ATD 工作坊报告

Today, 25th of September 2009, is the first day of the Global Gathering of Awakening the Dreamer facilitators around the world.  On 5 continents there are groups coming together to celebrate all that we are doing in 40 or more countries around the world spreading the message of awakening.  So there is no better day than this to share the latest news from China.

United International College in Zhuhai, China , is the first full-scale cooperation in higher education between the Mainland and Hong Kong. Its mission is to build a new model for liberal education in China and to nurture talented future graduates with international perspectives so it is just thrilling to know that the school is beginning to embed the Awakening the Dreamer symposium in its Whole Person Education curriculum.  The inspiration for this is Paul Wong, a faculty member with a strong background of activism within China.  Paul was introduced to the symposium in Hong Kong and trained there as a facilitator so that he could take the message back to his work at UIC – Paul, we salute you.

So the symposium is alive and growing within one of the most innovative approaches to tertiary education in China, and through this will become available to secondary and maybe even primary education there.  The approach is also a model of what’s possible in every other country in the world, so please feel free to spread this inspiration far and wide.

UIC students engaged in the symposium

UIC students engaged in the symposium

And here are some of their comments, which just remind me of our shared humanity, regardless of nationality, race or other differences;

这节课印象最深的事一段十分钟的视频,沉重的话题,令人震撼的画面与数字令我不得不反思“Where are we”和“How did we get here”, 令我不得不思考那些我以前觉得不关我事的问题。很高兴有这次机会给了我思考环境的问题。

——冯叶 文化产业管理 大二

今天看了不少Video, 对其中一个讯息有很深的印象,“我们以为科技可以带我们做更多,处理问题,怎料在过程中也给人类带来不少的麻烦。”会把这个当作提醒,今天享受的时候也要记得自己为地球也要负上责任。

——Lam Lok Yan 社会工作与社会行政管理 大二

In today’s class, I’ve seen many ruthless truths from the 3 steps of topics. I got shocked every time I see the videos. To me, and also to human beings, environmental protections should be an obligation.

——冯羽 会计 大二

Through this workshop, I knew more about danger of the environment and the earth. We not only need to know the impact, but also need to do more and make a contribution to the earth.

——陈欣 会计大二

For the environmental sustainability on this planet, I realize I can protect the trees, avoid using one-used products and encourage more people to protect our earth.

——陈欣 会计大二

For the environmental sustainability on this planet, I realize I can change the life style of mine and try to do more good things for our earth.

——Peng Cheng会计大二

For the environmental sustainability on this planet, I realize I can cherish the resources surrounding myself, meanwhile, I need to encourage other people beside myself to do something for our planet

——马可 会计大二

In China

The Big Trip; taking the Awakening the Dreamer message around the world. Here I am, blessed and privileged to be taking this message to China for the first time.

Courtesy of DC Cordova and her business partners I am being flown into Hangzhou to present to up to 1000 social entrepreneurs.

First impressions
• The amazing 3 lane highway between Shanghai and Hangzhou, full of trucks at 2 in the morning
• The familiar elements of the old dream, advertising bill boards
• The huge number of tower blocks everywhere it seems
• The tang in the air
• The wonderful greeting of so many Chinese people
• Language lessons from David, his pride in his country and the Olympics, he was actually a torch bearer as the flame made its way through the country, he personally handed over the Olympic spirit to me as a Brit because London will host the 2012 Games
• My own preconceptions and prejudices
• The piece in the South China Morning Post (check) about the Chinese government minister saying how successful propaganda had been in the H1 08, reinforcing the hegemony
• Meeting Randy, a Bucky afficianado and friend of Dave Buck
• Opulent hotel room, size of my last apartment
• My luggage is way-laid, I’m dressed in a Doers shirt and borrowed pants
• “I AM” with me, I am God in Action in this work
• The Toilet – American Standard its called – which offers a flush, rinse, wash and blow-dry all in one sitting

Pudong Airport in Shanghai would rival any modern airport in the world for scale, modernity and efficiency.

I’m supping Italian coffee, chatting online and watching a somewhat up-market crowd move through the airport. Clearly here the flights are out of reach of the poorer folk (or they are consigned to another airport of their own) and we could be in Paris or Geneva. The crowd is oh-so-bored Western business folk, travelers from the more developed world clutching bargains and tourist guides, plus seemingly wealthy Chinese wearing the latest fashions. The airport offers the normal diversions, food, drink and lusting after material excess. Why did I think I might get a pair of cheap trainers here, the $100 sneaker is alive and well – and not even a brand I know. All the familiar brands are here and then the wanna-be local brands borrowing look and feel to up their own perceived value. So what . . . . . why would it be any different? Its only my preconception or projection which would make this airport different from any other. And I do want to se it different, I do want to see an ancient culture reflected somehow, I do want to resist the McChina effect. For sentimental reasons, for environmental reasons, for the love of diversity and in hope for our future.

We drove here on wonderful roads that shame the infrastructure of the Bay Area, past an endless parade of huge hoardings erected 20 metres or so above the ground, advertising with huge Chinese characters, cars, textiles, washing machines. A few companies had arranged an English strap line on the ads, for whose benefit I can’t figure, but thank you to the kind folk at Kalibo Gear Hobbing Machines, International Automotive Electromechanical Plaza and Global Home Furnishings Centre. And I wonder if Sunkey Aluminium will achieve the sales boost they envisage from their investment.

The outlook, underneath a hazy smog or a smoggy haze (couldn’t tell which), was the same for the entire 200 km drive; clusters of apartment blocks 6 or so stories high surrounded by fields being farmed in small parcels of different crops, mile after mile, this is a huge country.

I was somehow reminded of being in Puyo, which Pachamama rainforest visitors will know is the last town before the forest, and yet seems to already represent all the trappings of the old dream, alive and well on the very edge of the unspoilt wilderness of the Amazon basin. Is China already one massive Puyo expanding westward and gobbling up the wisdom of their ancients, replacing it with our exported culture?

What this is really about, for me, is knowing our work in Awakening the Dreamer is every bit as important here. And I’ve been blessed to meet a host of great people who see the trap that we’ve laid for them. Some even see the irony that it is baited with Made in China goods, but all want to find a way to avoid further descent into the unsustainable dream of the modern world.

My travel bag is full of business cards I can’t even read, each piece in its incomprehensible characters represents another soul alive right now to how bad it is and how much basis for hope exists. Every one of these people will do something, they might want help to see what to do or how to join their efforts to ours, but they are with us just the same. Open minded, open hearted and ready to act even more for a world which is environmentally sustainable, spiritually fulfilling and socially just: partners in blessed unrest.