Freedom from Alaska!

Category: Forgiving/Grudgless/No Hate

Desmond Tutu: What If America Would Say “I’m Sorry” to Iraq?

From: Democracy Now!

AMY GOODMAN: President-elect Obama supports an end to the war in Iraq but a surge of soldiers in Afghanistan. What are your words of wisdom to him?

ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU: Well, I say that obviously it’s to end the war—yeah?—to end the occupation, to—but I’ve also said it would wonderful if, on behalf of the American people, he were to apologize to the Iraqis and to the rest of the world for an invasion that was based on lies. You know, saying “I’m sorry,” that’s a very powerful phrase in human relationships. The current prime minister of Australia, one of the very first things he did was to apologize to the Aborigines. And it’s amazing what those words, some of the most difficult words in any language, how powerful they are in changing. That’s what I’ve said.

And one would hope, too, that, you know, they see that war hardly ever resolves problems. You just have an exacerbation. I mean, look at Iraq. I mean, and when you think—we don’t speak about the casualties that have been suffered by them. I mean, they are spoken of as “collateral damage.” I think it’s an obscenity, really. But the damage that has been done to infrastructure, the insecurity that has people living, not sure from one moment to the next whether they will be alive—and say, if the money, all the funds that were expended so disastrously, had been used for building up, I mean, you can imagine. You can imagine what it would have been like.

Read/Watch/Listen to Interview

Related:

Over One Million Iraqi Deaths Caused by US Occupation

Michael Franti: Bomb the World (”Power to the Peaceful!”)

Alex Jones Learning To Be Free — No Hate!

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske from Willie Nelson on The Alex Jones Show, 10/22/08.

“You know, Willie, in the past, I hated those people [cold hearted, sovereign-nations-destroying, NWO globalists].

And as soon as I turned loose and stopped hating them a few years ago, and really—I want to stop them; I want to resist them; I want to fight them—but I don’t hate them. I really feel sorry for them and realize they’re really screwed up, bad people.

That took a weight off me.”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Id2wgQmdTtU]Part 4 of 4

Entire Interview at: Willie Nelson on The Alex Jones Show “Take America Back”

HeartQuotes: Freedom Through Forgiving!

From: HeartMath

“When you hold resentment toward another,
you are bound to that person or condition
by an emotional link that is stronger than steel.

Forgiveness is the only way to dissolve that link
and get free.”

— Catherine Ponder

Click for Pinnacle Version

Michael Franti: “We Don’t Have to Choose Sides”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wqM-9z0tdZw]Michael Franti — 2008 Power To The Peaceful
Press Conference

“The most important lesson that I’ve learned
is that we don’t have to choose sides.

We don’t have to be on the side of the Iraqis or Americans,
or the Israelis or Palistinians
,
or Croatians or Bosnians.

We can be on the side of the peacemakers.
And there’s people all over this planet
who are willing to take incredible risks.”

“And the other lesson that I’ve learned
is to be a good listener. …”

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske

Related: Power to the Peaceful Festival [2008]

Tony Rebel: If Jah is standing by by my side, then why should I be afraid? … Your best you try to harm I & I … But I LOVE YOU STILL!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=crRbgES1zPI]

If Jah is by my side
I won’t tired
No, I won’t tired …

Your best you try to harm I and I*
Aiming to kill
But I love you still

Cause you are here to make
Prophecy fulfill** (Its Jah will)

No weapon that form against me
Desire shall not be
Divine protection
Shall set my soul free
(Talk to me)

If Jah is standing by my side
Then why should I be afraid
Of the pestilence that crawleth by night

* I: replaces “me”, “you”, “my”; replaces the first syllable of seleted words I and I, I&I: I, me, you and me, we Rastafari speech eliminates you, me we, they, etc., as divisive and replaces same with communal I and I. I and I embraces the congregation in unity with the Most I (high) in an endless circle of inity (unity)source

** John 15:20, perhaps? — “Remember the word that I said to you: ‘A servant is not greater than his lord.’ If they persecuted me [Jesus], they will also persecute you.”

Suppose!

