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May 21, 2010

Downtown Community Dialogues

Filed under: event — Tags: , , , — Christine @ 5:11 pm

In the wake of recent violence and the events of May Day, tensions are high in Santa Cruz. Take a chance to sit down with a diverse group of people from our community and share your experiences, concerns, hopes, and ideas. Guided by facilitators from Nonviolent Communication Santa Cruz, these dialogues are limited to 25 and will give everyone an opportunity to be heard, and hear others.

Guided by facilitators from Nonviolent Communication Santa Cruz, these dialogues are limited to 25 and will give everyone an opportunity to be heard, and hear others.

Sunday, May 23: 3-5:30 PM • Monday, May 24: 6-8:30 PM • Tuesday, May 25: 9-11:30 AM

Following the intention of these meetings, they are being held in numbers of 25 attendees each. This in hopes of the relatedness of the group.  Sign up by sharing your intention to dialogue by contacting Steve at 425-0667 / steve @ santacruzhub.org, or stop by the People Power office at 703 Pacific Ave. Participants are requested to reserve the entire time for the meeting and to arrive on time.

Downtown Community Dialogues are sponsored by Nonviolent Communication Santa Cruz, the Resource Center for Nonviolence, the Hub For Sustainable Transportation, and City Council members Don Lane and Katherine Beiers.

If you’d like to download, print & share, here’s a pdf of four fliers, or you can go about it electronically…

Read more about the dialogues in practice – see the next page 

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May 7, 2010

A Justice System that Heals

Filed under: article — Tags: , , , , — Christine @ 12:08 pm

the storefront of Velvet Underground, downtown Santa CruzIn the wake of windows intentionally broken in downtown Santa Cruz, there has been a tremendous reaction from the community. In many ways, Pacific Ave. represents the heart of our town, so it’s as if our very own hearts have been trampled.

I was surprised to see the City Council’s quick reaction to beef up the police department. This is the very same reaction that happened after 9/11, and what many of us started experiencing was more of a police state. Is that what we want? It seems our reactive response is to find who did it and punish them as if that will solve the problem. In the meantime, our jails and prisons keep growing, and violence increases.

Maybe it’s time we start asking deeper and more penetrating questions like how is the health of our community? Are our children given every opportunity to be supported, nurtured, and educated? What about our elders? Are their needs being met? What structures support us and how can we increase trust, safety, and connection in our community where people have no desire to throw objects through windows or hurt people.

While I do not condone violence, I think it’s important for us to ask ourselves why a few people would be inclined toward this kind of behavior. What needs of theirs are not being met? What statement were they wanting to make?

It’s been said that harmed people harm people. Healed people heal people. If we are to interrupt the cycle of violence in our communities, if we are to bring peace to the streets of Santa Cruz, we need a justice system that heals.

More and more communities are finding a solution in a restorative justice process, a system that asks the following questions, “what happened?”, “who was affected?”, and “what can we do as a community to make things right again?” We are experiencing a shift away from a system that is punitive to one that is healing, from retribution to restoration. It is my dream that Santa Cruz will follow that path.

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