Showing posts with label Tree of Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tree of Life. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Ballarat Interfaith Networks Annual Tree of Life - One Voice : this year at beautiful Buninyong : 21 Nov 10am to 3pm


Tree of Life - One Voice ---- 
Ballarat Interfaith Network
Building Bridges of Understanding
 Saturday 21st November 10-­3pm 
Buninyong Town Hall
BIN: Aims to provide opportunities to communicate, celebrate, learn and enrich our understanding of people of all faiths within the Ballarat community
Link to document here
Programme Outline 
Saturday 21st Nov 2015
Buninyong Town Hall in Learmonth St, Buninyong

10am – 3pm 
Art exhibition, various faith information stalls, bonsai exhibition, coffee & cake. 
Also Hazara Tea House.

10am ‑10.30am 
Phoenix P-­12 Community College Choir.

10.30am - 11am: 
Josh Wilkins’ Shower Bus for the homeless

12.30pm -‑1.30pm: 
Phoenix P-­12 Community College Band.

1.30pm - 2pm: 
Nick Withers’ band
Maybe the Music.
ESPRESSO DEPOT 
Pavement lunch, 12-1.30pm: 
Learmonth St, Buninyong
Viewable Facebook link 

Uniting Church in Learmonth Street, Buninyong
Interfaith:
10.30-11.30am: 
Baha’i community
Soul Food programme, together with Geoffrey Williams’ Soul Choir

11.30 am: 
Murray Lobley
Significance of the Tree of Life to 
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

12noon: 
Islamic Society of Ballarat – address & Q & A

In Uniting Church grounds
• Walk the meditation labyrinth
• Enjoy a family picnic on the lawn
• Decorate the interfaith Tree of Life

Buninyong Botanical Gardens 
in Scott Street in 'The Village'
2pm-2.45pm
Guided informative tour of the Botanical Gardens


2.45pm

Release of Peace Balloons

Ballarat Interfaith Network contacts
Elham Jamali: Chairperson 
Mobile: 0421 001 363 elham@westnet.com.au
Maureen Doonan: Exec. Secretary 
Mobile: 0418 383 802 maureen.doonan@gmail.com
Margaret Lenan Ellis: Public Relations Officer 
Mobile: 0400 650 234  mflellis@netconnect.com.au

Sponsors

Ballarat Interfaith Network

One Voice for Aussie Youth Inc

City of Ballarat

BRMC


Interfaith Groups

Baha’i

Islamic Society of Ballarat

Christian Church groups

Hindu
Buddhist


Community Groups

Buninyong Botanical Gardens

One Voice for Aussie Youth Inc. - Mobile Shower Bus

Espresso Depot

Emmaus Primary School: Art Exhibition
Ballarat Bonsai Society
Phoenix P-12 CommunityCollege Band & choir
Nick Wither’s Band: Mainly the Music
Geoffrey William’s Daylesford choir: Soul Choir

.

Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Dignity, Australian Trees and the Interfaith Tree: a speech given by Chris Parnell in Ballarat at the close of The Tree of Life Project, 23 November 2013

speaking at the close of The Tree of Life Project
Ballarat Botanical Gardens
23 November 2013

Dignity, Australian Trees and the Interfaith Tree

Dignity as a human value is action that includes self-worth, self-regard and self-respect. What we think, feel and do with regard to ourselves, are the foundation of our integrity in encountering and interacting with others. In this manner, dignity is built on self discipline, self respect, self confidence, self sacrifice and self
satisfaction. Dignity becomes a path toward the goal of life.

If I think, feel and act with dignity, then I will think, feel and interact with others with dignity also. Where my life is sacred unto myself, then I will have regard for rights, and I will also have regard to the sacredness of others and their rights. Dignity is not only something I have for myself, dignity is something that I also confer on the other. In doing so, I am recognising and honouring the true humanness of each and every other person. Living dignity builds the dignity of the other.

The Trees of Faith Stories
The Bodhi Tree

Trees figure in myriad ways in the stories of the different religions. In the Buddhist faith, the Buddha achieved self-enlightenment sitting under the Bodhi tree.


In the mystical tradition of Islam, the great Sufi poet Rumi said,


Every tree, every growing thing as it grows, says this truth: 
You harvest what you sow. 
With life a short as a half taken breath, don't plant anything but love.

The Banyan Tree
In the Bhagavad Gita, Lord Krishna said,
"There is a banyan tree which has its roots upward and its branches down, and the Vedic hymns are its leaves. One who knows this tree is the knower of the Vedas." 

In the Sikh faith, we have the story of Guru Nanak as a young man being kept in the shade of a tree as the sun moved across the sky. The shade of the tree did not move from the sleeping young Nanak.