Forgiveness lets life flow again.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8kslMev5mA]

Michael Franti in Alaska: LOVE to the HATEFUL!

Power to the peaceful,
Love to the peaceful.

That’s the easy part.

Power to the peaceful;
Love to the peaceful.

Now here’s the hard part:

Power to the peaceful;
Love to the hateful!

__________

This album is dedicated to the great state of Alaska,
its people and its natural abundance.
May they work together forever.

– Michael Franti

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske from:

Michael Franti and Spearhead : Live : Alaska
Bomb the World

Recorded Live on
June 2 & 3, 2005
At The Beartooth
Anchorage, Alaska

Olympian Lloy Ball: Now Disbelieves His “Anger is a Gift” Tattoo — “And to have the Devil on your arm does not bode well”

From: Washington Post, Lloy Ball, Tattoos and Capricious Youth

The U.S. men’s volleyball team has its share of characters, but media folks aren’t going there after this month’s events. I spent a few minutes with longtime setter Lloy Ball last week….

If you’ve followed the team’s history, you remember that Ball was previously depicted as the bad boy of indoor volleyball: the “Satan” nickname, the “Boo-yah!” screams after successful spikes, his fish face that he called “The Grouper,” the “Anger is a Gift” tattoo that came from Rage Against the Machine lyrics. An “in-your-face, tattooed Generation X’er,” one newspaper called him during the ’96 Games, and virtually every story had a similar theme.

[…]

And what about the ‘Anger is a Gift” thing?

Yeah, uh…capricious youth? Back in ’96 for some reason I thought I needed to be somewhat upset to play well. Luckily it only took me 12 years to figure out that that’s not true. And to have the devil on your arm does not bode well when you go to church with your mom on Christmas, I can tell you. But, you know, live and learn.

So you don’t play angry any more?

Not so much. I mean, it takes someone across the net saying REALLY bad things to me in a language I understand to get too upset.

Really? Does that go on?

Oh yeah, yeah. You’ll see it when we play Italy. You know, a lot of us just aren’t real fond of each other. We play against each other on the national teams but also in club ball a lot of times. I’ve had a REAL good couple of years in club ball, so I’m not real popular with some of em, and I’ve on occasion let them know that I’m a little better than they are sometimes, and they take offense at that and start yelling at me through the net. In Italian, most of ’em.

Read Entire Article

Related: Cyclist Mimicks His Devil Tattoo

Michael Franti: “It’s Never Too Late” — A Song of Reconciliation

This is a song of reconciliation between children and their parents—between friends. And it’s even a song of reconciliation for nations.”

– Michael Franti introducing Never Too Late in the Live in Sydney DVD

If some of you find the way he phrases his lyric about not fearing our fathers a bit peculiar, please consider that Michael’s step-father was an alcoholic. And now Michael is overcoming that and the other junk, trying to lead all of us into reconciliation! This is a beautiful, incredible human being, y’all—even if we’re not all on the same page spiritually, yet. We’re heading there : )

At the end of the Sydney concert, Spearhead’s bass player, Carl Young, says this to the audience about Michael.

“You know, you got to give it up to this big man who stands about 6-foot-6 above sea-level. And you know he grabs this microphone to take us to another mental level. The big man that always takes a big stand. From San Francisco, California, give it up for Mr. Michael Franti!”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A252wpIn7J4]Live from the TLA 10/3/07 Philadelphia, PA

Don’t fear your best friends,
because a best friend will
never try to do you wrong.
And don’t fear your worst friends,
because a worst friend is just a best friend
that has done you wrong. …

And it’s never too late to start the day over
It’s never too late to pick up the phone
(pick up the phone and call me)
It’s never too late to lay your
head down on my shoulders
It’s never too late to come on home,
come on home

HeartQuotes: Gandhi on Forgiving

“The weak can never forgive.
Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.”

