I grew
up in a multicultural family. My
grandparents on both sides were refugees from Europe with German, Jewish,
Russian and Polish blood in their veins. They followed their track
to the ethnic neighbourhoods of Chicago, where my parents met and married.
I was raised by Christian parents who were both devout and freethinking.
They brought into my early life the impulse to worship and praise, as
well as to question everything that constricted and opposed the injunction "love
your neighbour as yourself." My father was a chiropractor, my mother
a student of the health education of Edgar Cayce. They raised me with
a respect for the body and the wonders of nature found therein, as well
as a disdain for the superficial innovations of humanity that polluted
both body and nature.
Hearing from childhood German, Yiddish and Polish in our home, raised
on the stories and miracles of Jesus, taught the practical truth of Rachel
Carson's Silent Spring, I formed an interest in language, spirituality,
the body and ecological justice early in life. In many ways, I have been
pursuing these interests ever since.
After graduation from college in 1973, I pursued a career as a
journalist in the fields of social justice, environmentalism and consumer
protection for several years before turning to the following questions:
Why do people change? What causes me to change? Is there a more powerful level of
motivating change than that of ideas? In pursuing these questions,
I returned to interests I developed in college that centered on: the body
and changes of attitude and behaviour, mystical and "expanded" states
of consciousness, and the early pre-religious roots of Judaism, Christianity
and Islam.
I pursued some of this study academically through the University
of California, Berkeley. But most of it found me seeking out teachers
from the native traditions of the Middle East, Pakistan and India who introduced
me to the other modes and methods of learning as well as the body-oriented
spiritual practices that accompanied this study. Beginning in 1976,
I was very privileged to study with the early students of the American Hebrew/Sufi
mystic Samuel L. Lewis, who introduced me to the body prayer meditations
called the Dances of Universal Peace. One phase of this intense
period of study led me on a three-month pilgrimage in 1979 to sacred
sites and teachers in Turkey, Pakistan and India.
In 1982, I founded the International Network for the Dances of
Universal Peace (now based in Seattle, WA), a multicultural resource
center for those who chose this form of peacemaking through the arts
as their forum for both peace "demonstration" as well as spiritual practice. Over
the past 15 years, I have been actively involved in leading educational
exchanges and citizen diplomacy trips with the Dances to Eastern Europe,
Russia and to the Middle East.
From 1986 until 1996, I served as a faculty member of the Institute
in Culture and Creation Spirituality and a member of the Core Faculty
since 1990. During its "golden age," the ICCS was a gathering place for
scientists, artists, educators and learners from many different cultural
and racial backgrounds. Many of our students were non-US citizens and I
enjoyed the opportunity to teach and learn across the differences and within
a rich field of diversity. This diversity, at its best, provided a sort
of "quantum field" of uncertainty in which real inquiry and learning
occurred for us all.
In September 1993, I co-led a group of students from Europe, Australia,
the U.S. and Canada on a citizen diplomacy/educational trip to Jordan,
Israel and Syria. Serendipitously, this occurred exactly during the signing
of the Israel-PLO accords. We were greeted warmly and were able to
share discussions and artistic and cultural exchanges with many different
people from all the varied sides of the confrontation. I continue
work in this area, both individually, and collaboratively through the
International Association of Sufism.
During my sabbatical to finish my doctorate, my then-partner Kamae
A Miller and I moved to Europe. It both allowed me to be nearer to my Middle
Eastern connections and seemed more welcoming to the type of multicultural
work we were both doing. I enjoyed the change from a bustling
Northern California urban environment to the rolling farm fields of Thomas
Hardy country in Dorset.
Since
March 1999, I've lived in Edinburgh, Scotland, another multicultural
arts and music center, where I started the Edinburgh Institute for
Advanced Learning (www.eial.org). My fluency in German and some other
European languages also enables me to continue educational exchanges
and lectures throughout Europe. In 2004, I co-founded, with Neill Walker,
the Edinburgh International Festival of Middle
Eastern Spirituality and Peace, which annually in March draws thousands of visitors to events
across the city. It is supported by the Scottish Government and the
City of Edinburgh (see www.mesp.org.uk) Since 2006, I've been married
to Natalia Lapteva, a Russian therapist and coach.
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