In the Baha’i faith, there is the orange tree beside the Mausoleum of The Bab, from which devotees take the seeds and plant them nearby houses of worship, worldwide.


The Latter Day Saints have the narrative of the revelation of the Tree of Life, with an iron rod beside it; this is the rod of faithfulness to the Word of God.


In the Jewish faith, the sacred narrative of Moses begins with the burning bush, and Moses being told to take off his shoes, for he is standing on sacred ground.


In the Christian faith, Jesus teaches that you will know a tree by its fruits: 
“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep's clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves. You will know them by their fruits. Are grapes gathered from thorns, or figs from thistles? So, every sound tree bears good fruit, but the bad tree bears evil fruit. A sound tree cannot bear evil fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Thus you will know them by their fruits. (Mt 7:15-19)
The Trees of Australia

Trees feature notably in Australian Life. We have the ever-present gum tree, the eucalyptus tree and the wattle tree. Many of our Cenotaphs and war memorials have trees growing from seeds of the tree at Lone Pine at Gallipoli. 


The Gum Tree exudes copious sap from any break in the bark. If you look at a gum tree, and examine the branches carefully, you will always find one branch is bare, dead, bereft of leaves and gum nuts. It appears the tree is pruning itself, casting off its unwanted part. This is a metaphor for human life. We cannot do in the evening of our lives what we did in the morning of our lives. We shed attachments and desires naturally as we age, just as the gum tree sheds its needless appendage. Human life is like that, we are continually letting go of attachments, glamour and affectation from our past for they weigh us down needlessly as we grow peacefully into the evening of our lives.

That one dead branch suggests to us that life and death, hope and loss, always coexist in the world. The gum tree, our Eucalyptus, is a unique living symbol of hope and survival.


Throughout our land, we find our own genus of the Eucalyptus tree, eucalyptus regnans. A Eucalyptus tree which regenerates itself. This is a unique tree, the only tree which regenerates itself in bushfire. The heat of bushfires causes the seed pods to burst open and they are fanned forward to land where they will and take root and grow.

The Eucalyptus and its gum weeping variants suggest the cycle of creation, preservation and destruction. This cycle of Generation, Organisation, Destruction

(GOD) spells the process of divine creation, maintenance and receiving – renewal of all life energy.


Wattles, also called acacias, are wonderful native plants. In fact, Australia's official floral emblem is a wattle. More than 850 species of wattle grow in Australia. The Australian Coat of Arms features the Kangaroo and Emu perched on sprigs of Wattle. Henry Lawson was once accused of sedition, when he wrote a poem about a strike camp at Barcaldine in Queensland. It was then that the memorable imagery suggestive of the Australian value of "fair go" entered the Australian soul, that of blood on the wattle:
So we must fly a rebel flag
As others did before us.
And we must sing a rebel song,
And join a rebel chorus.
We’ll make the tyrants feel the sting
O’those they would throttle.
They needn’t say the fault was ours
If blood should stain the wattle.
Seeds from the Lone Pine cones have been planted at the Shrine of Remembrance and the Australian War Memorial. These have been successfully propagated and presented as living war memorials to schools and ex-service and other organisations throughout Australia and New Zealand.

Trees as symbols suggest the marriage of heaven and earth. Like the Banyan of India, we may emulate a tree in meditation and reach up to heaven to breathe in the divine love. Our feet become the roots as we reach down and breathe the sustenance of Mother Earth.

Trees are also symbolic of the growth of faith. When we plant a sapling, we put a fence around it to protect it, we put manure or fertiliser on it, and we water it and protect it as it grows into a great tree, giving shade and shelter to many. It takes discipline and time to give that shade and shelter.

No one throws stones at bare trees; 
only the fruit-laden trees attract the stones. 

The Interfaith Tree

The Interfaith Tree of Australia accommodates all. We have striven as a nation to protect freedom of religion and worship in Australia. The work of the Australian Human Rights Commission and its collaboration with the Australian Multicultural Foundation and educational institutions produced the keystone reference document, Freedom of Religion and Belief in 21st Century Australia.

The foundation of our Interfaith Tree is dignity and respecting the rights of the other. As interfaith networks, we welcome the other and enter into dialogue with the goal of understanding, cooperation and harmony.
Interfaith Networks are not about syncretism where religions are merged; no, no: this is not the goal. Interfaith Networks respect and honour the boundaries of all religions.

It is from within these boundaries of faith and discipline, prayer and practice, that we encounter the other and experience points of contact in experience of the divine, with whatever name we honour and worship the Divine.

Our Interfaith Tree has many branches accommodating people of faith, and people of no faith. Often, people of no faith have profound values which they espouse and practice in the public domain. These values, truth, right conduct, love, peace and non-violence, are also human values. It is these values which we share in common as Australians that highlight interfaith activities as important to community well-being, respect and understanding. It is culture and values that bind our Australian society together.