– Mahatma Gandhi

Click for the Yosemite Valley Version

Michael Franti & Spearhead: One Step Closer To You

[youtube=http://youtube.com/watch?v=844sGaljrSA]

‘Til I let go of a broken heart
I let go to an open heart

I let go of my broken dreams
I let go to the mystery

And I believe in the miracle
I believe in the spiritual

I believe in the One above
I believe in the one I love

Even when I’ve fallen down
My heart says follow through

I take one step closer to you

Michael Franti: Power to the Peaceful Festival at Golden Gate Park

I would love to see something like the Power to the Peaceful Festival happen even in Alaska. We need to stand up for what is right before it’s too late.

Headliner, Michael Franti said this about the event in the Power to the Peaceful Festival 2005 DVD, which is held annually on the 9/11 weekend in San Francisco:

“We want this day and the remembrance of those lives lost on September 11 not to be a call for vengeance, but to be a call for peace, and to be a call for social justice.”

See the trailer.

This is last year’s poster of the event. This year it will be held on the 6th:

Blessed are the Peacemakers, y’all!

Michael Franti: Everyone Deserves Music — Even Our Worst Enemies

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-s6kaYb6Xo]

Everyone deserves music, sweet music
Everyone deserves music, sweet music
Even our worst enemies, Lord, they deserves music, sweet music
Even the quiet ones in our family, they deserve music

So I pray for them and I’ll play for them
So I pray for them and I’ll play for them

Related:

Michael Franti: Bomb the World (”Power to the Peaceful!”)

Michael Franti: Light Up Ya Lighter

Michael Franti & Spearhead | Children: Hello Bonjour

Greg Boyd: In the kingdom of God, we are not allowed to have any enemies

Greg Boyd’s Prayer: Teach us to be free, forgiving even our worst enemy

O’Jays: Love Train

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEUKW99ohuw]

People all over the world (Sisters and brothers)

Join hands (join, come on)

Start a love train (ride this train, y’all)

love train (Come on)

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9luQ-yerVc]

Cat Stevens > Yusuf Islam: Peace Train

I was going to add “Banished From the USA” to the title, but apparently The Peace Train has been thankfully, at least partially unbanished.

[youtube=http://youtube.com/watch?v=WlHOV5DOI80]Peace Train Tribute

Oh I’ve been smiling lately,
dreaming about the world as one

And I believe it could be,
something good has begun

Oh peace train sounding louder
Glide on the peace train
Come on now peace train
Yes, peace train holy roller

Everyone jump upon the peace train
Come on now peace train

[youtube=http://youtube.com/watch?v=Q7iLPnDCQ1g]Nobel Peace Prize Concert in Oslo, Norway – 11 december 2006

Now I’ve been crying lately,
thinking about the world as it is
Why must we go on hating,
why can’t we live in bliss

Cause out on the edge of darkness,
there rides a peace train

Oh peace train take this country,
come take me home again

[youtube=http://youtube.com/watch?v=U7wEctHyuc0]

Come take me home, again

Sinead O’Connor: This is a Rebel Song

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqh8dikSoTM]

I love you my hard Irishman
Your rage is like a fist in my womb
Can’t you forgive
what you think I’ve done
And love me, I’m your woman. …

How come you’ve never said you love me
In all the time you’ve known me
How come you never say you’re sorry
And I do
… I do.

Alaska: Father Forgives Son’s Murderer — “We love you; we do”

From: Anchorage Daily News

At Murderer’s Sentencing, Grieving Fathers Find Unlikely Bond
A story of addiction, death and forgiveness

In a downtown courtroom Friday, Rob Kagel didn’t know what to feel as he looked for the first time on Osaiasi Saafi, the man who’d shot and killed his son.

[…]

Then it was Saafi’s turn. He accepted the decision of the jury, he said quietly. He prayed every day for the family to forgive him. He was sorry for the heartache his actions had caused.

From his seat in the gallery, Kagel believed Saafi was sincere, believed he would be burdened for life by what he’d done.

Suddenly, locking Saafi up for most of his life seemed a waste. Then two young men would be destroyed, Kagel explained later. He knew Josh wouldn’t have wanted it.

Judge Michael Wolverton called a recess. When court reconvened, Kagel asked if he could make one last statement.

He’d changed his mind, he told the judge. Please give Saafi the minimum sentence, he said.

