require attention, which only increases the need for financial support.

Its most famous resident was Emily, a cow who escaped from a slaughterhouse and was bought by the Peace Abbey after she was captured. Some people considered Emily to be a wise incarnated soul. People came from across the world to see the cow known for being very friendly to everyone.

In the past, celebrities such as Yoko Ono have come forward with support the Peace Abbey.

Dick said, “We keep hoping there’s someone that can make a substantial contribution.”

He added that the Peace Abbey has vacillated between being able to be self-sustaining and looking for outside investment or even selling the Abbey.

Despite its struggles, the Abbey continues to welcome guests daily, and continues to hosts its traditional Sunday morning meditation and multidenominational peace prayer sessions.

“The energy that comes from this place is just amazing,” Dick said. “It’s almost unthinkable that this place wouldn’t exist.”

 

Read the Peace Abbey Newsletter November 2011 (pdf).