Please note: The photos and links in the above speech were inserted by the editor of this blog.

Sunday, 24 November 2013

The Tree of Life Project - a PowerPoint Presentation of events

Below is a PowerPoint Presentation of what happened at The Tree of Life Project - a concept of the Ballarat Interfaith Network - held in Ballarat from 15-23 November, 2013.

The Tree of Life Project - a mind map of events and related photographs

Photos from the Ballarat Interfaith Front: 
The Tree of Life Project
15-23 November 2013

This Mind Map of the event has been prepared by Ian Hall.
The map can be enlarged.

INSTRUCTIONS TO GET THE MOST FROM THE MIND MAP
A click on a photo will bring up an arrow.
Click on the arrow to get to more links.
Please note the logos of the sponsors are linked to their websites.
We are grateful to them and ask you to support them.
If a sponsor has inadvertently been omitted, please advise
at ballaratinterfaithnetwork@gmail.com
There are YouTubes linked and they contain music and/or
PowerPoint Presentations.
Along the top of the Map there are links to Ballarat Interfaith Network's
Facebook, Google+, Tumblr, Twitter and Pinterest.
The centre of the MindMap is a link to a pdf file
so that the image can be seen in a larger format.

Saturday, 23 November 2013

The Tree of Life Project concludes to-day with two events - it has been a joy to present and participate in the Project



To-day is the final day of The Tree of Life Project.
This concludes the nine days of an all-inclusive, community-wide
opportunity for people of all faiths and of none
to come together and rub shoulders with each other.

We have had children's art; a visit to the oldest Synagogue 
on the Australian mainland; we have welcomed the Jewish Shabbat;
we have gone bush and meditated on the major religions of the world
and included, as well,  humanism;
we have remembered the Trees of Faith planted around Ballarat
which testify to the hope of the human spirit;
we have listened to various religious speakers
telling us of The Tree of Life in their traditions;
we have listened to children singing from the Russian tradition;
we have listened to what it is like to be a stateless and displaced person
yet have hope in your heart and solace in art.

We have met and shared with a diverse range of people.

To-day we conclude with poetry, music, food and trees.

From 2pm-4pm we have Poetry
from three published Ballarat poets -
Barry Breen, Ross Gillett, and Lorraine McGuigan -
at The Known World Bookshop, 14 Sturt Street, Ballarat.

We then dash across to the Ballarat Botanical Gardens
for a 4.30pm start to the Conservatory to hear 
Chris Parnell of the Shepparton Interfaith Network speak
and 
to listen to Like Honey, a singing group from Geelong.
And then it will be multicultural food across the courtyard
in the Robert Clark Centre.
At 6.15 pm we conclude.

A big thank-you to all who participated in the many events.
We bless you and hope you took away warmth and good thoughts
from the events.

We hope you will join the members and supporters of
Ballarat Interfaith Network
at future events.

And remember you can stay in touch with us on this blog
and on our other social media listed at the top of the sidebar.


Friday, 22 November 2013

Poetry, Music, Food, and an Ancient Oak conclude The Tree of Life Project




To-morrow, Saturday - from 2pm-4pm, 
there will Poetry at The Known World Bookshop
14 Sturt Street, Ballarat. 
(a bookshop to die for!). 


Local published Ballarat poets Barry Breen, Ross Gillett, and Lorraine McGuigan will entertain you. The Known World is a wonderful experience so please take note of the books. You may even want to purchase one or two. 

And the TKW chatelaine Michelle does lovely coffee and bikkies too. All this is part of Ballarat Interfaith Network's The Tree of Life Project - Ballarat's all-inclusive, end-of-year, community-wide celebration.

Then it will be a dash over to the Ballarat Botanical Gardens for The Finale - singing from Like Honey (from Geelong), food, and perhaps a visit to the Druid's Oak planted in 1870!
See you there!

Thursday, 21 November 2013

Final events of The Tree of Life Project as we look back (in a PowerPoint Presentation) at the highlights of the week.

The Tree of Life Project is nearly over.

Below you can see some of the wonderful highlights we have experienced this week. If you have missed out on ToL - the all inclusive end of year event - so far, please check the program above.

We are having a wonderful poetry reading on Saturday afternoon at The Known World Bookshop, 14 Sturt Street, Ballarat. This has been organised by the well-known Ballarat identity, Barry Breen who has been Poet in Residence at The Art Gallery of Ballarat this year. Joining him will other published poets from Ballarat, Lorraine McGuigan and Ross Gillette.