“We do forgive you,” Kagel said to Saafi. “For reasons we don’t understand, we love you; we do.”

Saafi nodded. Behind him, his father Henry Saafi wept.

Read Entire Article

[music video] Michael Franti: Bomb the World (“Power to the Peaceful!”)

Michael Franti – Bomb the World

Please tell me the reason
Behind the colors that you fly
Love just one nation
And the whole world we divide

You won’t say you’re “sorry”
“There is no other choice”
God bless the people them
Who cannot raise their voice

We can chase down all our enemies
Bring them to their knees
We can bomb the world to pieces
But we can’t bomb it into peace

Power to the peaceful
Love to the peaceful
.

=

[God’s] love to the peaceful.

=

Blessed are the peacemakers
for they shall be called the children of God.”

– Jesus

=

God resists the proud [Americans],
but GIVES GRACE to the humble.”

– Jesus’ brother, James

Who would Jesus bomb —
or have us bomb?

“Love your neighbor as yourself.”

Michael Franti & Spearhead | Children: “Hello Bonjour”

LOVE EVERYBODY!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuAahjFL-mA]Michael Franti & Spearhead

You say you’re a Christian ’cause God made you;
You say you’re a Muslim ’cause God made you;
You say you’re a Hindu and the next man a Jew;
And we all kill each other ’cause God told us to? Nah!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uqYC3AnYsRQ]Children

Related: Michael Franti & Spearhead: “Hello Bonjour” in Belgium

[video] Christian the Lion—How Our Heart Should Be

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVNTdWbVBgc]

Related:

Video: Lion Hugs Rescuer – So Cool!!!

Video: Otters Holding Hands – Sweet, Sweet, Sweet!!!

Cute – Otters Holding Hands II!

[Awesome WONDERFUL video!!!] Elephants Shirley and Jenny reunite after a 22-year separation — The bonding was immediate, intense and unforgettable!!!!!!!

Heartquotes: A Heart that NEVER Hardens

Have a heart that never hardens,
a temper that never tires,
a touch that never hurts.

– Charles Dickens

Click for the Daisies Version

Actress Christine Ebersole: People are NEVER the ENEMY—King Even Called White Supremacists His “BROTHERS”

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske from: Actress & Singer Christine Ebersole on The Alex Jones Show, April 11, 2008

When Martin Luther King would talk about the white supremacists, he called them his ‘brothers.’ He said: ‘they’re my sick brothers, but they’re my brothers.’

See, because it’s really the brotherhood of man. We know that we are all…when we start thinking ‘other,’ ‘other,’ that’s exactly what the New World Order power elite want us to think.”

“Well, this is the point I that I wanted to make, Alex, is that, you know, when I was talking about Martin Luther King and he talks about the white supremacists being his brothers.

There is no enemy. The enemy is the system. The enemy is the system. And that’s what we have to keep our focus on.

Because to create the ‘other’ and create an enemy is doing exactly what the propaganda machines want us to do.

There is always in this business in the United States of America has always been about creating an enemy. And when you create an enemy, a perceived enemy, you create fear, and then that’s how you have control.

And you see, so for us to do it conversely, and say the enemy is these individuals that are involved in this kind of a system, that gets us off the track. Then we’re still perpetuating that illusion that there is an enemy. The enemy is the system; it’s not the individual. Because as individuals, we are created out of the same dirt in God’s image. And that our job is to love one another.

So really what it is: it’s about instructing people about what the truth is.

And so even the oligarchy, even the ones that are in high level of position, it’s really about being able to change the consciousness. It’s not about eliminating these people. Of course, it doesn’t mean that people don’t have to have responsibility, and their are consequences for actions. I believe that there are consequences; there should be consequences.

But really the ultimate, ultimate, ultimate goal in humanity with human beings to one another is to be able to bring consciousness to one another, and wake people up to the truth. And the truth is not that we have another enemy, but we have these powerful systems that are taking away where we have coopted our power, our absolute blinding light that’s within all of us.”

Listen to the Audio

Joe Sample’s Decision: “I’m NOT GOING TO HATE the white man. I’m going to the piano & CREATE THE LIFE that I want TO LIVE!”

