Friday, November 6, 2009

The Women of HOPE Self Empowerment Group

I thought this was beautiful, Courtesy of HUB and Shauna Kane:

Walking into their tiny workshop in Ruai, Kenya, I am filled with amazement, for these women have worked so hard and have come so far. Tie-dye tablecloths hang from the walls and beaded bowls and candle holders cover the small broken table. The women beam with pride in what they have created and what they have overcome to get to this point. We are welcomed with a traditional Maasai song and gather in prayer to bless this group and all that they have made. A week earlier, this workshop was empty - only bare walls and some wobbly benches - Women of HOPE 1but in a week's time, this group had gathered together and worked throughout the night to prepare crafts to sell to the visiting HUB members.

Last year, the HOPE group started with only one member: Helen, a young Maasai woman and the only member to know how to do traditional bead work. Now after a year, Helen has taught all 13 members of this group how to bead, expanding their knowledge and helping them create an income stream where there was once none. As I sit with the group, each woman tells me about her experience since becoming a member of the HOPE Self Empowerment Group; there have been many ups and downs and moments when they wanted to give up, but they have not and I truly believe that this group is ready to thrive. Susan Maina from Craft Link Kenya is now committed to working with these women and the Korogocho women, helping with product development, Women of HOPE 2marketing, and finding further international and local markets. A member of the group, Margaret, tells me "what God has started, nothing can end."

Something greater is happening with these two groups of women and I feel so honored to be able to work with them and witness the change in their lives and the lives of their children. By purchasing crafts from these two groups, you are creating a lasting effect in their lives and empowering them to uplift others in their community and beyond.

From the women of Korogocho and HOPE Group, I want to thank each one of you for supporting them through buying from HUB'S Global Village Marketplace.

Please spread the word and share their message of hope and gratitude.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Lakota Pine Ridge Reservation Receives a Wind Turbine


Update from the Humanitarian Fields in the US

"We just completed the first home of it's kind built on any Native American reservation in the history of this country. It is a Natural home that the family who will live in it has helped us to build. This is the poorest place in this country. The cost of a new home on the reservation can be up to $50,000. We have done this Green for FREE with the support of people who care!

We also received a WIND TURBINE donated to the project and it is on the way! We have two more domes (homes) to complete in the week of September and with the help of the HUB community, our goal will be complete!

As the Head of HUB Faculty, Dr. Michael Beckwith, says, 'We are history makers!'

My heart is so RICH with gratitude and love for LIFE AND ALL OF ITS CHILDREN."

Temba Spirit, founder of www.NaturesCompassion.com and host to HUBbies September 10th to 14th on the Lakota Pine Ridge Reservation, has been hard at work serving the homeless, the incarcerated, and now the Native American community.

If you would like to be a history maker on the Pine Ridge Reservation, please join us September 10th to 14th by emailing sprytel@hubhub.org, or by making a donation directly to www.NaturesCompassion.com today!

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Impact: South Dakota

From Spryte Loriano, Chief Humanitarian Officer:

"Chris and Janet Attwood, HUB Master Faculty, brought Temba Spirit to a HUB Actioning Your Brilliance event in June 2008. He sang his passionate song, “It’s Time to Reclaim Your Power” to over 500 cheering HUB members and guests. From that day on, Spryte Loriano, HUB’s Chief Humanitarian Officer, kept receiving emails and calls from Temba about his projects on the Lakota reservation in South Dakota.

“We’ve wanted to find ways to do more humanitarian work here in the US, and know that our members have a heart to help our Native Americans. So as Temba kept sharing about the work he was doing, and what he was accomplishing, I knew it was time to get involved,” shares Loriano.

Temba began months ago building eco-sustainable dome houses on the Pine Ridge Reservation. He has had over 45 volunteers from all over the world come lend a hand, some sweat, and their love to the project. And this week, Spryte Loriano is joined by HUBbies Faith Rivera, Nolan Hee, Nereyda Perez and her husband Gary Harris to help Temba complete the last of the domes!

“We were ready to work hard. I think we all psyched ourselves up to be in the heat, cold, wind – whatever we had to do. Then the first day, Temba told us to relax, he was almost complete and the pace and work would be easy. Yet, after that first day, there were some very tired faces around the dinner table! Mine included!” laughs Loriano. The group learned how to make the bags that form the dome - out of a mixture of rice hulls, sand, limestone, water and earth. They filled a total of about seven bags, and strategically placed them where needed – that took several hours! After making just a couple of bags and placing them, Spryte looked at the house and then at Temba and said, “You’ve got to be kidding me!” Temba just grinned ear to ear with that boyish, love-filled face and replied,”Now you understand why I had to have you come out here and see this! I just feel so blessed to have gotten so much help this summer.”

