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Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts

12 Jul 2012

Willowbrook Farm Open Day Barbecue Iftar: Sat 28th July 2012

WIN is delighted to highlight this Ramadan event at Willowbrook Organic Farm (see below). We've thoroughly enjoyed supporting the farm and organising outings to Willowbrook over the years. WIN Reps are also intending to participate in the gathering below - we hope to also have copies of our popular Islam & Climate booklet on hand for anyone interested at the gathering (Suggested donation £1.50 ea to help cover costs). With the climate already changing before our eyes, it is vital that we reflect on the state of things, and how we can actualise our responsibility in a constructive and enjoyable way.
 
Ramadan is an ideal time to reflect on our own internal state as well as the state of the world. This booklet offers insights and direction towards a more wholesome way of living and connecting with our fellow beings, on this beautiful planet. The images and text creatively articulate a message that can easily be understood and shared with others. We hope to have plenty of copies for those who would like to do this. The booklet is also available on pdf via our website.


The event notice now follows>> 

Willowbrook Farm Open Day Barbecue Iftar

Date: Sat 28th July 2012
Time: from around 6pm
Venue:  Willowbrook Farm, Hampton Gay, Oxfordshire , OX5 2QQ
 
Willowbrook Farm is an organic farm in Oxfordshire run by a Muslim family. 

Bookings are open to attend a Ramadan open day barbecue iftar at the farm. 

If you are interested in attending please email Willowbrook farm directly for details. Please book early so they can confirm numbers.

7.15   pm    Welcome to farm and guided tour taking in the vegetable garden, poultry, geese, turkeys and sheep and woodland.
7.45   pm    Free time to wander around farm.
8.15   pm    Open air music by the Birmingham based band "Silk Road"
9.00   pm    Break fast and open air maghreb prayers
9.30   pm    Iftaar with additional spiritual music by Adam Radwan
10.30 pm    Close


The cost for the entire programme including food is:

Children aged 1-3 Free
Children aged 4-10 £12
Adults £20

Camping: This is an option as long as it is self-contained. Please contact/email the farm directly if you need more info.

More info/bookings: willowbrookorganicfarm AT gmail.com  ;
website: http://www.willowbrookorganic.org/   

18 Sept 2011

WIN Rep talks at Lambeth Palace: Summary of speech

Below is a summary of a talk I gave at Lambeth Palace in March this year, at a national Interfaith conference on sustainability. Attending the conference was a valuable experience for me. I observed some inspiring and thought provoking talks, as well as a number of small group discussions. At the same time, I noticed that 'power' and the extent to which it can be centralised in faith groups was something that a number of small groups showed some resistance to reflecting on. 

The conference was on a selection basis (as opposed to first come, first serve) in a prestigious venue, and no doubt many of the people who attended were probably in positions of privilege in their faith communities. Might it be that some might ultimately lose some of that privilege if the issue of power was brought more fully to awareness? This is something I have thought about.  Amongst a bunch of other things, I'm looking at writng a piece focussing more on my experience of the day, but for now here's that summary of the talk I gave at the conference!... 

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An Islamic Ecological Engagement: Uniting the Strands

By Muzammal Hussain, Founder of Wisdom In Nature


The Outer and the Inner

The faiths – by providing a framework that re-orient life from the material to the spiritual – offer a means of lessening our attachment to the physical world, to materialism and to wealth accumulation. Faiths can thus offer a quality that is of profound value to environmental care.  

We are spiritual beings. However, we also have the gift of a body - a vehicle to help bring wholeness into the world. Along with the concept of stewardship expressed in a number of faith traditions, the fact that we physically exist places on us a responsibility. In Islam, this role of a ‘steward’ is called khalifah.

Yet, if faith traditions re-orient us to the inner whilst placing an outer responsibility, what kind of approach might we take outwardly? How might it be distinct from an approach which disregards the inner?


Nature, social ecology & an interconnected world

One quality might be that with a spiritual or Divine centre, we are able to act without ‘our issue’ becoming an idol in the marketplace of competing issues.

We might also look to nature. The Qur’an guides people to contemplate nature which it refers to as ayat or ‘signs’ - the same term used to describe verses in the Qur’ an. For Muslims, thus, nature is a ‘sign’ of the Divine; and can offer inspiration that moves us to wholesome solutions. In nature we can witness mutually supportive relationships, and multi-directional processes rather than linear ones.

If we can apply the lessons of nature to environmental care, we might take an approach that is co-nurturing and ultimately more resilient. Rather competing with issues, our approach might integrate the social, economic and ‘environmental’. Indeed some say that the economic system - based on fictitious money, usury and unending growth on a finite planet - is at the heart of the environmental crisis. There is no absolute separation, and to make any would go against the nature of things in a world where things are inter-connected.

To me, ecological activism - the activism that I strive to participate in - is activism that values interconnectedness - honouring the relationship between different strands of existence however much cultural norms differentiate between them.

From a social perspective, it means awareness around class, gender, culture, power and privilege, for example. Without an appreciation of social diversity, so everyone - with our unique stories, hurts and hopes - can feel and is included, how effectively can we work in communities as we take our work forward?

Ultimately a joined-up, integrated approach, whose centre is the Divine is one, which I believe, was embodied by the Prophets, who were compassionate and holistic as they engaged outwardly.


Wisdom In Nature: Islamic grassroots activism

The group I am involved with, Wisdom In Nature, attempts an integrated approach. We used such processes to complete our photo-booklet ‘Islam & Climate Change ~ A Call to Heal’.

Also, we do not accept donations from government or corporations. Indeed our day-to-day funding comes only from individuals.

A natural extension of our work is to support local initiatives. Our Islamic community food project at Spitalfields City Farm is an example of this. Participants connect with the earth, train in facilitation using inclusive processes whilst also discovering their own direction – all within a framework that values spirituality.

With a presence in London and more recently in Brighton, we look forward to collaborations and community building as we further an integrated approach in these locations. 

© Muzammal Hussain