The piano, to me, was that escape
from the boredom,
the segregation,
the racism

that existed in the deep south.

I had to fight this constant proclamation
that I was inherently born inferior.

So at 22-years old, I made a decision;
and I told all my friends:

I’ve got enough of civil rights;
I’m not going to hate the white man.
I’m going to the piano,
and I’m gonna create the life that I want to live!

And yes,
music can transform our lives.”

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske from:
“Live from Abbey Road,” the Sundance Channel

Greg Boyd’s Prayer: Teach us to be free, forgiving even our worst enemy

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske from:

1/7/2007 – The Outsider’s Kingdom, Greg Boyd – sermon length is 48:39 minutes
The Kingdom of God is incredibly different from any kingdom of this world. One of the major ways this is so is in the way that God’s Kingdom includes everyone in its benefits. When it comes to God’s love, no one is left as an outsider!

Audio – 5.70 mb
High-Quality Audio – 22.8 mb

“I pray, Lord God, that you just teach us how to in our thoughts and in our words be humble. Help us, Lord God, to see all others’ sin as a mere dust particle compared to our sin, which is a tree trunk….

Lord God…set them free from the bondage of judgment, the bondage of religion, the bondage of self-righteousness, that false source of life. Set them free from that demonic idol, and liberate them to live in the freedom of the ollie-ollie-in-free kingdom.

And to wish for every person on this planet, including their worst enemy, including our national enemy, to wish for them ‘Father forgive them, they know not what they do.’

And have this desire to see all not receive vengeance, but receive the year of jubilee.

Let it be done. This is your kingdom.

And we give you the praise….”

– Gregory Boyd
Pastor of Woodland Hills church in Minneapolis
Author: “The Myth of a Christian Nation: How the Quest for Political Power Is Destroying the Church”

Related:
[Video] Greg Boyd on ‘Charlie Rose’: How the Quest for Political Power Is Destroying the Church

Greg Boyd: In the kingdom of God, we are not allowed to have any enemies. All body-bags are equally tragic.

“It’s normal for the kingdom of the world to consider the boys in body-bags on our side more important than the boys in body-bags on their side. But from a kingdom of God perspective, we would consider all body-bags to be equally tragic.

The kingdom of the world is always involved in conflict, because it’s a power-over kingdom, and if you’re getting in the way of my power-over we’ll have to go to war over this. And usually in the kingdom of the world you demonize your enemies to rally up power against them.

But in the kingdom of God, we are not allowed to have any enemies. We’re forbidden to have enemies of flesh and blood. The ones who think that they are our enemies, we are commanded to love them, to serve them, to lay down our life for them.

While the kingdom of the world is about conflict, the kingdom of God is about reconciliation.”

– Gregory Boyd
Pastor of Woodland Hills church in Minneapolis
Author: “The Myth of a Christian Nation: How the Quest for Political Power Is Destroying the Church”

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske from:

4/25/2004 – The Difference Between the Two Kingdoms, Greg Boyd – sermon length 43:43
The kingdom of God and the kingdom of this world are two very separate things. One uses the sword (power over) to influence people; the other uses love (power under). To understand this distinction is much easier than letting it affect the way we live. Greg continued to discuss the differences between these kingdoms and how we are to live within the distinction.

Audio – 5.0 mb
High-Quality Audio – 20.0 mb
Presentation Slides
Study Guide

Related:

[Video] Greg Boyd on ‘Charlie Rose’: How the Quest for Political Power Is Destroying the Church

Carlos Santana: “If you fight with joy, you’re the solution”

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske from: Herbie Hancock: Possibilities, The Movie Channel, 2006

“This is the thing, man. We don’t have to worry about anybody else’s doing. All you need to do is that:

Everyday it’s a battlefield. But if you fight with anger, you’re the problem. If you fight with joy, you’re the solution.”

Conviction is from your soul. You have to go out there with conviction and say, ‘you can’t stop me. You cannot break my spirit.’ Before I go [strongly exhales] and I’m done with this body there will be some hearts that will be touched by my spirit.”

– Carlos Santana

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