Temba is one of the most devoted and selfless individuals on the planet – having raised all of the money and equipment for this project through donations, he has slept in his car on the reservation for months, laboring everyday. The family who will receive this home currently lives in a black-mold-infested run-down trailer without running water or proper heating and cooling. “I just want to get this complete before the cold sets in and give this family the first warm winter they’ve had in a long time.”

For more information about Temba’s work with the Lakota please go to www.NaturesCompassion.com."

Cheers!

- Julius

Friday, August 28, 2009

Impact: Teacher Training in Liberia

This is what it's all about, reaching out and creating impact, Read Below:

“The Liberians are a proud people. They don’t dance, sing and carry-on in public unless it is in church on Sunday morning,” the young Liberian political leader, Kimmie Weeks, told me.

It is Saturday evening on the beach in Liberia, as we sit at our table and enjoy one of our last evenings in this most unusual place. We see one star, a ton of beach trash, barbed-razor wire fencing around our hotel and we laugh and talk about how much we like the Liberian version of English…a cross between Creole, with a French twist while speaking English words, with a yaya at the end of each sentence, even if one word. Beautiful. It almost sounds musical.

We ended the three day training yesterday evening and for the first time since our arrival, it began to rain. I stood out in the drizzle along with the cameraman and Spryte Loriano from Humanity Unites Brilliance, talking about what happened here, as a fitting ending of a most mystical, magical three days. We talked about how more people crowded into the last few hours, just to hear a little more. Kimmie remarked, “You know, usually on a three day training like this, on the first day, all the people come, the second day one-half come back, on the third morning about one-half again show up, and by Friday afternoon we are lucky to see 20 or 30 people. I have never seen anything like this. We had people trying to crowd in even in the last few minutes.”

The StarShine Academy Field School Teacher Training focused primarily on peace building skills, brain exercises for peak efficiency and social etiquette interwoven in financial literacy. The Liberians, 600-800 of them, we were never really sure, were listening so intently that at times I prayed that I would say the right things that they needed to hear.

On Friday morning, the four of us girls walked onto the stage in our colorful, full-garb, African dresses, as a means of connecting and honoring the audience to the last day of the seminar. The crowd went wild, as they did when we ran out of books in the beginning and out of graduation certificates at the end. We ordered more books and we were able to get more graduation certificates printed still in time for Friday night.

I have never felt this much love and appreciation from this large of a crowd. The Liberians are smiling and sweet. They are happy most of the time, even though most of them live in poverty that most of us would find substandard. They walk with the pride of soldiers, not only to show their love of their country and their pride in themselves, but also because so many of these people were stolen as young children to fight in a war that they did not understand, using weapons that they had never before seen. And now that they are teachers, leading the way out of poverty and devastation from the wars of the past twenty years, they make an average of between $20 per month and $70 per month in U.S. dollars. And yet our hotel bill here is $200+ per night and our dinners average $25 per meal.

The potential in Liberia is immense. They have diamonds, a huge rainforest that will be providing trees for other countries, Firestone Rubber Plantations, Chinese owned iron-ore, and a beautiful ocean (if you ignore the trash.) These teachers have learned that education is what makes cash assets. And if you live right, cash assets make the world a better place.

This experience has been incredibly complicated and one of the blessings of my life. The people believe that their country will be the leader for many things, but in particular, the way that they educate and care for their children. As I looked around today at the little children, as young as five years old, fetching the water for their family from the town water supply which is a manual pump and a faucet in the center of the village, I remind myself not to cry. These children, I tell myself, are the lucky ones. They are fetching the water. They have enough to eat and they are living in a country that values education above all other things, I hope. There are many other children that are too weak to do much of anything.

I am grateful for this opportunity to spend time with the Liberian teachers and principals and to get to know the culture briefly. These people are proud. I smile as I picture all of us dancing to Mama Liberia and singing peace out into the ethers of the world, to reach every ear, so that this kind of hope, enthusiasm and appreciation continues into the future forever.

Singing off from Liberia. Good night. Trish

----
- Julius

Monday, August 24, 2009

Wealth Circulation / Dalai Lama, Bryan Adams, Paula Abdul

Hi Everyone!!

