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The Arbor Day Peace Walk
to Colombia

Honoring Non-Violent Conflict Workers
In A Walking Prayer To Embody Their Work For Peace



"What is necessary, after all, is only this: solitude, vast inner solitude. To walk inside yourself and meet no one for hours - that is what you must be able to attain. To be solitary as you were when you were a child, when the grown-ups walked around involved with matters that seemed large and important because they looked so busy and because you didn't understand a thing about what they were doing."
-- Rilke




Washington, DC


On April 27, 2001 Geronimo Reached
Virginia
Charlottesville
Lexington (Washington and Lee University)


On May 7, 2001 Geronimo Reached
West Virginia
Lewisburg
Rupert
Charleston
Huntington


On May 19, 2001 Geronimo Reached
Kentucky
Lexington
Sunday, June 17th:
Geronimo calls an end to the walk

Missouri
Sikeston
Dexter
Kennett

Tennessee
M.K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence, Memphis
Speaking engagement, sometime in the last 2 weeks of June

Arkansas

Texas

Mexico
Puebla


Guatemala
Santiago Atitlan


El Salvador

Honduras

Nicaragua
Managua

Costa Rica
United Nations University for Peace in Colon


Panama

Colombia





"The next great step for the human family will be to recognize, in our daily lives, the unity that already exists. And a necessary step is the recognition of the common symbols of this unity." — Joseph Campbell


Reasons for Walking

Duty & Virtue

Goal

Acting for the Action's Sake


A story is told of Jesus and His disciples walking one day along a stony road. Jesus asked each of them to choose a stone to carry for Him. John, it is said, chose a large one while Peter chose the smallest. Jesus led them then to the top of a mountain and commanded that the stones be made bread. Each disciple, by this time tired and hungry, was allowed to eat the bread he held in his hand, but of course, Peter's was not sufficient to satisfy his hunger. John gave him some of his.

Some time later Jesus again asked the disciples to pick up a stone to carry. This time Peter chose the largest of all. Taking them to a river, Jesus told them to cast the stones into the water. They did so, but looked at each other in bewilderment. "For whom," asked Jesus, "did you carry the stone?"



For more information on the background of this event
Please visit my Shifting To Dâna page.

You can email me to discuss joining the walk
or to report problems with links.


Click here for my online diary


"My pilgrimage is not a crusade, which connotes violence. There is no attempt to force something on people. A pilgrimage is a gentle journey of prayer and example. My walking is first of all a prayer for peace. If you give your life as a prayer you intensify the prayer beyond all measure."

-- Peace Pilgrim


"I like to work in any medium where I am free to do as I choose."
-- Alexander Calder


"I am a patriot."
-- Jackson Browne




Lex Hixon



More Inspirational Quotes





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