Two requests we have if you attend the poetry reading at The Known World - please take an interest in the wonderful collections of books there and please purchase a coffee. Otherwise the event is free. The Known World, under its chatelaine Michelle, is a favourite place of mine. I think if we were like the British or Americans, Australia would have made a movie about it. Comments have been made about the smallness of the bookshop - but I think this is part of the charm. Sure, if you all come the poets may have to speak louder and you may have to spill onto the footpath - but my theory is that people - if crowded yet comfy and cosy - think they are having a great time.

 After the poetry, we make a bee-line for the Conservatory at Ballarat Botanical Gardens for the finale of The Tree of Life Project. There will be music from Like Honey and a multi-cultural repast across the courtyard in the Robert Clarke Center. Please enjoy. Thank you to everyone who has contributed to this event - in Ballarat, Creswick and in Trentham. We've loved every minute.

The Tree of Life Project 15-23 November 2013 - :Photos

Saturday, 16 November 2013

The Nightingale of Paradise ... signature tune for The Tree of Life Project in Ballarat

Last night, the official opening of The Tree of Life Project was held at Ballarat Library. Stan Deutscher composed a song which will be the signature tune for the event. Here are Stan and his song on YouTube. Our next even will be at the Art Gallery of Ballarat to-morrow afternoon. Please check the program above for details. There will be a number of speakers from different faith traditions and the Russian Orthodox Children's Choir from Geelong will sing. Should be a beautiful afternoon. Please come.

Monday, 11 November 2013

In retreat - no, not going backwards or running away. Rather - stretching ourselves for the journey ahead!



On 2 November, the Ballarat Interfaith Network had a Retreat Day at the rural property of our Chair, Elham. It was beautiful. Some of us don't experience such a concept in our own traditions. Others of us are well used to the concept.

Our Wise Guide was Frank Purcell who is President of Shepparton Interfaith Network. He is the one on left of the photograph. Frank is a very learned man and his knowledge of his own faith and the need for interfaith networks and activities is substantial. We learned a lot. 

It was a good preparation for The Tree of Life Project and all the wonderful things we want to do for nine days under that banner.

Sunday, 10 November 2013

THE TREE OF LIFE PROJECT - COUNTDOWN TO FRIDAY 15 NOVEMBER



Next Friday 15 November
THE TREE OF LIFE PROJECT
begins.
Below is the full-colour program
which can be read here on-line
or downloaded to print out.
Hope to see you at one of our events

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

The Tree of Life Project in Ballarat is on Facebook






and here is our Preliminary Program

The Tree of Life Project
Various Locations
Fri, Nov 15, 2013 12:00 AM - Sat, Nov 23, 2013 12:00 AM
TREES OF FAITH SELF-GUIDED TOUR
Brochures will be available at various Ballarat Outlets

Primary Schools Art Competition for Grades 4, 5, 6 on display at Ballarat Library

Tree of Life made by Ballarat East Community Men’s Shed on display at Ballarat Library 15-20 November and the Conservatory, Ballarat Botanical Gardens 21-23 November

Children's Story-Telling Time
Mon 18- Fri 22 November
Around the idea of trees, hopes and wishes – concluding each day with an activity where children write hopes or wishes on leaves (or birds) to hang in our Tree of Life. Story telling will rotate around Ballarat at various library venues.

Family History Research – Family Trees
Mon 18-Wed 20 November
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints will provide assistance with Family Tree research with an explanation of why LDS Church members themselves research to trace their family tree ancestors.

15/11 - 5.30pm-7pm Ballarat Library Opening Event of The Tree of Life Project
Announcement of winners of Primary Schools Art Competition

16/11 - 10am-4pm Evera, Trentham
A visit to an Interfaith Garden. This will be a ‘most of the day’ event. Please phone 0439 425 751 for more information and details of meeting.

17/11 - 1.30pm-3pm Art Gallery of Ballarat
Various speakers – on The Tree of Life theme

19/11 - 10am Landcare Trail, Creswick
A meditative walk on the Landcare Trail See http://www.creswick.net/things_to_do/bush_walking
For details of the track please phone 0439 425 751 for more information and details of meeting.

23/11 - 4.30pm – 6.30pm Ballarat Botanic Gardens – Conservatory
Followed by Robert Clark Centre
Closing Event of The Tree of Life Project
Contact : Ballarat Interfaith Network

Monday, 7 October 2013

The Tree of Life Project - Ballarat's all inclusive end of year celebration


The Ballarat Interfaith Network
wishes its end-of-year all inclusive celebration
to be known far and wide.
In just under six weeks time,
The Tree of Life Project will be declared open. 



A preliminary program can be read on-line below or downloaded.
This program is still being finalised.
However, readers will get an idea of the structure.
It is not too late for anyone to come to us with their own project
and to get in the program.
There is still some room for the more the merrier.
Contact details are on the flyer as well as the program.