This is the best 3 minutes I have ever heard on wealth circulation
and the emerging new gift economy. Just press the Play button at
this web site:

http://www.ordinarywords.com/beckwith2

The Event of the DECADE has confirmed:

=> His Holiness, the Dalai Lama
=> Billionaire, Sir Richard Branson
=> Dr. Stephen Covey, "7 Habits of Highly Effective People"
=> President F. W. deKlerk who released Nelson Mandela
=> Bill Harris from "The Secret"
=> Celebrities Bryan Adams, k. d. lang & Paula Abdul
...plus more!

To get all the details, simply enter your e-mail at this address:
http://www.ordinarywords.com/engage

Share the wisdom and possibilities with your friends.

Let's love the world together...

Love,
[)anish /hmed, Visionary

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

The Meaning of Community

A few months ago, I remember walking down Spadina Rd and thinking to myself that I really wanted a spiritual community. I realized that although I am living in Toronto and have good friends, I still felt like meaningful community was still missing. I have sometimes felt a 'glimpse' of this community by getting to know the people working at local bookstores, or shops that I frequent in the annex.

Over the last few months, our HUB group has been getting together more frequently. We have been holding more events, spending more time together and getting to know each other on a deeper level. Our group has also been growing as more people feel attracted to our humanitarian movement.

We've hosted the CEO and visionary of HUB, Charlie Gay for our own Toronto event, went to San Francisco (Actioning your Brilliance event), had weekly and monthly events like Buddha Groove, Igniters, movie nights, and our calendar is always filling up with more interesting things and events.

Through HUB, I've met a group of people who are heart centered, focused on humanitarian work, spiritual and also very interesting and diverse. I have felt very blessed to have met so many amazing people and I finally feel like I am part of a community of people that I resonate with on many different levels.

I didn't completely realize until this month that meaningful community had been missing from my life. It is an amazing feeling to have people around me to inspire me and encourage me to be at my best and share my gifts with the world, in a way that can help and empower others. It is an amazing feeling to know that I am acting as a co-creator with other humanitarians and like-minded people.

Our events are always open to HUB members, friends of HUBies, and friends we haven't met yet. If you want to be invited to our events so that you may also connect with like minded people and community, feel free to contact me and I'd be happy to keep you in the loop. I can be reached at hubtoronto@gmail.com.

- Shyra

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Actioning your Brilliance Event, San Francisco (June 18 - June 21, 2009)

On June 17th, a group of humanitarians got on an airplane and flew to San Francisco for the Actioning your Brilliance Event. Among the group were Danish Ahmed, Julius Ko, Andre Losinski, Isaac Martens, Elizabeth Greig, Danielle Fortier, Dortmund Mattioli, Andrew Norgate, Tina Packer and myself.

During the event, we saw some amazing speakers including Jack Canfield and Michael Beckwith (both from the movie 'The Secret') and we also were entertained by some amazing musicians including Ricky Byars Beckwith, Steve McCarthy (from the Steve Miller Band), Faith Rivera and Paul Hoffman.

During the event, we were educated in humanitarian impact, self empowerment, wealth dynamics and we also got to network with many amazing, like-minded individuals. The amazing thing about events like this is that they tend to attract very heart-centered people who are very in tune with what is happening with our earth. I truly felt blessed for being there and for being able to experience personal growth with people that inspire me.

A big highlight for me at this event was getting to see and meet Chief Arvol Looking Horse and his wife Paula. From the Lakota nation, the Chief and his wife shared a message for the healing of our planet. They also held a sacred native ceremony, on the summer solstice, at a park downtown which is considered a 'sacred site' by the native people. To honor the first nations community of San Francisco, one of their elders spoke and blessed the ceremony. This is customary when a first nations chief enters the land of another first nation.

Overall, I felt a sense of oneness with the HUB community. It felt amazing to be part of a vibrant group of people from Toronto! Everyone seemed to like our Toronto group and said that we were a very energetic bunch. Our mentor, and friend Danish Ahmed also received an award at the event for his impact in Toronto. We all had a great time and I felt happy to be part of this growing humanitarian movement and community!

-Shyra

Here are some pictures from the Native event:


Chief Arvol Looking Horse



Chief Arvol Looking Horse, Charlie Gay (CEO & Visionary of HUB) and Spryte Loriano (HUB)



Dancers from the Native event, held at a native 'sacred site' (park in San Francisco), for the Summer Solstice.